In general, no, not according to the standards set by fashion designers and agencies. However, there is "plus size" modeling, which describes female fashion models that range in size from 10-18. There is also "real people" modeling, which is a niche that accepts people of all shapes, sizes, ages and ethnicities.
Female runway models tend to have 16% body fat, and rarelly over 18%
yes but they can not be fat
Because they think that being a size 6 (which we think is normal!) is being too fat and in their minds, models are not meant to be fat, they are meant to be tall and slim.
Yes they are called plus sized models
models
You only can play PS2 games on the First models of the PS3 Fat most of the 80 GB models and all of the 160 GB Fat models do not play PS2 games. The only ones that do are the 60 GB model and the 80 GB model with the 4 USB ports. 80 GB PS3s with only 2 USB ports do not play PS2 games even if they are the Fat Ones. yeah you can but only the ps3 fat not the slim , and you can also play ps1 games on ps3 fat ( remember only ps3 fat ) .
In plus size modeling, the female models are larger than traditional fashion/runway models but are by no means "fat." They are proportional and healthy in appearance, while meeting specific measurements/size requirements set by the industry. Print models are also commonly of different shapes and sizes.
In November 2008 they released a 160 GB Fat PS3 CECHP01 that had the latest harddrive in the Fat models. Two 80 GB models (CECHK01 & CECHL01) were released in 2008 besides the 160 GB special edition
Because when if theyre fat they wudnt fit on there clothes and those are model rules
only healthy things nothing with fat in they need to look slim for modelling
Extreme Scales. US models are extreamly skinny or extremly Fat! There is no middle ground for americans!
It is not appropriate to call larger models "fat." In the modeling industry they are referred to as plus size models. Although they wear a larger dress size, they are still required to maintain strict measurements and must still be tall (5'8"-6'0") like traditional fashion models. There are short models, mainly in commercial/print modeling (5'5"-5'7") as well as petite modeling (5'0"-5'7"...many in the industry consider anyone under 5'7" to be petite). Unfortunately, there is no demand in the market for petite models, which is why it is much harder for models in this field to find work. Right now the demand is for plus size models, which reflects the growing trend of women's dress sizes getting larger, hence the need for the appropriate kind of models. Short models exist, they are just not in demand at the moment.