Meeting Lauren Chan at New Yorkβs Mexican joint Chavelaβs seems appropriate after my jaunt to check out a Frida Kahlo exhibition at the Brooklyn Museum, but the place is so bustling when we sit down that itβs hard to hear the entrepreneurβs sparkling conversation at first. It prompts us to commiserate about nightmare interview scenariosβChan was an editor at Glamour magazine before striking out as a full-time size-inclusivity advocate and founder of the size 12-and-up workwear brand, Henning, which will launch this fallβand the seeming implausibility of those celebrity interviews we grew up reading; you know, the ones where the interviewer and interviewee share fries and conversation in some chic Manhattan or Los Angeles restaurant, seemingly immune to the noise around them.
Chan and I speak about how many times those kinds of profilesβat least when the subject was a womanβcentred around the subjectβs appearance and apparel. Iβve always tried to stray away from such writerly conventions, but the older I get and the more woke I become, the harder I find it to separate appearance from identity. Not because I think you should judge a book by its cover, of course, but because thereβs a luxury in dressing that isnβt historically afforded to those who arenβt βblessedβ with an actor or model body type.
Thatβs something Chan is trying to change. As a plus-size model turned fashion industry insider, she has seen firsthand the frustrating limitations and woeful invisibility of people who, like herself, donβt adhere to arbitrary appearance conventions. For instance, she recalls how hard she tried to tamp down her differentness size-wise when she started at Glamour because she wanted to appear like everyone else. βWhen I got my first editing job that I had so badly wanted, I did not want anything to do with plus-size when I got there,β she says. βI was finally there in the ivory tower, and I didnβt want to be the big girl in the room.β
She notes that growing up reading those βaspirationalβ magazine profiles and perusing page after page of fashion editorials had a life-long effect. βIt made me feel like I didnβt belong, and that I was wrong for being who I was,β she says. βI obviously love fashion because of a lot of the reasons that everyone does; itβs an escape, because itβs great, because you get to participate in a world from afar. But at the same time, I was internalizing this idea that I was not white, and I was not a sample size. And I therefore wasnβt what a woman quote-unquote should be.β
Chanβs mission is now bolstered by her oft-repeated mantra, βWhat makes you different is what makes you great.β Sheβs mentioned it to me (and as a self-certified weirdo, I can definitely relate), and it was a key takeaway from her recent speech at an event run by ELLE Canada. Chan has used this notion to turn the tide not only during her time with Glamour, where she began writing tirelessly about size inclusivity and how concepts of βflatteringβ clothing do nothing but reinforce negative stereotypes about body and self-worth, but also in the development of her new clothing line. As she finesses Henningβs brand and product development, Chan has harnessed the powers of crowdsourcing to help direct design differently and smartly. After all, why create clothing if youβre not listening to your audience?
There are a few across-the-board core concepts that Chan is ensuring are addressed by Henning, in particular fit and fabrication. Calling out another example of the privilege that comes with the sizes found on most store shelves, Chan notes that because of the poor-quality poly textiles used in most plus-size clothingβfabrics that let sweat and smell clingβthe people who wear them are typically shy to raise their hands in a meeting. So, putting on traditional types of plus-size clothing automatically sets up the wearer for anything but success.
But in the same way Frida Kahlo bucked convention with her choice of dressing, artistic subject matter, and lifestyle choices, Chan is embracing and harnessing alternatives, and ensuring that future generations of plus-wearing people are seen, listened to, and respectedβthat they raise their hands and are finally heard.