Fashion
giants LVMH, Kering to ban underweight and underage
models
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[September 06, 2017] By
Dominique Vidalon
PARIS (Reuters) - French fashion groups
Kering and LVMH will stop hiring excessively thin models on catwalks
worldwide in response to criticism the industry encourages eating
disorders.
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The two groups, whose fashion labels include Christian Dior,
Givenchy, Yves Saint Laurent and Gucci, said they had signed a
charter for "the well-being of models". The charter also forbids the
hiring of girls under the age of 16 to pose as adult models for
shows or shoots.
France in 2015 passed legislation outlawing ultra-thin models from
working in the country's fashion industry. Fashion agencies face
fines of up to 75,000 euros ($89,527.50) or imprisonment of up to
six months if they breach the law.
Kering and LVMH said their charter will go further, adding that all
their fashion brands commit to banning models below size 34 for
women and size 44 for men in French measurements from their casting
requirements.
Size 32 in France corresponds to XXS or size 6 in Britain, and size
0 in the United States.
Fashion industry insiders have long said that clothes hang and drape
better on tall, androgynous women, while western cultures often
associate thinness with wealth, youth and desirability.
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In 2010, Isabelle Caro, an anorexic 28-year-old former French
fashion model, died after posing for a photographic campaign to
raise awareness about the illness.
The charter will come into effect ahead of this month's Fashion Week
in Paris.
(Reporting by Dominique Vidalon; editing by Richard Lough and Louise
Heavens)
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