Showing posts with label Changing Shape of Women. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Changing Shape of Women. Show all posts

Friday, 5 May 2017

Women's Changing Bust Size

The changing shape of women’s breasts

We know that since the 1960s women’s bodies have changed dramatically. You only have to look at the arguments surrounding Ms Monroe’s ‘true size’ to see that what was considered the average back then is vastly different to today. But how specifically? According to new statistics obtained via a report by Bluebella, women's breasts have been the most dramatic to change. Whilst 34B was considered the average back in the '50s, and is still widely regarded as being such today among the fashion world, in reality a woman’s average size of bust is closer to 36DD.
Why is that? Well according to the report, our lifestyle choices are largely the cause. In 1970 the level of health had improved rapidly due to balanced diets and a better understanding of medicine. This saw the bra size average rise slightly from a B cup to a C cup, but stay steadily at a 34 inch bust. With time British Women’s lifestyles have changed dramatically; with health and fitness becoming incredibly fashionable as well as obesity becoming an issue in the early 2000s the average size for a woman in the UK rose from a 34 to a 36D.
But this all seems quite a dramatic change if we’re just looking at the lifestyle choices of British women. In reality, the growth of breast enlargement surgery and it becoming more accessible is a large contributor to the growth of our boob size. In the 1980s, breast enlargement surgery was in its infancy and therefore becoming an option for those who could afford it. This is what brought the average up to a D cup from the 34B we had seen in the '50s and '60s. During the '90s plastic surgery then entered a boom period due to its medical advancements and idolisation of beauty icons such as Pamela Anderson and her coveted role in Baywatch. This is when a cup size DD became the average for women, not to mention what was considered the ‘best’ size for many societally.
"The way women's busts have changed over the last 50 years has been remarkable”, said Bluebella CEO Emily Bendell, on learning about the changing shape of women over this course of time. "Better health, diets, improved fitness and the trend towards bigger and often surgically enhanced busts make Miss Average from today barely recognisable from her 1967 counterpart when it comes to her figure.”
But with all these numbers and statistics, it can be quite hard to visualise what all these remarkable changes actually look like. Well, what was considered average back in the '60s was a young Jane Fonda at 34B, back when she was starring in Barefoot in the Park and other sixties smashes. Nowadays we’re much closer to the surgically enhanced breasts of everyone's favourite reality star Kim Kardashian, who is a 36DD.
1960s - Jane Fonda - 34B
Bluebella - Jane Fonda
2017 - Kim Kardashian - 36DD
Bluebella Blog - Kim Kardashian
But we didn’t just go from one to the other! Scarlett Johannsen’s 36D breasts and enviable figure are similar to the average from the Noughties, whereas Halle Berry’s 34DD boobs were standard of the Nineties. The slight changes from the '60s to the '80s moved from Barbara Streisand at the peak of her seventies career, with classics such as The Way We Were and A Star Is Born. And star of 1984 classic smash, lovable mermaid Hannah Daryl claimed the spot as national average with 34D breasts.
1970s - Barbara Streisand 34C
Bluebella Blog - Barbara Streisand
1980s - Daryl Hannah - 34D
Bluebella Blog - Daryl Hannah
1990s - Halle Berry - 34DD 
Bluebella Blog - Halle Berry
With all these rapidly changing breast sizes, the lingerie industry has had a hard time keeping up, but nowadays “bras for bigger breasted women have never been more comfortable or looked better,” according to Bendell. To accompany the need for bigger, better and sexier bras for British women, lingerie has had to adapt. Bluebella’s MORE range does just that, encompassing 32-38 and DD-G, the range is filled with contemporary styling and exciting design elements but still maintains an effortlessly feminine feel.
2000s Scarlett Johansson - 36D
Bluebella Blog - Scarlett Johansson

Thursday, 16 March 2017

Changing Shape of Women

How has the average woman changed since the 60’s?


If we consider what beauty ideals and standards were back in the 1950s, the blonde bombshell that was Marilyn Monroe takes centre stage. During the height of cinema in the decade, she was widely regarded the most famous movie star in the world, and her penchant for fashion, lingerie, and Chanel no 5 made her figure one of the most covetable. Yet, apart from her incredibly tiny 22-inch waist, her body type and measurements were much more similar to the average size of women today. Standing at 5'5 with a 36D bust, she was widely different to the average woman of 1957, as discovered in a report by Bluebella.

In the last 60 years, the quintessential British woman has grown 3 inches, gained a stone and has increased her bra size from a 34B to a 36DD. Although many runway models and advertisements might suggest that the average woman is a small size 8, in reality, the report found that Ms. Average in the UK is actually a size 16. She also lives a much healthier lifestyle; she is likely to exercise at least twice a week and will consume 2,300 calories a day compared to the 1,800 calories consumed on average 60 years ago. Modern culture's emphasis on health and fitness, as well as women having the freedom to live their lives however they please, means we're looking much more like Kim Kardashian in 2017, arguably the Marilyn of our time.


Changing Shape of Women


Speaking to Emily Bendell, Bluebella's chief executive, it seems the dramatic shift in size, shape, and lifestyle of the average woman has had an effect on the fashion industry, "she has changed from being quite petite to [having] a much more fuller figured silhouette which has presented real challenges for designers and lingerie brands."

But our bodies are not the only things that have caused the fashion industry to grow; the invention of the washing machine as well as women entering the workforce and having their own disposable income has altered spending habits on clothes and fashion. Compared to an average £10 weekly wage in 1957, an average wage nowadays would be placed at around £530, and she will devote 30% more of her income to her wardrobe as a result. "This is reflected in the size of her lingerie collection, which is twice the size of a 1950s woman,” Emily says, “she now has an average of 12 bras compared to just six in the 1950s.”

“Today's women see lingerie and nightwear as fashion crossover pieces, a trend not seen back in the 1950s,” continues Emily. “At Bluebella we are creating lingerie and nightwear collections to reflect this changing body shape from stylishly chic everyday pieces to show-stopping provocative items designed to inspire and empower.”

So we're taller, healthier and apparently much bustier, but how else have our bodies changed? According to the report, whilst Marilyn Monroe was the biggest movie star of her time, and Jennifer Lawrence is notably ours, brunette beauty Natalie Wood was a lot closer to the national average. In 1957, the average-sized British woman was 5ft 2ins tall, weighed 9stone 10lbs, had size 3 feet and wore a dress size 12, with a slim waist of 28 inches. Her life expectancy was also capped at 68, while luckily women these days now grace 83 on average. We're also sporting much larger feet at size 6 (to balance out our new found height) and our waist is at a 34 to match a size 16 average.


Changing Shape of Women - Natalie WoodChanging Shape of Women - Kim Kardashian
             Natalie Wood in 1957                                    Kim Kardashian

So from Marilyn Monroe to Jennifer Lawrence and Kim Kardashian, the extraordinary ways our bodies have changed encompass a wide range of sizes and shapes that are all undeniably sexy. Bluebella has adapted to the changing shape of modern women by creating MORE by Bluebella for the fuller busted woman, bringing its design ethos to the DD-G cup market.

How we lived in 1957

1 Just 33% of households had a washing machine
2 Only 10% of homes had a telephone
3 Average wage was £10 a week
4 Life expectancy was just 68 years for men and 71 for women
5 Biggest female movie star in the world was Marilyn Monroe

How we live in 2017

1 78% of us have smartphones
2 Average wage is £530
3 Life expectancy for men is 79 years and 83 years for women
4 Biggest movie star in the world is Jennifer Lawrence
5 98% of homes have a washing machine

Visit Official Bluebella website here: