Where were the models in wheelchairs, I’d wonder? Where were the people who looked like me? The reality was that they just weren’t there, and this absence has as much to do with our society’s beauty standards as it does with fashion itself. These strict beauty standards dictate what is and isn’t considered beautiful and, by default, acceptable.
Traditionally,
disabilities have not made the cut,
but thanks to organizations like Runway of Dreams,
those outdated standards are finally changing for the better.
Founder Mindy Scheier started the non-profit in 2014;
her son Oliver,
who has a rare form of muscular dystrophy,
wanted to dress like his friends,
but couldn’t manage the buttons or zippers on regular jeans.
She quickly realized just how much disabled people struggled to find clothes that were both fashionable and functional.
Six years later, Runway of Dreams promotes inclusion in the fashion industry with events like last month’s kick-off to NYFW, which went virtual this year during Covid-19. I joined more than 25 other disabled people in modeling adaptive clothing from Zappos Adaptive, Tommy Hilfiger, Target, Kohl’s and Stride Rite. We each modeled our outfits in video segments we shot from the comfort of home and our “catwalks” were interspersed with our stories of living with a disability and what it means to us to see the fashion industry making space for us instead of shutting us out like in the past.
It’s no secret that the fashion industry has been hit hard by the pandemic — everything from brick and mortar closures to fashion weeks going online.
The way we shop and experience fashion is forever changed and part of that change revolves around fashion becoming more accessible — literally.
More will be available online,
which means more access for disabled people who may not be able to shop in person as easily.
Plus, having NYFW online this year actually allowed more people to watch it. This means that even more people (both disabled and non-disabled) were able to see a fashion show full of disability representation, and for disabled people especially, maybe it was the first time they saw someone like themselves on their TV screen. The fact that a virtual fashion show made up entirely of disabled people kicked off NYFW is revolutionary; it’s not something we would have seen even just 10 数年前.
Disability representation is happening off the runways too.
Clothing brands are beginning to see the need for fashion that caters to disabled people.
This year alone,
Target once again released their line of adaptive costumes for children with disabilities and adaptive brand Intimately is launching two adaptive lingerie lines and a sleepwear collection specifically designed for disabled women.
It truly feels like I’m part of the disabled community’s fashion revolution. When we think of accessibility for disabled people, we typically think big stuff like buildings. But access should also apply to fashion, and including disabled people shows that they deserve a seat at the table in all aspects of life, frivolous or not.
“
To know that my son is going to grow up in a world that includes him — that believes that people with disabilities are just as important — to know we have a little bit of history in making that change happen is truly indescribable,”
Scheier told People.
Indeed, seeing disability and fashion come together so beautifully tells us something pretty powerful: Disability inclusion is the ultimate fashion statement and forever on trend.