Москва
Москва ваш город?
Да
Выбрать другой город
Написать в
WhatsApp
Написать в
Telegram
Каталог
Sony A7
  • Все категории
  • Фотоаппараты
  • Объективы
  • Видеокамеры
  • Аксессуары к Фото и Видео
  • Услуги тестирования и активации
  • Новинки
  • Акция

In an industry obsessed with sample sizes and spray-on tans, Vic Marie is the refreshing, voluptuous wake-up call we’ve been waiting for. The influencer, singer, and now actress stopped by our studio to talk about her new docuseries, "Perfect Fit," and how she turned a wardrobe malfunction disaster into a movement. Vic’s origin story is painfully relatable to any woman who has ever cried in a dressing room. "I was going to a major award show," she recalls, sipping matcha from a ceramic mug. "A famous designer sent over a dress. It was gorgeous—sequins, a thigh slit, the whole fantasy. But when I tried it on, the zipper was three inches from closing. The stylist looked at me and said, 'We can tape you.'"

"We don't just 'size up' a straight pattern," Maria explains. "That’s a crime against fashion. With Vic, we measure the apex of the bust, the slope of the hip, the way the small of her back arches. A curvy goddess needs architecture, not spandex."

That night, Vic wore a sleek, high-waisted black skirt and a corset top from a local plus-size boutique. She looked radiant. The internet agreed. But she knew she deserved couture. Enter Maria Delgado, the bespoke designer behind the new wave of curvy red-carpet looks. For the "Perfect Fit" docuseries, cameras followed Vic and Maria as they constructed the ultimate premiere dress: a liquid-satin gown in emerald green, engineered to celebrate every curve.