Profile In Flabulousness: Velvet D’Amour

Velvet D'Amour wearing a please feed the models tee shirt

Velvet D'Amour (used with permission)

by Golda Poretsky, H.H.C.
www.bodylovewellness.com

Listen to the podcast of this post here:

Velvet D’Amour is a Renaissance woman in the truest sense.  Born in Rochester, New York, Velvet went to Paris in her late 20’s to pursue dance and photography, and since then she has walked the runways of Paris (at age 39 and weighing around 300 pounds), been sought after by renowned photographers, appeared in French films, music videos and French, Swiss, and Japanese TV, and continued to take photographs for magazines.  If you’re here in the U.S., may know her as a judge on M’onique’s Fat Chance, and from appearances on Entertainment Tonight, E News and CBS Sunday Morning. In 2010, Velvet was selected to participate in TF1’s, La Ferme Celebritie (Celebrity Farm), where she made it through nine of the ten weeks living in the rough, caring for wild animals on a nature reserve in South Africa. Velvet raised over $73,000 for her chosen charity, SOS Enfants Disparus.

But Velvet’s road to fat positive stardom wasn’t paved with gold stars. In her late teens, she considered modeling.  Weighing around 140 pounds, she was told by modeling scouts that she had the face for it but would have to lose weight.  She went on a crash diet and managed to get down to 117 pounds, and was told again that she was too fat to model. “The more severely I dieted, the more fat I got,” she said.  “I’d have these big extremes of eating tons and then starving myself.” Because she couldn’t maintain the size she needed to be to please the modeling agencies, body hatred set in.

As it happens for many body positive folks, Velvet reached a turning point where she started to see her struggle to conform to beauty standards as a larger struggle.  “I started questioning our ideals of beauty and why I hated fat and I why I didn’t like looking fat. . . . The more I questioned it, the more rebellious I felt about it, the more I tried to find images that somehow related to how I looked and the more difficult it became [to find them].” Part of the reason why Velvet turned to photography was to help herself and others let go of our singular ideas around beauty.  “We’ve evolved so much in society that we don’t need to consistently leave people out.  We can open up our ideal of beauty to be more accepting and find beauty in every individual.”  She thinks that one of the reason why fatness is so dreaded and derided in our society is that fat is often depicted as unsexy and non-seductive.  “I started emulating photos that I would see in regular fashion magazines but using myself . . . and it ended up helping me and a lot of other people.  I would try to make the images so seductive that you had to question something.”

It was photography that led Velvet back into modeling nearly twenty years after her original foray.  When  the first plus sized modeling agency was opening in Paris, Velvet sent her photography portfolio, along with a picture of herself, saying that as a plus sized woman she knew how to make the models feel comfortable.  But the agency wanted more pictures of her, eventually asking her to sign with them as a model.  “I thought, this is crazy.  I’m 39 years old, 300 pounds, and . . . I’ve gone through this really amazing journey of self-acceptance and now I’m kind of reaping the rewards of that.”

Velvet D'amour (used with permission)

Velvet’s way of styling herself and her models has a timelessness about it that I’ve always connected with.  In photos she always seems to be inspired by different time periods, from pre-revolutionary France to a 1940’s pinup aesthetic.  So I wasn’t surprised when she brought up her interesting perspective on broadening beauty definitions.  “Instead of honoring what the media’s trying to sell us, why not honor the ancestors that have come before you? . . . .  For me, thinking about how many people came before me was another way of thinking that I don’t need to buy into someone else’s idea of what ‘pretty’ is.”

I asked Velvet about how ‘pretty’ is often limited in the plus sized community too, given that the plus sized models that seem to get the most work (like Crystal Renn and Ashley Graham) are often no larger than a size 12 and therefore don’t even need to wear plus sized clothes.  “Well, it was interesting.  When I did Galliano and Gautier [runway shows] my expectation was that the plus community would be fully behind me and they were actually my most severe critics. . . . [There were] forums on how awful it was that I was on the runway, how I was promoting obesity, what joke it was, that I was dragging down the plus model industry, etc., etc. by being a genuinely fat person on the runway.”  But for Velvet, this just brings up how exclusionary the whole world of modeling is.  “For me, it’s just so much more global than plus sized women. . . .  You’ll never have an actual person in a wheel chair in a fashion magazine.  Why is that?  There are 90 year old women who are stunningly attractive but you’ll never, or rarely, see them in a “women’s” magazine. . . . It’s 99.9% white women, not any other ethnicity.  It’s 99.9% very young people.  So for my quest, it’s about bringing diversity to fashion and all types of media.”

Velvet with Dita Von Teese (used with permission)

As for the debate that having more fat people in media “promotes obesity,” Velvet has this to say.  “There’s much more pressure put on [plus sized models] and it’s a form of denying our right to be included in media by constantly using the health debate, where no other person is expected to discuss their health, nor should they be. . . .  It’s an utterly ludicrous notion that we as fat people aren’t allowed in media, and if we are allowed in media, it’s to berate us and tell us that we need to lose weight and have some thin person screaming over you. . . in order to be in their glorified circle of health.”

If you’re looking to connect with Velvet, she invites to join her Facebook page and check out her photography.  Some of her upcoming projects include, a feature in Vogue Curvy, her inclusion in Valerie Berlin’s burlesque art expo in NYC, a feature on Tellement Vrai (Popular French TV show), shooting for several plus magazines in UK and US, an appearance in an Axel Engstfeld documentary film for ARTE, as well as the release of several songs in which she sings lead vocals.

Golda Poretsky, H.H.C. is a certified holistic health counselor who specializes in transforming your relationship with food and your body. Go to https://www.bodylovewellness.com/stay-in-touch/ to sign up for her newsletter and get your free download — Golda’s Top Ten Tips For Divine Dining!

13 thoughts on “Profile In Flabulousness: Velvet D’Amour

  1. To DiosaNegra: Sigh…totes agree with you. I am glad you had the bravery to put that out there and telling your truth. The ideal of beauty is very race (white) informed and many people brush this reality aside. But, I guess we gotta still love ourselves and affirm our own beauty…even if we are the only ones really doing it! So, I better here “DiosaNegra” in the same vein as our girl Velvet one day! :) Much love…

  2. She certainly is lovely, and so are so many black BBW’s (referring to an earlier post). Her achievements so far are awesome, and thank you for highlighting them!

    Count me as a veteran FA, among other things…

  3. I really enjoyed this podcast, and I feel a lot more empowered/educated/inspired after listening to the interview. Thank you Golda and Velvet for keeping it real. I know that phrase is trite, but it’s true. This is real stuff.

  4. Great post, Golda! I absolutely adore and applaud what Velvet is doing…but, let’s face it….larger women are only accepted as figures of beauty…if they are White.

    One example: There’s a blog that deals with the celebration of plus-sized models and let’s just say that it is GLARINGLY obvious that women of color are not featured or thought to be “worthy” of adoration/admiration….AT ALL. Talk about a “judgement”, if you will….it’s almost as if plus-sized models who are beautiful women of color DO NOT exist on this planet.

    Another example….lets look at the lovely Ms. Gabourey Sidibe. While she got nothing but praise for her wonderful acting skills in “Precious”, she also (somewhat singlehandedly) became the #1 “whipping girl” when it came to “beauty standards”…..or, shall I say the (implied) lack thereof, when it comes to larger Black women.

    I’m quite sure this comment will either be deleted or my point of view will be attacked, as I’m raising the banner for fat/larger women of colour….but, I had to put my 2.5 cents in….

    1. @DiosaNegra, I would never delete this comment! I’m glad you pointed it out. I totally agree with you too. I think Venus would agree too. In some ways she’s trying to use the platform she has in order to encourage more inclusion (see her quote towards the bottom).

      I think I know the blog you’re talking about in particular, and a lot of people would agree with you on that too.

      Regarding Gabourey Sidibe, I totally agree. Every time she was interviewed, people gave her so much shit about her size and “OMG, she has boyfriends!” It was disgusting.

  5. Woo hoo! She is gorgeous! I love Velvet, and the more we can get her out there, the better. It’s way past time to stomp down those impossible, ridiculous beauty ideals and fill them with real beauty – like this!

  6. “The more I questioned it, the more rebellious I felt about it” Well said. The same is true of me.

    And she looks so sexy in that blue gown at the Cannes!

  7. Yay, Velvet!!! She’s amazingly talented, and amazingly beautiful.

    I was also tickled by the photo of Velvet and Dita. I think if you averaged the two of them out (face, figure, coloring), you’d get me!

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