Trinny and Susannah are on the road with an assault on style issues facing women today. After triumphing last year when facing major dress challenges such as age and breasts, this time they turn their attention to… how to shop successfully; ways to love your bottom; the clothing difficulties facing plus size women; as well as how to brighten up your wardrobe and dress glamorously. From women whose wardrobes are overflowing with items bought but never worn, to ladies who hate buying for themselves, the inability to shop successfully is also on the Trinny and Susannah style agenda.
As part of their quest to investigate bottoms, Trinny and Susannah take eight women who can’t bear their own behinds, on a journey of bottom discovery. The girls train their style campaign sights on high street retailers and their plus size clothing ranges. Often limited to a few items, larger women are poorly catered for in the fashion stakes, argue Trinny and Susannah. In an attempt to brighten the wardrobes of women worldwide, Trinny and Susannah tackle the fear of colour with their own colour clinic to show the range of shades to suit everyone’s colouring. Finally, Trinny and Susannah also want to teach women to become more glamorous. Tired of seeing women opting for comfort over style in tracksuits and dull, dreary, shapeless clothes, the girls take on the challenge of making over an entire team of factory workers to show them they can be glamorous every day, rather than just on special occasions. Always outspoken, the pair tackle the age-old problems facing women today, with revealing and enlightening results.
Please note: Trinny & Susannah Undress is no longer showing on The LifeStyle Channel and has moved to LifeStyle YOU. Please click here for more information on the LifeStyle YOU website.
I love the show I think their honesty and straight talk is just what some women need to make the changes that are so obviously needed. What I want to know is where to get the clothes that Trinny and Susannah wear themselves. I love the shir Trinny wore on the Brisbane show
Hi Natasha love Trinny's clothes too I tried to find out where she got that cream dress she had on in the Brisbane Show!
I'm watching the show right now... In Melbourne. I do not understand how they can walk the streets of my city but only find over 10 white women that were worth giving a makeover to! Are Asian, African and Latina women in Melbourne (easily amounting to 75% all women in the locations they looked at (Flinders St Station, Melbourne Central, etc) so much better dressed? That is .... This show is clearly targeting a white audience. Very, VERY disappointing!
Ali - I was like you when I was in my 20's,in fact people used to ask if I was anorexic because I was so skinny. When you reach your 30's life takes over, I eat healthy, have ahealthy lifestyle, don't smoke or drink but am a size 14-16 depending on "the label". Sometimes the weight just creeps on, and it's not about unhealthy living at all. Trinny & Suzzana are trying to get designers to recognise there are all sorts of shapes & sizes not just a stick that resembles a coat hanger, which in reality and truth is all the designers like. Designers do not like women with curves as iut ruins the line of their work!
i am currently watching the episode about challenging fashion designers to make better clothes for plus sizes. I am horrified that these women who are up to a size 24 are saying they are 'only a few sizes about average', that 'size tens are freaks' and 'we are women who like to eat'. I understand that all women want to look good and sexy, and I have no problems with a 'plus sized' woman. I am a happy and healthy size 8 - I eat whatever I like, I exercise and have a curvy shape. I get told all the time 'Oh youre so tiny!' and yet as far as bmi and waist to hip ratio I am perfectly healthy. I am not a freak, I am a normal woman and I think that 'big is beautiful' is ridiculous. Healthy is beautiful. Curvy women should be celebrated, but obese and unhealthy women should not. They are killing themselves and should maybe be told how to live a healthy lifestyle, not just how to look good in 'high street fashion'.
i think tha the coment from donna was not a true state ment
i thin that when you do your bra fitting you should not touch the girls as much as you did as it maes you look like lesbians
that is not true
I have just seen the latest larger sizes clothing campaign which these two ladies have arranged for the retail industry. I am a larger size (26) but I am sorry I wouldnt wear any of these clothes as lovely as they look. I have no bust anymore as I have had a double mascectomy. I have alot of trouble to find clothes to fit me. I usually end up making what I want. Its nice to be able to buy something occasionally, but I am never going to be able to. All I ever see I ever see in the shops is either satin/polyester or nylon. None of these breathe in our country and humidity. I will always be having to make what I want to wear. No one carries anything which is comfortable for me to wear. I am very unhappy about this but oh well as there is nothing I will ever be able to do I will just live with it.