Tommy Hilfiger's Newest Campaign Helps Bring More Accessibility to Fashion and Marketing

Possible leads work for the brand's adaptive line

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For almost as long as the length of its existence, the fashion industry has thrived on a foundation of exclusion. The bulk of its marketing has mostly centered around a seductive version of inaccessibility, selling an image of products that are only available to those with the best taste, “perfect” (see: thin and able) bodies, and most fortunate of means. In doing so, they’ve failed to address just how much of the industry has effectively boxed out large swathes of the general public, both in function and presentation.

That’s changing—incrementally—with the help of designers like Christian Sirano, who remains committed to designing high fashion for plus size women, and the visibility of models like Winnie Harlow, a spokesperson for the vitiligo community, and trans activist Munroe Bergdorf.

Now,

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