The fashion scene has been struggling for decades of setting some unrealistic beauty standards, women try too hard to look like runway models because for them this what perfection is, starting from certain skin tone, skin type, body types and facial features while they are just models picked specifically to fit in the show and defiantly it is a lot of pressure for a normal woman handling a busy life to look "That" perfect and we finally say not to such pressure, the fashion world started to adapt over years

At first, the modelling industry held very strict standards like it was designed only for one type of women, entirely ignoring the diversity of the human species and how we vary in shapes, facial features, body types and skin colours and it did not stop here but the garments itself in luxury fashion neglected women who do not fit these imagery standards so designers did not care to design to fit women but they wanted women who only can fit their designs and one of the most popular examples was Coco Chanel herself as at the beginning she created the perfect body of women who can wear Chanel!.

The glamourous universe of haute couture does not care about importing a specific image of perfection but it started to emerge with more diversity, over a decade we did not see a plus-sized model walking in for the French house Chanel, but in one year the dutch model Jill Korteleve has made two executive catwalks for the French brand and it is surely a step forward. Korteleve in her Instagram feed celebrating the special unexpected moment expressed her pride and happiness for accomplishing what seemed impossible a few years ago because as she claimed: "women like her did not fit the briefing". It sends us a message of hope, that beauty comes in all shapes and types and we should cherish it because it is about what's normal and normal is naturally beautiful.

It is amazing to see the world adapting and developing into a healthier body image especially after banning underweight models who followed harmful and damaging diets only to meet the requirements of modelling agencies who were also pressured by designers but today we see hope in a healthy modelling industry which celebrates beauty instead of limiting and defining it and when this hope is coming from Chanel then the change is major