Plus-size model Crystal Renn fits in her own skin

I'm glad to read that she's comfortable in her own skin and longer obsessed with being boney and skinny. I love how she looks now since I have a weak spot for thick, curvy and juicy women like her who don't have hangups for being voluptuous :)

http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/n/a/2009/08/27/lifestyle/l104842D36.DTL

Plus-size model Crystal Renn fits in her own skin
By SAMANTHA CRITCHELL, AP Fashion Writer
Thursday, August 27, 2009

Crystal Renn was miserable as a super-thin model who had heart palpitations when she'd worry that there might be calories in Diet Coke.

Her moment of epiphany came when "I couldn't walk another step without being exhausted, or having hair clumps falling out." She knew she needed to live in the body she was supposed to have — specifically a curvy size 12.

In a new memoir "Hungry," Renn, now a plus-size model, exposes her struggles with weight, health and self-esteem, fueled by the industry she says she still loves.

That is, she loves it now that she has been accepted — even embraced — by the fashion world.

"I got to my lowest point, when I couldn't go lower, and it was either, `I'm going to die and not accomplish the dream,' or, `I can become a plus-size model and keep the dream,'" she said in an interview. "I am healthy now, the healthiest I've ever been in my life — both physically and mentally."

Writing "Hungry" with Marjorie Ingall for Simon & Schuster was an important part of the healing process, said Renn, 23.

She had told her story before, but always in a quick hit for some magazine celebrating the novelty of an hourglass shape on its pages. The book is her attempt to move the needle on how people — everyone from wide-eyed young girls to jaded fashion insiders — perceive beauty.

"I'd like to see everyone take on the attitude that there are women of all different shapes and sizes as `the beauty ideal,' and that it's not one type or another. There are women who are naturally a size 2 — you can't forget them, and that's discrimination the other way," Renn said. "All women bring something different to the table and we have to appreciate them all."

Some in the fashion, modeling and magazine industries have been receptive to the idea, she said, noting that she's still working with her fuller figure in Vogue, Glamour, on the runway with Jean Paul Gaultier and in ads for Dolce & Gabbana.

It's often not the typical "pretty girl" who makes the biggest splash anyway, she said, explaining that when a modeling scout first laid eyes on her as a chubby cheerleader, he was the only person other than her mother who said she was beautiful.

Still, Renn is not ready to declare that runways will be filled with curvy types anytime soon.

"I believe there is a cycle to everything — Wall Street, the housing market, and modeling, too. Back in the Victorian days, it was all about a full figure, in the '50s, it was about the boobs, in the '80s it was shoulders and in the '90s it was waifs," she said. "It can only go up from here."

In the more recent past, say 2008, Renn writes in her book that she started to see a greater variety of models on the designer catwalks, and we're not just talking some size 2s and 4s. There also were girls with different hair color, skin color and body types, she observed.

Fashion alone isn't to blame for the idea of carbon-copy beauty, nor is it to blame for all the girls out there with eating disorders, Renn said. But she added that fashion does help create the lens through which others, like the chubby cheerleader she was in Clinton, Miss., see themselves.

In hindsight, however, she cringes at her early modeling photos, as she focuses on the graying skin and lifeless eyes. Once she joined the "12+" group at Ford Models, Renn said she finally started seeing images of the young woman she knew she was meant to be.

(On the day she decided to switch gears of her career, she celebrated with a salad with salmon and nuts on it. It was, she wrote, a really big deal.)

Renn's favorite photo of herself was shot in 2004 by Steven Meisel for Vogue. It emphasized her mane of raven-colored hair and real cleavage.

"That shot — I knew this is my moment. I remember him saying, `We've got it,' and I remember thinking, `This is my time.' Everything I was working toward, taking a chance on becoming a plus-size model, following my dream, and now everything is happening in front of my eyes," Renn said.

The American edition of Vogue is unrivaled in its power in fashion publishing. Using plus-size models is not the norm, but it's not unheard of, and there is an annual issue that celebrates the idea of "shape."

The Meisel picture "is a quintessential Vogue portrait, taken by one of our most important photographers and styled by one of our important editors," said spokesman Patrick O'Connell. "And Crystal certainly is a beautiful model."

Renn has taken her mind off 24-7 dieting and is more involved in the lives of her friends and family, she said.

Flashes of fears about her thighs — the bane of her skinny-model time of her life — still cross her mind, but she has learned to get over them quickly: She'll find her "positives" to distract her.

"I love my cheekbones. I highlight them," she said. "I also love my eyebrows. I have good thick healthy hair — and that shows how far I've come."


Before [no]
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/objec...es/2009/08/27/ba-fashion_cryst_0500525990.jpg

Now :p
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/object/article?f=/n/a/2009/08/27/lifestyle/l104842D36.DTL&o=0
 
I think I'd have to be demented to think she looked hot in that first pic...she looks SO good in the second one. Curvy woman = beautiful. :D
 

lechepicha

Prince of the Rotten Milk
Have to agree. Curves always beat bony & too skinny.

I boned a skinny boney chic and a juicy and curvy chic and I must say I prefer the latter becoz they got "more cushion for the pushin" :)
 

LukeEl

I am a failure to the Korean side of my family
Yeah I prefer women with some meat on their bones as opposed to a concentration camp looking Skelator.
 

Ace Bandage

The one and only.
Sorry, I prefer thin women (saying skinny will get you punched). To me, plus size = fat mess. Just sayin'...
 

biomech

Virtus Junxit Mors Non Separabit
Sorry, I prefer thin women (saying skinny will get you punched). To me, plus size = fat mess. Just sayin'...

When this subject comes up, people say they don't like "skinny" women, instead, they like a woman with "meat on their bones".

When did fat become meat?

Also, when did "curvy" come to mean fat? I look at Eufrat, Piper Fawn, Shay Laren and Carrie Du Four and I see lots of curves, but not much fat. Not much at all.

Fat women are often called "real women." I'm guessing that all those thin women who manage to burn more or as many calories than they consume are a figment of my imagination.

This woman, Crystal Renn, is beautiful. I'll give her that..she's beautiful and looks healthy. However, when it comes to "plus-sized" or "full-figured" women, very few of them look like her. And I still don't understand why we take people who don't have enough self-control or discipline to maintain a healthy and attractive figure and applaud them as if they've accomplished some heroic deed.

"I'm glad she has the courage to eat those three McMuffins and not do cardio! Hear her roar...between gasps." :1orglaugh

Post your hate here X__________
 
When this subject comes up, people say they don't like "skinny" women, instead, they like a woman with "meat on their bones".

When did fat become meat?

Also, when did "curvy" come to mean fat? I look at Eufrat, Piper Fawn, Shay Laren and Carrie Du Four and I see lots of curves, but not much fat. Not much at all.

Fat women are often called "real women." I'm guessing that all those thin women who manage to burn more or as many calories than they consume are a figment of my imagination.

This woman, Crystal Renn, is beautiful. I'll give her that..she's beautiful and looks healthy. However, when it comes to "plus-sized" or "full-figured" women, very few of them look like her. And I still don't understand why we take people who don't have enough self-control or discipline to maintain a healthy and attractive figure and applaud them as if they've accomplished some heroic deed.

"I'm glad she has the courage to eat those three McMuffins and not do cardio! Hear her roar...between gasps." :1orglaugh

Post your hate here X__________


rep
 

Rey C.

Racing is life... anything else is just waiting.
I think Crystal Renn looks great. And from reading a couple of interviews, it sounds like her mind is a LOT healthier now than it was before. And considering what she was doing to remain a size 0-2, her body is probably healthier too. I knew a girl in high school who had an eating disorder... not well, but she was pretty screwed up, from what I knew about her. When I was living in NoVA, a girl I knew was trying to get a modeling contract. In a rather shocking bathroom surprise, I found out that she was doing heroin. :eek: A lot of "party girls" I knew back then, in addition to drinking like fish, they did coke and smoked weed. Not my cup of tea, but that never really bothered me so much. But when you stick a needle between your toes and get on "the horse" to stay fit & trim, we have to part ways. I knew she stuck her finger down her throat after meals (ever kissed a girl after she's vomited and you didn't know it?!) and took diet pills, but Homie ain't down with the needle & the spoon. :nono:

I like girls of many shapes and sizes. But I tend to go with personality and brains over body, unless I'm just staring at a picture. And if all I'm doing is staring at a picture, I generally like my women just like my race tracks: curves over a straight line. Like some of the pics of Aria Giovanni when she put on some weight... I can't/won't even say here what nasty things crossed my mind when I saw those pics. :nannerf2:

But to each his own. :dunno:
 
I don't like women that are to fat or skinny. As long as they are within a healthy range it's alright. If given a choice I would go with people that have figures of a fitness model where they are healthy while being lean are neither fat or skinny.

I will also say I really hate it when "voluptuous" and "curvy" are used as a nice way to say somebody's fat. Fat is fat and people can be both of the above without being fat. There should be no reason for people to sugar coat reality, and if they like fat chicks they should just admit it. I know I don't think fat women are good looking, but there are plenty of curvy women I think look good. On the same principle I hate it when people lump being “skinny” with somebody that’s just “lean” because they aren’t mutually inclusive either.
 

PirateKing

█▀█▀█ █ &#9608
She definitely look hot with curves. I don't see how anyone would be more turned on by a bony woman unless they were touched in the head.
 
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