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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

Fancy dress isn't for fat people.

287 replies

tiedyewhale · 01/03/2025 17:03

I’ve worried my friend a bit and want to know if I was unreasonable.

My friend has an anniversary coming up. She’s planned a party. We were having drinks and she said that the invites were going out soon and she’d picked a fantastic fancy dress theme (can’t what it is, too outing.)

All our other friends were excited - and then she saw my face. I made a joke about being grinchy about fancy dress, but that I was still very much looking forward to the party. She point blank asked me why I disliked fancy dress, and I’d had a few wines, and so I told her…

I’m fat. I’m 5’2” and was 16 stone. I’m now 13.5 stone and losing steadily but realistically I’ll be fat for a long time still. I’ve been fat for 15 years. My other friends are all slim (and about 5 inches taller!) It’s really easy when you’re a slender/standard size to go into a charity shop and get fun cheap things that fit the theme and which look great. As a size 18 -20 pickings are slim and usually dreadful. I spend a lot of time choosing nice going out clothes that don’t make me feel awful and that I feel confident in, but I’ll end up at a fancy dress party in something unflattering that makes me sad.

Buying ready made fancy dress is worse- nasty cheap material, usually slightly slutty.

At a 60s hen party a few years ago everyone was rocking fun micro mini dresses and knee boots they’d got in charity shops. They had nothing in my size so I was in some flares I’d had to order from Shien and a T-shirt I’d had to tie dye myself. The picture of us all just makes me feel terribly upset. I look like a tie dye whale. I did have a flattering wrap dress that I loved and made me happy but obviously couldn’t wear it. Dressing is just so much harder as a larger person.

Now, me being fat is a me problem. I’m fully aware of that, and I’m now finally managing to lose weight. This is my friend’s party and I’ll go regardless, and try not to feel like a self conscious lump. My friend is lovely and it’s not her fault I’m fat and that fancy dress makes me sad. But- other fat friends all feel the same. Fancy dress is a slim woman’s game.

My friend (5’10”, size 8) looks amazing in pretty much anything. She’s picked a theme that’s a bit risqué and will look sensational while I just can’t think of what I’ll do. I also work full time, have 3 junior aged children and a seriously unwell mother so no time to visit lots of shops/ make something.

As I said my friend is lovely and I feel sad that I’ve worried her. She asked her MIL, SIL and neighbour (all larger people) and apparently they all said the same as me- her MIL said she "dreaded" fancy dress. She’s now rethinking the theme or thinking of making it optional but I think that’ll be worse- people are lazy, there will only be a few people who bother dressing up and it’ll be a shame as it’s not what she wants.

I stand by my premise that fancy dress isn’t for fat people but was I unreasonable for saying something? She did ask….

(Ps I know I was wrong. How do I fix this?)

OP posts:
cardibach · 01/03/2025 18:12

Howcoulduoudothsr · 01/03/2025 18:09

What on earth makes you think they all felt shit about it? Quite the leap!

Just for balance I love fancy dress, so do lots of my friends of all shapes and sizes

Experience. I’m 60. I’ve been to a lot when I was too young to assert myself about the shitness and refused a lot since. And spoken to lots of people at and about them. Ok. All may be an exaggeration. Most.

Rainingalldayonmyhead · 01/03/2025 18:12

tiedyewhale · 01/03/2025 18:10

Thank you but honestly I'm not running myself down saying I'm fat. Acknowledging it has been weirdly freeing.

I spent years saying I was curvy/ fuller figured/ Rubenesque etc etc. Then I had a medical at work and I was morbidly obese, with high cholesterol and high blood pressure and dodgy joints, and the fat I had was especially clustered around my organs in the most dangerous way possible.

I'm fat and I acknowledged it and it was the thing that helped me lose weight. I'm now 2.5 stone lighter (took 18 months though) but I'm still obese.

I can't start thinking of myself as not fat otherwise the excuses will creep
in again.

I'm all my kids have once my mum dies (hence having no time or mental bandwidth for costume shenanigans at the moment) and I need to be healthy.

Love your attitude and you sound awesome. Sorry OP I meant well but sounds like you got this.

tiedyewhale · 01/03/2025 18:13

justasking111 · 01/03/2025 18:09

I've dressed up normal clothes with accessories, make up, badges. I'm not looking like an eejit all evening.

Loads of people have said similar. I feel stupid for not thinking of this.

All my life I've tried so hard to be the same as my slimmer friends to prove that my weight didn't hold me back - often at the cost of my dignity or my finances. They'll all be in sequins and feathers and bloody leotards. I might wear a nice dress and a top hat.

(My nice wrap dress is now too big!)

OP posts:
justasking111 · 01/03/2025 18:14

My mother loved fancy dress. as a teenager I was so shocked at one outfit she went out in. Very sexualised to a teenagers eyes. Think she put me off fancy dress for life

BitOutOfPractice · 01/03/2025 18:15

I’ve always loathed fancy dress no matter what size I’ve been

Unpaidviewer · 01/03/2025 18:16

You're not wrong OP. I have seen some plus sized ladies rocking some cos play outfits that are made from decent material but they are expensive.

tiedyewhale · 01/03/2025 18:17

@5128gap
"Fancy dress is very 'look at me' isn't it? You're going to get attention if you're wearing it. And there's only two types of look, amusing or attractive/hot. If you don't feel attractive in your clothes, that really only leaves you with funny, and a lot of women don't want to look funny."

This is so true.
Someone upthread suggested lots of comedy fat people costumes - I think Asterix was mentioned! I want to look nice!

OP posts:
SilkSquare · 01/03/2025 18:17

tiedyewhale · 01/03/2025 18:13

Loads of people have said similar. I feel stupid for not thinking of this.

All my life I've tried so hard to be the same as my slimmer friends to prove that my weight didn't hold me back - often at the cost of my dignity or my finances. They'll all be in sequins and feathers and bloody leotards. I might wear a nice dress and a top hat.

(My nice wrap dress is now too big!)

You can wear sequins an d the the toppest of top hats with your black dress-it's just the base.
Leotards are going to look a bit urgh unless it's a Lawrence of Arabia Party and they're going as camels.

autisticbookworm · 01/03/2025 18:18

YANBU

I went to see rocky horror live about 20 years ago me and my friends were all excited to dress up in French maid outfits. Except one friend who was a size 18, she tried to get a basque to wear with black trousers or similar and couldn't. She nearly didn't come but came at last minute in her own clothes. I felt awful for her and looking back I should have realised it would be a problem for her before we arranged it but it just didn't occur to me until she said something.

It's good u said something

Pluvia · 01/03/2025 18:19

I've just been invited to a rather posh wedding with a very specific vintage theme, chosen because the bride and groom dress in that era's clothing every day and have appropriate hair and make-up. It suits them: they're young and slim and tall and good-looking. I'm in my 60s, short and a size 16-18, and I'll end up having to spend north of £400 to expose my cankles and look like a frumpy dowager.

tiedyewhale · 01/03/2025 18:19

autisticbookworm · 01/03/2025 18:18

YANBU

I went to see rocky horror live about 20 years ago me and my friends were all excited to dress up in French maid outfits. Except one friend who was a size 18, she tried to get a basque to wear with black trousers or similar and couldn't. She nearly didn't come but came at last minute in her own clothes. I felt awful for her and looking back I should have realised it would be a problem for her before we arranged it but it just didn't occur to me until she said something.

It's good u said something

I've been her. Traumatic memory unlocked.
It was awful.
Everyone in fishnets and leather and me in a pair of black bootleg trousers and a pvc corset that gave me a rash.

OP posts:
Willyoushutthefrontdoor · 01/03/2025 18:20

cardibach · 01/03/2025 18:10

You think anyone would tell you they resented every uncomfortable minute?

Refer to my previous post. Thanks for your concern for them though 😉

Jumpingthruhoops · 01/03/2025 18:21

tygertygers · 01/03/2025 17:33

Good idea - OP could be jabba the hut or Fat Bastard.

Seriously though, "dress as a famous fat person" is an odd suggestion to give someone who has said they lack body confidence!

How to take a positive comment and turn it into a negative... Only on Mumsnet!

My post was to encourage her to try and love the skin she's in. What helpful contribution have you made?

tiedyewhale · 01/03/2025 18:22

Pluvia · 01/03/2025 18:19

I've just been invited to a rather posh wedding with a very specific vintage theme, chosen because the bride and groom dress in that era's clothing every day and have appropriate hair and make-up. It suits them: they're young and slim and tall and good-looking. I'm in my 60s, short and a size 16-18, and I'll end up having to spend north of £400 to expose my cankles and look like a frumpy dowager.

God. A wedding. That's awful.

OP posts:
simonthedog · 01/03/2025 18:24

YANBU it is possible to go down the comedy route as a fatter person doing fancy dress but it often turns into a sexy outfit for people with good figures. Sexy Witch, sexy cat etc

hereismydog · 01/03/2025 18:24

Comedycook · 01/03/2025 17:04

Yanbu.

Is there a theme for this fancy dress party?

Yes, but we’re not allowed to know what it is because OP’s friend is the first person to have ever had this theme and OP will instantly be recognised as the only fat person the friend knows.

alwaysdeleteyourcookies · 01/03/2025 18:26

Pluvia · 01/03/2025 18:19

I've just been invited to a rather posh wedding with a very specific vintage theme, chosen because the bride and groom dress in that era's clothing every day and have appropriate hair and make-up. It suits them: they're young and slim and tall and good-looking. I'm in my 60s, short and a size 16-18, and I'll end up having to spend north of £400 to expose my cankles and look like a frumpy dowager.

That's so inconsiderate. Do you have to go?

Hortus · 01/03/2025 18:27

I loathe loathe loathe fancy dress and always have done whether I've been fat or thin. I've been every size from 8 to 22 since I was mid 20s to now at 61, and dressing yourself elegantly and attractively is a million times harder as a fat person.
However it is possible in normal clothes, but fancy dress as a fat person, no way, unless you deliberately want to make yourself look and feel even more awful by dressing up as a fat figure who people laugh at or take the piss out of eg miss piggy, and why would you do that to yourself.
Luckily I don't know anyone who would have an adult fancy dress party, if I did, I would decline the invitation.

TheLargestToblerone · 01/03/2025 18:28

Does the theme allow you to go as an undercover detective or Supergirl before she changes in a phone box or whatever? That's what I do and just wear normal clothes.

Abracadabra12345 · 01/03/2025 18:29

@SilkSquare
Use the low neckline black dress and high heels as a base to make you feel slimmer and taller and just add what ever might go with the theme
.

I was thinking exactly that too

Sparkletastic · 01/03/2025 18:30

I couldn't agree more OP. I was once invited to a 'Burlesque and Bowie' party. Obvs the idea was the laydeez dressed in sexy basques and the men could get away with a suit or a face painted lightning flash. I fully committed to my Goblin King Labyrinth costume.

Peaceandquietandacuppa · 01/03/2025 18:32

tiedyewhale · 01/03/2025 18:13

Loads of people have said similar. I feel stupid for not thinking of this.

All my life I've tried so hard to be the same as my slimmer friends to prove that my weight didn't hold me back - often at the cost of my dignity or my finances. They'll all be in sequins and feathers and bloody leotards. I might wear a nice dress and a top hat.

(My nice wrap dress is now too big!)

Put the £30 towards a lovely new wrap dress and just wear that 🥰

Peaceandquietandacuppa · 01/03/2025 18:32

Sparkletastic · 01/03/2025 18:30

I couldn't agree more OP. I was once invited to a 'Burlesque and Bowie' party. Obvs the idea was the laydeez dressed in sexy basques and the men could get away with a suit or a face painted lightning flash. I fully committed to my Goblin King Labyrinth costume.

👏👏👏

alwaysdeleteyourcookies · 01/03/2025 18:34

Sparkletastic · 01/03/2025 18:30

I couldn't agree more OP. I was once invited to a 'Burlesque and Bowie' party. Obvs the idea was the laydeez dressed in sexy basques and the men could get away with a suit or a face painted lightning flash. I fully committed to my Goblin King Labyrinth costume.

This is awesome, I admit 👏

SwanOfThoseThings · 01/03/2025 18:35

I think you were right to say something. If your friend has always been slim she probably, genuinely, has no idea that fancy dress isn't simple for people who are fat or even a non-standard sort of shape. I personally think fancy dress should always be optional.

In one of the Adrian Mole books, Adrian comments to the effect that the purpose of fancy dress for women is for them to look sexy - unfortunately he's voicing a truth there - you get no kudos as a woman for originality or humour.

I agree with pps' advice to wear something you're comfy in and make the fancy dress about your accessories and make-up.