Is Your Size Ten Really a Ten?

It’s a dieter’s dream: the lofty yet difficult goal of losing a dress size seems to happen overnight. A size twelve is now too big, but size ten seems to fit just right. Somehow, smaller just became a whole lot easier.

Easier, that is, if you believe the labels. Although Americans aren’t getting any slimmer—quite the contrary, our population has steadily gotten heftier—our clothing sizes tell another story. As most women well know, sizes between stores aren’t consistent. But now the numbers on clothing labels designate completely different dimensions and meaning than they did twenty, ten, or even five years ago.

“I remember consistently being a size ten at Banana Republic and then one day, I was an eight,” said Selma Anderson, thirty, a San Franciscan. Although she hadn’t lost any weight, and the clothes in her closet still fit, she wasn’t taken aback. “I was excited.”

Open up your closet and you’re likely to experience the same trend. My jeans from ten years ago hover around the six/seven range, while newer pants tend more toward four. Eight years ago, I would have never pulled anything below a four off the rack—those sizes were for midgets or skeletons—but now a 2008 size two fits me just as well as a 2000 size seven. What gives?

Arbitrary Numbers
Vanity sizing—when retailers drop the size on the label without changing the actual dimensions of the clothes—isn’t something new; it’s been happening since standardized measurements were snipped from the designer’s arsenal. In 1983, the U.S. Department of Commerce dropped a uniform sizing system because they didn’t think it accurately reflected women’s sizes. And they were probably right—our population is heavier and more diverse than when the system was constructed in 1941. But while our perception of what a size should be hasn’t changed much, the actual size of clothing is anyone’s guess. Retailers now assign sizes almost arbitrarily.

For instance, a 2003 University of North Texas study, which measured the inseams, crotch seams, and waistlines of over 1,000 different types and brands of women’s clothing, found that the actual size to label difference could be as large as thirteen inches.

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07.04.2009
Miriam Cash
I understand your frustration! I wear the same size as I did 20 yrs. ago...but that's with a 15 lb. weight gain! UGH! That's ok, that's life. I work out every day and I'm very healthy. I prefer clothes made well that last. I'll pay extra and dry clean also if it's made right. The lesser made clothing does not last and I find is definitely vanity sized. The better made, more expensive items are sized more accurately and I can handle that! My biggest frustration is catalog orders that require me to cover shipping something back. That's highway robbery! If they are going to pick their sizes and they want a repeat customer, they need to cover shipping BOTH times, returns and reorders for wrong sizing. Let's work on that!
I must be "through the looking glass....." I find the opposite is true. I am now a plus size (in pants mostly), and maybe a "L", "XL" or 1X in tops. (what a choice!) Interesting thing: I have shirts, tees, etc. from eons ago (say - 20-30 years) that are -S-, -M-, and even Large! They still fit!! I couldn't get my finger in a size -S- now. Or even an -M-! Go figure!!!!! I usually order on-line, IF I can trust the sizes to be consistent (?). It's easier than walking/driving all over the place looking for exactly what I want (I was once a "personal shopper"). Had I the money I would order SEVERAL of each item to see what fits, and return the rest. Too bad for me - I don't. If I have bought several things from a certain brand that are 'perfect,' and the next year I look for more - forget it! It's different. Hey - think we ought to bring a "class action suit" against the designers/manufacturers of these women's clothes??? Would that work? :-)
07.01.2009
Linda
I have not read the other posts, but, here is my opinion and I hope I am not repeating what others have said. WHO CARES. I don't care what SIZE clothes are, I care about their QUALITY. More and more of our clothes fall apart, shrink and just don't last. I have had clothes last for 20 years and that does not happen any longer. Who cares if you are an 8 or a 10 and really, what does it really matter in the whole picture of life. But, when you spend your hard earned money on clothes, you expect them to hold up. I love to dress up and to dress down for I live at the beach. But, I want one thing both ways, clothes that wash well and hold up. For if I took the time to shop for clothes, that is time out of MY LIFE and I expect something back. Sorry, but that is how I feel.
07.01.2009
Gloria
It really is so true! It depends on the store, and the designer. I guess if you feel good about yourseld, the size should not matter. It does make it hard to shop though! G.Denomme moneybringsfreedom.com
06.30.2009
Carole
People refuse to believe it's true that sizes are way bigger than they used to be. Now I wear the same size I did in high school in the early 70s, except the clothes I had in high school were a size 9. Now I'm a size 2? While it makes those who are getting bigger feel better, it sure makes life difficult for those of us who try to stay healthy and fit to find clothes.
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