Kara Richardson Whitely is an outdoor enthusiast whose 2015 book, Gorge: My Journey Up Kilimanjaro at 300 Pounds, makes clear that adventure is not just for the thin. She’s also the founder and CEO of The Gorgeous Agency, which has helped brands including The North Face, L.L. Bean, and Columbia to reach the plus-sized market.
Richardson Whitely hopes that someday clothes shopping for plus-size people will be, if not enjoyable, at least less disappointing.
“I feel absolute dread when I need something,” she told Retail Brew. “It’s not fun.”
If you think plus-sized—14 and up for women—is larger than the norm, think again. Among American women, 67% are plus-sized, according to Richardson Whitely, who estimates their spending power at $40 billion.
And yet, in one of retail’s enduring paradoxes, the larger your body gets, the more invisible you become. While brands may make a show of featuring more non-waif models and mannequins in their stores, and offering extended sizes, those sizes often are available only online, Richardson Whitely told me.
But I wanted to see for myself. So we went shopping.
Keep reading here.—AAN
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