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Bramblethorn said:IRL taller people tend not to be quite as wide in proportion to their height
Will chime in agreeing with everyone else. I wrote a BBW story...
I'm writing a story about a tall bbw who is 6ft and want her to be the same ratio weight as an average height bbw weighing around 200lbs (so more bbw than ssbbw). Is 300lbs too much or about right?
300 is positively obese.
At 71 inches an average frame would run out at about 180lb.
See the charts, like this one.
I agree with others, don't lock yourself in with "stats"...
That story opened my eyes to something that I wanted. Dunno if my preference was latent, or if I'm just easily lead by a good writer.![]()
BBW = "Big Beautiful Woman", so I doubt the OP is looking for an average frame.
Height/weight average stat charts are junk IMO, they're like 1 size fits all Army gear from WW2.
Yep, formulated from cadavers donated to medical research. You just have to think about what kind of cadavers they would be, to realised how unreliable the figures are.
And they don't have any relevance to anyone who does regular exercise.
Yep, formulated from cadavers donated to medical research. You just have to think about what kind of cadavers they would be, to realised how unreliable the figures are.
I don't think that's right. There's plenty of height/weight data taken from representative samples of live people - see e.g. here - so it's not like you'd need to use cadaver-sourced data.
(But I agree that measures like BMI are very badly flawed.)
Yep, formulated from cadavers donated to medical research. You just have to think about what kind of cadavers they would be, to realised how unreliable the figures are.
And they don't have any relevance to anyone who does regular exercise.
That's how they first formulated the charts, by liquidising cadavers to find out what actual body fat percentages they had. This came up when I was studying for my degree, when we were looking at how reliable different methods (skinfold calipers, scales, water displacement) were. At the time, there was no accurate way to calculate someone's body fat other than to liquidise them. Nowadays, some scanners can do it.
The Insurance Industry obtained a lot of data from live people from all walks of life.
It gave the actuaries something to work from.
So how heavy SHOULD a normal active woman, aged about 30, six foot one, weight then?.
It's no good blinding us with science, such as BMI and then having a discussion about the applicability thereof. A simple average will suffice.
Sure sure, but the problem with 'average' when applied to humans is that there are 7 or 8 billion of us.