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This Company Sizes its Clothing With Flowers, Not Numbers

When we shop for workout gear, we’re used to simple size charts that designate garments as small, medium, or large. Rachel Blumenfeld, however, decided there was a better way to do things, so she founded her own company, Manifesta. She realized that athletic clothing was sized with smaller sizes in mind, and that adjustments for large sizes weren’t done thoughtfully. The result was that larger sizes simply didn’t fit right. Blumenfeld knew because she herself was tired of working out in things that clearly weren’t made for her body.


 

Awesome write-ups in the June issues of Main Line Today and Delaware Today!! So excited :-)

A photo posted by Manifesta (@mymanifesta) on

It’s not just fit Blumenfeld wants to change—she also wants to change the way we think about sizes. Instead of having an “inherent order” of sizes that imply some are better than others, she “just wants you to get what fits.” When shoppers arrive at the Manifesta website, they are prompted to select sizes ranging from everything from “poppy” to “dahlia,” and can determine which flower they are by using a measurement chart. It’s about more than just cute names. Blumenfeld told Buzzfeed, “I didn’t want letters or numbers or even adjectives because I want the sizes to be absolutely neutral.”

Do you think changing a name can change people’s additudes? Let us know!

Zoë Randolph

UC Berkeley '15

Since graduating, Zoë's served as a content marketer for non-profits and tech startups. She worked remotely and traveled the world full-time with her fiancé before becoming a freelance writer and settling (at least for now) in Montréal, Quebec. She likes reading good books, learning new things, and watching Real Housewives argue on TV. You can keep up with her writing over at zoerandolph.com.