The Average Size is WHAT!!!!

Beam me up Scottie
on 4/11/07 5:20 am
Ok if you came to this post with a dirty mind, you will be disappointed...lol.  With that said, here's an article today on Netscape: Average Clothing Size Is WHAT?

Despite what the fashion industry thinks, the average clothing size in the United States is not a svelte 8 for women and a 40 regular for men. The average women's size is 14, the size at which "plus-sized" clothing begins. And the average size for men is 44.

We're bigger not only in weight and height, but also just about every measurement in between, according to the new SizeUSA survey, a first-of-its-kind look at our measurements that has been taken since World War II, reports The New York Times, which published the results. Sponsored by various clothing and textile companies, the Army, the Navy, and several universities, the survey of 10,000 people in 13 cities nationwide used a light-pulsing 3-D scanner to take 240 body measurements from tip to toe. (No fudging in this survey!)

Let's size up some fascinating facts as reported by The New York Times:

The Ladies:

  • 64 percent of women are pear-shaped, while 30 percent are "straight," which means they have little perceptible waist.
  • Black women have larger measurements than other women, but they are most likely to have the classic hourglass shape.
  • Women over 36 are the most likely to have bigger hips.
  • Black women older than 55 have smaller hips than those ages 45 to 55.

The fashion industry assumes these standard measurements for a woman: 35-inch bust, a 27-inch waist, and 37.5-inch hip. In the real world, women ages 36 to 45 actually average:

  • White: 41-34-43
  • Black: 43-37-46
  • Hispanic: 42.5-36-44
  • Asian: 41-35-43

The Gentlemen:

  • Older men have trimmer thighs than younger men.
  • 19 percent of men are considered portly.
  • An additional 19 percent of men have "lower front waists." (That means they have to look under their belly to find their waist.)
  • Men who are over 45 are the most likely to have bellies.

The fashion industry assumes the average man is a traditional 40 regular, which means 40-inch chest, 34-inch waist, and 40-inch hip, with a 15.5-inch collar. In the real world, men ages 36 to 45 actually average:

  • White: 44-38-42
  • Black: 43-37-42
  • Hispanic: 44-38-42
  • Asian: 42-37-41

About 51 percent of men and 38 percent of women said they were "about the right weight" when asked their perception of how much they weighed. Meanwhile, 10 percent of men and 21 percent of women faced the truth and acknowledged they were "quite a bit overweight."

* Nicole *
on 4/11/07 5:59 am
Oh what the heck, just when I thought I would finally say im in AVERAGE sized clothes you go and post this. Damn it Im below average, lol. Size 10. woohoo..., wow thats kinda funny to think about. Yeah and yet according to so much im still obese aka my weight...hahaha, I LOVE BEING ME! But this was cool info, Ill be passing it on to a few people i know.

DS Aug 15th,2005 @ goal, living life and loving it.

"An Arabian will take care of its owner as no other horse will, for it has not only been raised to physical perfection, but has been instilled with a spirit of loyalty unparalleled by that of any other breed."

(deactivated member)
on 4/11/07 6:11 am
The fashion industry assumes these standard measurements for a woman: 35-inch bust, a 27-inch waist, and 37.5-inch hip. So are those the measurements that go with the "Svelte 8" size? I'm sure the clothes in each size have grown larger..I'm just SURE of it! What were Marilyn Monroe's measurements?  She was purportedly a size 14.
(deactivated member)
on 4/11/07 6:32 am - Newton, IA
Sheesh, this makes me think of the current People magazine cover with Valerie Bertinelli on the cover.  She is a size 14 and wants to lose weight a la Kirstie Alley with Jenny Craig.  When you open the magazine to the article, there is a picture of a sheepish looking Bertinelli with the title, "I Know What You're Thinking...I'm FAT!".  Uh, actually, no...that's not what I was thinking.  She doesn't look fat at ALL to me.  I would kill to be her size right now.  One of my friends watches "Top Model" and told me the plus-sized model on that show is a size 8!!!  WHAT?!  To me, plus-sized is 18W and up.  And believe you me, when I arrive at an 18W, I will be doing a big, fat, plus-sized happy dance!
Beam me up Scottie
on 4/11/07 10:08 am
Ok i'm a reality TV show watcher..i admit it!!!  There is a new show on MTV or VH1 called the Agency.  It's a reality TV show about a modeling agency in manhattan.  They are telling girls with 37 inch hips they are way too fat, and need to lose at least 10 lbs.   That their hips have to be no bigger then 34 inches.  It's INSANE!!! Scott
LadyDi9080
on 4/11/07 8:55 am - Tallahassee, FL
Yep...I came in with a dirty mind. I learned something though. I'm average. I say clothes are bigger now than they were when I wore a 14 last (in the late 70's) BUT, maybe they aren't. Maybe it is just MY preception of what I was like back then. Next time, I want DIRT! ;-) Dianne from FL PS: I am going to share the article you posted the other day about dieting and diabetes with a friend that has been going to WW. The nutrionist told her she needed to do more of a high protein. What timing you had on that article!
(deactivated member)
on 4/11/07 9:15 am, edited 4/11/07 9:17 am
Shoot Scott, no Dirt?? Dang it. LOL  And y'all are RIGHT, clothing IS bigger now. My daughter is 12 going on 13 and it's the IN thing to be a size 0 or 00. INSANE. We didn't have size 0 when  I was in Jr High or High school.  I thought this was kinna interesting, http://jscms.jrn.columbia.edu/cns/2005-04-19/whitford-vanity sizing/ Altho I'd read before that the size tag says smaller now than they were years before, even tho the garment is actually larger than it used to be.   Crazy huh?
Elizabeth N.
on 4/11/07 9:40 am - Burlington County, NJ
And this, my friends, is why we need to do whatever we can to get away from the obsession with numbers! Whether clothing size, tape measure, or scale--measuring our lives by the numbers is crazy making. We need to find more substantial, realistic ways of measuring our progress after WLS.  I'm loving watching the scale go down and the clothing sizes changing, but I'm a LOT more psyched about the fact that I was able to make a round trip in my local mall with no oxygen!
(deactivated member)
on 4/11/07 10:32 am - Newton, IA

Not having to use oxygen in the mall is AWESOME, Elizabeth.  Good for you!

Elizabeth N.
on 4/12/07 2:45 pm - Burlington County, NJ
Thanks :-). It feels a lot like I got freed from carrying around a ball and chain all the time! Now, if I have to use it again when the hot humid weather comes, I'll try to not complain about it too much, but OH BOY DO I HOPE THIS IS PERMANENT!!!!
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