What’s Your Nude? Facebook Campaign Gets Some Noise

By | February 7, 2012 at 11:40 pm | No comments | Lifestyle | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , ,

Queen Grace Weekly Dish contributors found this interesting piece from the style editors over at Today.com. Seems there is a grand shortage and options for women of color when it comes to bras and lingerie. According to Today.com, a new Facebook campaign called “What’s Your Nude?” is mobilizing women “fed up over the lack of diversity in bra manufacturing.” The movement — with the simple plea “more brown bras, please” — urges women to contact bra makers throughout the month of February and demand greater representation in the lingerie section.

The issue? Nude bras basically come in one range of light colors (think blush, nude or tan), so women with darker skin tones don’t have nearly as many options when looking for bras to match their own skin color. “Women of color have voiced that they’ve been thinking this for years, and don’t understand why it’s taken bra makers and retailers so long to meet this need,” founder Tara Raines, 31, a psychologist living in Los Angeles, told TODAY.com.

Raines, who is black, was inspired to get active after having difficulty shopping online at major retailers, only spotting a few deeper hues at “exorbitant prices.”
A quick scan of Macy’s and Victoria’s Secret online show there are indeed a lack of extensive options. (And while several women wrote to Raines that Target carries a wide selection, she says she visited the retailer in Los Angeles last night and was unable to find even one brown bra in the entire store.)

Women across the color wheel have taken to the cause – with 2,300 Facebook fans and rising. “Nothing worse than your beautiful clothes having the undergarments distracting the look because they don’t blend with skin tone,” wrote one disgruntled fan on the page. “Everyone should be able to have a naked color bra!” chimed in another. Several celebrities have also voiced their support, including comedian Sheryl Underwood, actress Holly Robinson Peete, singer Chrisette Michele, and chef Sunny Anderson. “The support from women everywhere, all women of all colors, has been tremendous,” said Raines, noting that even Caucasian women have joined the cause, though many of them admit they weren’t originally aware of the problem. “They’re baffled that something like this would still be an issue in 2012.”

Where bigger brands fail, Raines says she has seen an impressive effort by smaller companies, including BeingU.me, a new nude lingerie company. “If mainstream retailers won’t work to cater to us, then we want to use the campaign to shine a light on these newer companies.”

More than anything, the campaign sparked a meaningful discussion, which Raines hopes prompts companies to be more inclusive of all women items, ranging from shoes to hosiery to even bandages. “We still have a lot of work to do to get the attention of bra makers so I don’t think we’ll extend this campaign beyond bras, but we will proudly support individuals and organizations who want to take up those other platforms.”

QG WD salutes the effort and we are in the design stages of bringing in our own Queen Grace lingerie options for our diverse community, slated for release later this year.

Partial content and photo courtesy of Today.com

About the Author

Lisa Pool Content Manager

About Our Content Manager; Lisa Pool is the creative consultant for QG and acts as the lead contributing writer and Content Manager for the Queen Grace Weekly Dish. Lisa owns the branding agency, cc101 Productions. As someone who thrives on current trends and events, Lisa and her guest bloggers bring to the QG WD contemporary posts on topics important to our QG community. Follow Lisa on Facebook at; Creative Consulting cc101 and on Twitter @cc101production - Lisa also writes for MindBodyGreen, Divine Caroline, Conscious Divas, The Examiner and Redbook Magazine. About our blog; Marina Zelner created the Queen Grace brand as a high-fashion company that designs exclusively for the contemporary full-figured woman. Every one of our distinct collections celebrates her freedom, confidence and inner beauty. The QG Weekly Dish blog is an extension of this vision. The QGWD will share posts by our staff, contributing writers, guest bloggers and popular industry feeds from time to time. Follow us on Facebook at; Queen Grace Collection and on Twitter @QGCollection

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