Curves and length signal both frailty and strength:
The secret of shapely legs revealed
Kate Moss and Nicole Kidman have them; Greta Garbo did too. And for
two pins, many women would gladly swap theirs, with something like half
of women reportedly hating their legs.
Now
plastic surgeons have defined the perfect pair: long with the bones in a
straight line from thigh to slim ankle, the outline curving out and in
at key points. Straight and slender legs are considered especially
attractive, say researchers because they combine fragility and strength.
They spent 12 years of studying photographs of models and athletes.
Using data from sources as diverse as Leonardo da Vinci, Greek statues
and even Barbie dolls, they analysed legs widely accepted as the most
attractive in the western world.
"The goal of this research was to have an ideal aesthetic model" - on
which to base plastic surgery - says a report in the medical journal,
Aesthetic Plastic Surgery.
The primary requirement for beautiful legs, says the study, is
straight bones: a line going through the top of the thigh, the middle of
the knee joint, and the middle of the ankle joint: "As soon as the
column departs from the straight axis, it deviates from our perception
of beauty."
But straightness alone is not enough: on the inside of the leg, the
calf needs to have a well-defined convex curve, short, but pronounced,
say researchers. And then a short concave curve as it descends into the
ankle.
The outside of the perfect leg has a much longer and smoother convex
curve. The curves on the inside and the outside of the legs should not
be symmetrical.
Mark Soldin, consultant plastic surgeon at St George's and Kingston
hospitals, and a spokesman for the British Association of Plastic,
Reconstructive and Aesthetic Surgeons, said: "High heels make the leg
more attractive because the elevation of the heel enhances the convexity
of the upper calf muscles, while making the ankle region appear even
thinner, more fragile and feminine."
- The Independent
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