![]() ![]() You're going to meet some exciting new people. It's going to focus a lot on what I'm doing now. Julia Haart: My family and I are going to take people even deeper into who we are and what we do. Here, Haart further elaborates on the “Bridget Jones problem” with most undergarments, the status of her faith, and what’s in store for the second season of her hit show.īrian Underwood: Can you share anything about season two of My Unorthodox Life? And we don’t have those seam lines because we fuse the materials together. “Our color is fused into the thread, so you don’t get those annoying white lines when the garment stretches. “We’ve completely changed the way color is put into the material,” she says. Inclusive of all body types (sizes range up to XXX-large with an F cup) and designed to be shown off, the line addresses many of the common problems Haart saw with current shapewear offerings. Instead, Haart wants to celebrate women-and her latest venture, a shapewear line called +Body by Haart+Lieu, aims to do just that. We should not be defined by our biology.” Stop telling women they must hide themselves. “This is coming from a place of, ‘There’s so much beauty in this world let’s make it better.’ Stop covering up women. ![]() She doesn’t quite see it that way: “My show isn’t coming from a place of anger,” Haart tells Oprah Daily. Critics lambasted Haart for “misrepresenting” Orthodox Judaism and perpetuating negative stereotypes. The wildly popular show struck a chord, but that’s not to say it wasn’t without its detractors. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |