The skinny model outcry is now an annual event. It coincides with fashion week. Every year, it’s been there. It’s an eye-roll because it’s so predictable. Every year thin models, every year angry backlash.
Which leads to the question – every year – why hasn’t it changed? If the outcry, like the event itself, is annual, why doesn’t the fashion industry stop casting waifs?
It’s baffling to outsiders, but I know the answer.
First, let it be said that some waifs are thinner than others. And some waifs wind up in hospital, and this is never, ever okay.
So, why did Alex Perry tell Today this year that his sample has gone from a ten, to an eight, to barely a six in the past few years?
The answer to that question is local. Cut off from the rest of the world, still in its relative infancy, crushed by a soaring dollar and lack of manufacturing savoir faire and pressured by the arrival of international brands, the Australian fashion industry is incredibly insecure and therefore, conservative.
Australian fashion people are painfully aware that we live in the provinces. The boonies even. Because of our geographical and economic insecurity, we do what all awkward fledglings do. We copy what the coolest, oldest most established players are doing, in order to fit in. In fashion, that would be Paris. Having girls who walked in a lot of shows overseas is a huge sign of prestige for an Australian designer.