Marieβs Note:
Every so often, a piece lands in my inbox that says the quiet part out loud and this one doesnβt whisper, it declares. Written by an indie designer navigating the realities of size inclusivity in fashion, this op-ed challenges where we place our attention, our dollars, and our loyalty.
If youβve ever wondered why access still feels limited, or why some brands seem uninterested in evolving, this is a perspective worth sitting with.
I was at the mall the other day and it was a ghost town.
This was the Beverly Center. A place where you once had to circle just to park. Stores had waitlists. There was energy. Demand.
Now? Empty.

The food court, the movie theater, the stores… quiet. Even Sephora wasnβt busy.
And it makes you wonder: if traffic is this low, if retailers are struggling just to get people in the door, why does size inclusivity in fashion still feel like an afterthought?
Because hereβs an uncomfortable truth:
Theyβre just not that into us.
Marieβs Note:
This line might sting, but it also clarifies a lot. Weβve spent years asking brands to expand, include, and acknowledge. But what happens when we shift from askingβ¦ to choosing differently? What changes when we stop centering brands that have already decided weβre not part of their vision?
The Ongoing Gap in Size Inclusivity in Fashion
For years, weβve watched brands come up with a thousand reasons why they canβt extend sizing past a 16 or 18. Why they wonβt feature a model above a size 10. Why itβs βtoo complicated,β βtoo expensive,β or βnot aligned with the brand.β

But letβs be honest.
When they picture their clothes on a runway, they donβt see us.
They see Kate Moss, not Kate Upton.
And in many cases, their vision doesnβt stretch much further than that… whether weβre talking about size, race, or ability.
Itβs not always overt hostility. Itβs something quieter, and just as limiting.
Indifference.
They donβt mind if we find a way to wear their clothes.
They just donβt care enough to design for us.
And still, I see my plus size sisters begging.
Asking to be included.
Campaigning for visibility.
Trying to convince brands to change.
Stop.
If a brand has to be convinced to see you, it will never fully serve you.
Instead, look at what already exists.
There are brands… talented, intentional design houses, that understand curves. That build garments for our bodies from the ground up. That think about fit, fabric, movement, and real life.
There is an entire ecosystem forming around us.

Follow platforms like The Curvy Fashionista. Ask the question on Threads, TikTok, or Instagram… and watch how quickly your feed fills with options.
Support them.
Because right now, many of those brands are fighting to stay alive, while weβre still trying to convince legacy houses like Dolce & Gabbana to care.
So maybe itβs time to stop asking for a seat at someone elseβs table.
And start building, and protecting, our own.
Because we do have a plus size economy. Itβs not perfect, but itβs real… and it exists whether or not mainstream size inclusivity in fashion ever fully catches up.
If we donβt?
We risk losing the very brands that already see us clearly.

And that would be the real loss… not being excluded by them, but failing to support the ones who were here all along, designing with us in mind.
The shift is simple, but itβs powerful:
Go where you are valued.
Spend where you are considered.
Support who already chose you.

Because the moment we stop chasing…
is the moment things start to change.
Marieβs Note:
This is the shift weβve been circling for a while. The plus size market isnβt a question mark, itβs an ecosystem. And while legacy brands continue to deliberate, indie designers have already been doing the work: designing, testing, refining, and showing up for our bodies as they are.The opportunity in front of us isnβt just about visibility, itβs about sustainability. Who survives, grows, and thrives will depend on where we collectively decide to spend, support, and show up.
So, the question becomes: are we still asking to be chosen⦠or are we finally choosing back?
Tracy Christian is a veteran talent agent with more than twenty-five years in the entertainment industry. She is the President of TCAΒ Mgmt, aΒ premiumΒ boutique talent agencyΒ representingΒ trained character actors, producers, and writers. Named as one of the top Black female executives byΒ Forbes, Hollywood Reporter, Essence, Black Enterpriseβ¦ Christian has represented a list as varied as producer Mona Scott Young, Academy Award winner Octavia Spencer, Emmy and Golden Globe winners Elizabeth Moss and Jeremy Piven, Emmy nominee Michael Kenneth Williams, Jamie Hector, Grammy Award winner Toni Braxton, and industry veteran Tisha Campbell. Christian is bi-coastal with residences in both Los Angeles and New Jersey.Β
After years of having difficulty finding clothes that accommodated her lifestyle, Christian started Sante Grace, an upscale plus size clothing line. Christian functions as both the founder and head designer. The line has been featured in multiple fashion magazines and blogs likeΒ The Curvy Fashionista,Β FashionΒ Bomb Daily, Who What Wear, RefineryΒ 29Β and Time Magazine.Β
