historymystery
Registered Shopper
- Joined
- Feb 16, 2015
- Messages
- 3,998
Miss G, A lovely post - thank you. Don't desert us, but if you decide not to post until after Chrimbo, then have a lovely Christmas and a very Healthy & Happy New Year.:mysmilie_3:
Mediastar made me very nostalgic for my university days when I knew exactly what size every garment was because it was a standard with the inch measurements she gave. And in my favourite chain, dresses were 39/11 and skirts 19/11.
Has anyone noticed the deliberate changing, not just of measurements, but of shapes? Because the young generation have boyish figures, straight up and down, manufacturers are now cutting garments to be the same measurement at the bust and the hip. There was a time when garment manufacturers used to cut pear and inverted pear... garments for the British market were two inches bigger round the hip, for the Continental market two inches bigger round the bust. Now we are all boys with big shoulders, no indentations and the waist and slim hips, as far as manufacturers think.
The curse of the androgene has hit Centigrade, one of the only two brands I ever bought from QVC. The coats used to fit perfectly my two poached eggs up top, vast spreading bottom, with a Princess cut that flared out magnificently from a shaped-in waist. The last couple of coats were cut like the cardboard tubes inside paper kitchen rolls.
I still buy Kim because her pull it, bend it, stretch it, fabric still fits. But of course, from auction websites as I cannot afford her prices on Q any more.
And now this is my last post until after Christmas. No matter what show I flick over to for a moment, it's to see a set decorated with candles and tinsel. We are still in October, for goodness sake. I shall not watch until New Year, well, a few days later when the New Year New You stops trying to flog us useless and dangerous exercise machines.
So Merry Christmas to all, nearly two months early in the spirit of QVC. I hope all of you who have had health problems, or like Shopperholic, had family members with health problems, have a happy and healthy Christmas.