Fashion Rants Post Fifty

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If youre over 50 and pick up a copy of Vogue magazine, dont expect to see someone like you peering back from the cover, writes Stephanie Pappas for a Today Show article highlighting the failure (or refusal) of womens magazines to portray images of women that reflect their actual readerships, or that portion of their readerships that is post-20 years of age. Ive been saying the same thing for years, and I wouldnt limit my complaint to age-discrimination in print. Try maintaining your sense of fashion post-50 without dressing like a teeny-bopper. Not easy, but the issue is so much more than narrow concepts of a fashionable age. Try maintaining your sense of fashion post-hair, now thats a fashion challenge.

Id like to rewrite Pappas opening statement slightly. Here goes If you are [over 50, greater than size 2, shorter than 510, browner than vanilla ice cream, have anything less than long, luscious, straight and thick locks of hair, and have any human flaws what-so-ever] dont expect to see someone like you peering back from the cover. Who doesnt know that? After all, the whole point is to sub-consciously convince us a) that we need to look like their chosen models to be happy, whole, and worthy of love, and b) if we purchase all the goods advertised between front and back cover, we will magically transform into those magically perfect people. Really, whose buying it? No one, and then again, everyone.

While I dont expect the marketing images will change in any substantial ways, I do think its realistic to think that the fashion items marketed to us with those unattainable images might one day reflect who we really are . So while I expect that the very occasional mature female model will be perpetually photoshopped, airbrushed, wrinkle and gray free, with a body that typically only comes with a personal trainer, I also believe that speaking our post-50 (greater than size 2, shorter than 510, browner than vanilla ice cream, balder than a pencil eraser) minds can and will impact fashion because when it comes to sales, we vote with our money. I dont know about you, but I have a lot more fashion dollars to vote with now than I did as a 30-yr-old with three young sons to care for and I am not voting for mini skirts, baby doll wear, 5 inch heels OR frumpy, matronly, over-sized polyester for that matter. As a fashion designer myself, I am pleased to announce that there are a lot of women of all ages voting for my fashion-forward head scarves because despite the prevailing perception, women dont need to surrender their style with their hair.

You dont need to be over 20 or bald to feel excluded from the fashion world. What physical attributes do you wish were included in mainstream images of fashion and beauty?

Susan Beausang, 4Women.com


About the Author:
I am the President of 4Women.com and designer of the newly patented BeauBeauR head scarf, a fashionable scarf specifically designed for women and girls. The Beaubeau unites the world of fashion with medical hair loss. 4Women.com's mission is to help women and girls cope with the emotional upheaval of medical hair loss with dignity and confidence and to advocate for greater understanding of the emotional impacts of medical hair loss among medical professionals and the public. (www.4women.com)



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