A perfect derrière is
one that is neither “too big, too small, too perky or too flat”. In other words,
the perfect caboose is one that is exceptionally average in every single way. Natasha
Wagner possesses and painstakingly maintains such a set of average buns.
Standing at 5 feet 8
inches tall, Wagner is described as having ideally proportioned hip to waist
measurements, with her 28-inch waist squarely in the middle of the standard
jean size range. Wagner was initially unaware of all this until a friend’s
modelling agency took her measurements out of curiosity in 2001 when they
noticed her petite, but curvy frame.
The agency then passed
the measurements on to a denim company looking for a model of roughly her
build. That company subsequently hired Wagner to model a pair of their jeans
and found that they fit her perfectly without any behind the scenes meddling or
camera trickery.
Very quickly, other
denim companies began hiring Wagner to model their jeans and perhaps more importantly,
simply try them on to see how they fit.
Due to her ideal (by
fashion industry standards) measurements, any jeans that fit her could be
reliably expected to fit reasonably well a range of other women, since, as
mentioned, Wagner’s 28 inch waist falls right in the middle of the standard
jean-size range which goes from 24 to 32 inches.
Elaborating on this,
fashion designer Julien Jarmoune said that Wagner possesses, “The perfect
marriage of body types because if you fit with someone who is too curvy (tiny
waist, big butt), or with someone who has a straight body (no hips), you are
limiting yourself to just a certain body type. A jean that is fit on a straight
body will never look good on someone who has curves. That’s why Natasha comes
into play perfectly. She has the best of both worlds where she’s slim and she
still has shape. Additionally, she has great legs that are the perfect length
(she fits our standard 30-inch leg inseam flawlessly) so that our jeans will
work for someone who is short or tall.”
So by making a design
that fits Wagner perfectly, then scaling the size of the jeans that fit her up
or down, jean makers can essentially make a single design for a pair of pants
that will be at least in the ballpark of fitting women of most body types.
As a result, since her
initial foray into the world of modelling, Wagner has been used as a template
of sorts for the fashion industry, often being called in just to put on a new pair
of jeans to see if they fit.
On top of this, due to
her experience in the industry that has consisted almost exclusively of trying
on jeans, Wagner is today also called upon as a jean expert, being consulted by
various designers and manufacturers alike to offer advice on improvements that
could be made to their products.
As Re/Done co-founder
Sean Barron said, “She has a complete understanding of what makes a jean fit.”
Wagner herself stated, Once
I had learned the jean terminology, I began to help designers flesh out details
or catch things that may have been overlooked. They’re busy, they’re working on
the current season plus a year ahead. I’m just focusing on fit and am able to
point out specifics like if the back rise is pulling or if there’s bubbling or
roping. A lot of the time you’ll get what’s called ‘slippage’ on a jean, where
the denim pulls and you can kind of see the weft in the garment. So I can
recommend trying a different type of construction or a different side seam. I
know how the body should look in the jean, so I’m able to tell them things
like, ‘Kick out the back rise,’ or ‘Take a measurement from the top of the rise
and add it to the bottom of the rise to give it a nicer butt shape and a lift.’
In order to maintain
her self-described “median” figure, Wagner subjects herself to a strict diet
and training regiment that consists of squats (a drastically underrated
exercise for both men and women), running and time on an elliptical machine.
In regards to Wagner
herself, she feels: “Very flattered that anyone would say that I have a perfect
butt.”
Adding that when she
was first informed of her measurements that she felt as though she’d “won the
lottery” because they were exactly the measurements the fashion industry was
looking for in someone to model jeans, allowing her to enjoy a lucrative, if
somewhat unusual career in one of the most highly competitive industries on
Earth.
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