beauty

"I opened a Target catalogue today and saw myself for the first time."

 

“I saw this wonderful campaign of models wearing lingerie and I just felt so fantastic about my body.”

Ever heard this statement uttered from a woman’s lips? Neither. Not once.

In fact, I can honestly say that my usual thought pattern after seeing a lingerie ad, where all the models have the exact same Victoria’s-Secret-esque figure, is:

“I could never wear that. God, why did I eat that doughnut yesterday? Mm, doughnuts…”

But Target’s new campaign is helping to change that internal dialogue.

The Aussie clothing giant has released a Valentine’s Day lingerie catalogue and the beauty of it comes down to the women featured wearing the pretty bras and undies.

They’re sexy. They’re confident. And lo and behold, they all come in a range of different body shapes, skin colours, sizes and ages.

Yes, one of them, Mel Brady, has been a stylist for 30 years and she has the stunning grey hair to prove it.

Now I’m not saying there’s anything horrific at all about Elle Macpherson doppelgangers modelling lingerie, every woman is a “real” woman after all, as cliched as that sounds. But when this body type is the only one displayed in the ads we walk and scroll past, it can make women who don’t fit the mould feel bad about themselves.

Case in point? As a pear-shaped, small-boobed lady, I generally don’t see models who look like me in advertising.

When I do? I feel great, I can see how the product would work on me and I am more likely to want to buy it.

Which is exactly why I’m on board with the “Yay For Every Body” approach Target Australia has been adopting since August last year.

No, it’s not a token effort. A diverse array of models can be seen throughout their catalogues, print, digital and TV campaigns. In store, they’ve introduced size 16 mannequins.

It makes perfect sense – if you see yourself mirrored in advertising, you feel included. You feel accepted. You feel celebrated.

And you feel more inclined to spend dollars. It’s a clever marketing strategy and I’m surprised more companies aren’t adopting it.

A Target spokesperson told Mamamia they’re committed to celebrating the diversity of their customers.
Another image from inside the catalogue. Image via Target Website.
“Our latest Valentine’s Day campaign is a small but vital step in continuing Target’s promise to make quality style and fashion not only more affordable but also more accessible and relevant for our customers,” they explained.
You just need to take one glance at the retailer’s Facebook page to see its strategy is paying off.

“Fantastic to see fuller figured and over 16 yrs [sic] modeling beautiful underwear, makes us all feel good about ourselves. Wonderful to see nice, trendy underwear instead of stuff that made me feel like a 95 yr old,” One woman commented.

Another chimed in: “Thank you, Target, for celebrating every body type and for clarifying that ALL your models are real and beautiful no matter their size. It’s insulting to say someone isn’t real because of their body shape or size but you always promote body positivity. Well done!”

Cha-ching. Clothing companies, are you listening?

FYI, this isn’t a sponsored post, we just really love this campaign.

What’s your take on this campaign?

Image: Target website. 

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Top Comments

JanieBabes 8 years ago

Yeah, still not seeing someone representative of me. Why does Target feel the need to airbrush the skin folds the larger women have?


Lucy 8 years ago

I wouldn't exactly call featuring one token half black lady diversity of skin colours, to be honest. This campaign had potential to be great if they didn't heavily photoshop out cellulite and stretch marks.

They could have put in some women that actually represent what carrying a lil extra weight looks like, you know stomachs, "unflattering" lumps and bumps that women have. Or if they didn't bother to cover up (I'm not sure of the term) the bit where the fat bulges over at the end of the stomach.

When are we going to see body diversity campaigns featuring more than just photoshopped curvy white women? I wouldn't give target too much credit for this.

Visita 8 years ago

I agree. I don't see much diversity of skin colours and I am not represented there either. Would have loved to see an Asian person in this ad.