The Fall and Rise of a Plus-Size Empire

After two brushes with death, Ashley Stewart is alive and well.
“I love the fit. They know how to accentuate curves.” —Tanza Baker, 36, minister, motivational speaker, model, musician. Baker and the women in the following photos, all Ashley Stewart devotees, were photographed in Brooklyn, N.Y., wearing the November holiday collection.

“I love the fit. They know how to accentuate curves.” —Tanza Baker, 36, minister, motivational speaker, model, musician. Baker and the women in the following photos, all Ashley Stewart devotees, were photographed in Brooklyn, N.Y., wearing the November holiday collection.

Photographer: Malike Sidibe for Bloomberg Businessweek

Chary Wright knows that for bigger women, shopping for clothes can be rough. Until a few years ago, some mainstream retailers didn’t carry anything larger than a size 12. Stores that did might have stocked only one or two pieces. Or maybe they had plenty but just put out the extra smalls, smalls, and mediums, requiring anyone who needed a different size to ask an always-slender saleswoman, a living, breathing reminder that fashion is for thin people. Wright has spent 18 years making shopping fun for plus-size women. At an Ashley Stewart in a New Jersey shopping plaza, she sells clothes in sizes 12 to 26. She listens to customers who sometimes feel bad about their bodies and, like many women who work in Ashley Stewart Inc.’s shops, plays the role of stylish sister-friend.

“I hear it all the time: ‘I’m too fat. I’m ugly,’ ” says Wright, an area manager. The youngest and chubbiest of 14 cousins, she grew up with an ex-model for a mother, a woman who insisted that Wright focus on school, be kind to senior citizens, and sit up straight. The day I meet Wright, she’s wearing a ruffled orange blouse, and her short hair has longish bangs tipped in gold. “I make her look in the mirror. I’ll sit her in her underwear and her bra and say, ‘Look at you. You are gorgeous. Own your beauty.’ ”