The sustainable fashion industry has historically failed to represent a wide range of bodies. Many slow fashion and artisanal clothing brands were built with limited sizing, leaving plus-size customers excluded from conversations around quality, craftsmanship, and longevity.

In recent years, a growing number of plus-size influencers have helped shift that narrative. They focus on sustainable womenswear, prioritize natural fabrics, and demonstrate how slow fashion wardrobes can be built at any size.

What sets these women apart is not just visibility, but consistency. They repeat outfits, invest in quality garments, and choose handcrafted and handloom clothing that works for everyday life.


Katie Sturino

Katie Sturino has played a key role in expanding conversations around size inclusivity in fashion. While known for body positivity, her more recent styling focuses on practicality and wearability.

She often highlights brands that prioritize fit and construction rather than trend cycles. Her approach aligns with slow fashion values: fewer pieces, worn often, styled realistically.


Lydia Okello

Lydia Okello’s style emphasizes comfort, proportion, and confidence. She gravitates toward clothing that allows movement and breathability — key considerations when working with natural fabrics like cotton and linen.

Her outfits demonstrate how handcrafted clothing can be integrated into everyday wardrobes without feeling precious or restrictive.


Sarah Chiwaya

Sarah Chiwaya approaches fashion through an editorial lens. She frequently discusses representation, ethics, and access — all critical topics within sustainable fashion.

Her styling choices lean toward pieces that hold structure while remaining wearable, often highlighting artisanal clothing brands that invest in thoughtful construction rather than mass production.


Tiffany Ima

Tiffany Ima’s content focuses on personal style rather than constant consumption. She repeats silhouettes, layers intelligently, and chooses garments that feel grounded in daily life.

Her wardrobe demonstrates how slow fashion wardrobes can be expressive without being excessive, particularly when built around versatile, well-made pieces.

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