• Tall Ladies in need
  • Tall Women Likely To Live Longer

    Tall Women Likely To Live Longer

    Written By: Kim Buckley

    Taller women are more likely to live longer.

    According to new medical research, women who are taller than 5 foot 9 are more likely to live into their 90s than women who are shorter than 5 foot 3.

    The study from The Netherlands found that a woman's height and weight has a bigger influence on their life span then a man's.

    The study also found that greater physical activity results in a longer life but not for both sexes.

    The more exercise that men do the more likely they'll will live to old age, but for women, 60 minutes a day is all that's required and doing more doesn't make a difference.

    Read the original article

  • Tall Women Live Longer Than Short Ones, Recent Study Says

    Tall Women Live Longer Than Short Ones, Recent Study Says

    March 11, 2019 - Asheley Rice

    According to a new study that lasted for 30 years, tall women have more chances to live longer than short ones. The study was published by the Journal of Epidemiology & Community Health.

    Tall women are more likely to have a longer life

    The study started in 1986, and 120,000 women and men with ages between 55 and 69 took part in the research. The data comes from the Netherlands Cohort Study. What the study found was that women who are 5 ft 9 when they are 40 years old have 31% more chances to live until they reach 90 than women who are 5 ft 3 or shorter at the same age.

    But even though taller women seem to have an aging advantage over shorter women, the same thing doesn't really apply to men.

    Men who are engaged in more physical activity might live longer

    As far as the height is concerned, this doesn't seem to play such an essential role in how long a man can live. What matters more for men are physical activity levels. The study showed that men who exercised for more than 90 minutes every day had 39% more chances to reach 90 than those who exercised for less than 30 minutes a day.

    When it comes to women, those who exercised for approximately 30-60 minutes per day had 21% more chances to reach 90 than women who exercised for less than 30 minutes a day.

    Women are believed to have more chances for a long life than men

    Another thing that the study found was that no matter how tall or short the women were, they were more likely to live longer than the men. 34.4% of the women who participated in the research lived until they reached 90, while only 16.7% of the men lived until the same age.

    Physical exercise is important

    There might be a link between tall women and physical exercise, as they may exercise more than those who are shorter, but this has not been proven.

    Nevertheless, exercising plays a crucial role in having a healthy life, regardless if you're a woman or a man. Maintaining a healthy life will undoubtedly increase your chances of living longer.

    Read the original article

  • Tall, Thin Women at Higher Risk of Developing Endometriosis, Study Confirms

    June 14, 2017 by Magdalena Kegel In News.

    Tall, thin girls, adolescents and young women are at higher risk of developing endometriosis, according to a study by U.S. and French researchers.

    How body composition influences the risk of endometriosis is a matter of debate. Researchers at Harvard’s T.H. Chan School of Public Health and INSERM at the Paris-Saclay University in France hypothesized that hormone-related factors play a role.

    The study, “Associations among body size across the life course, adult height and endometriosis, confirmed earlier research on the connection between body composition and endometriosis. It was published in the journal Human Reproduction.

    Researchers found 2,416 French women diagnosed with endometriosis among 61,208 who were part of a prospective study. That kind of study is a long-term look at people with mostly similar characteristics, such as age.

    Since cancer can impact a woman’s risk of developing endometriosis, the researchers excluded those with a history of cancer from the study.

    Women who were lean at 8 years old, when they had their first period, or when they were 20–25 years old were at higher risk of developing endometriosis than those with average or stouter body sizes, the team found.

    They also found a link between body size when a woman was older and endometriosis, but it was not statistically significant.

    The link between leanness and endometriosis held up when researchers accounted for factors such as the age when a woman had her first period, whether she had used oral contraceptives, and the level of her physical activity.

    In terms of height, the study found that women 165 cm (about 5-5) or taller were more likely to have endometriosis than women who were less than 158 cm (5-2 feet). One hundred sixty-five centimeters equates to about 5 feet, 5 inches and 158 cm to about 5 feet, 2 inches.

    Another finding was that those of medium height were at higher risk of developing endometriosis than those who were shorter.

    Several factors can influence height, so the research team also measured a woman’s height while sitting and her leg length. Women with a sitting height of 87 cm — about 34 inches — or more were at increased risk of developing endometriosis than those with a sitting height of 82 cm — about 32 inches — or less. There was no correlation between leg length and the disease.

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  • Taller, Bigger Women May Face Irregular Heartbeat Risk

    Chances of atrial fibrillation rise along with body size, but remain low overall, study says

    By HealthDay Reporter

    MONDAY, April 10, 2017 (HealthDay News) -- Big or tall women are nearly three times as likely to develop the dangerous irregular heart rhythm known as atrial fibrillation as smaller women, a preliminary study says.

    The larger a woman's body size as a young adult, the more likely she is to develop the heart disorder later in life, according to the researchers.

    "There was a stepwise elevation in risk with increasing body size," said study author Dr. Annika Rosengren.

    "The group with the highest body surface area had nearly three times the risk as those with the lowest body surface area," added Rosengren, a professor of internal medicine at the University of Gothenburg in Sweden.

    Atrial fibrillation is an irregular heartbeat that develops in the atria -- the two upper chambers of the heart. The quivering heartbeat increases risk of stroke, heart failure and other heart rhythm problems, according to the American Heart Association.

    It's the most common heart rhythm disorder, and everyone has a 1 in 5 chance of developing atrial fibrillation during their lifetime, the researchers said in background information. The problem occurs most often in people older than 60.

    "The implications may be substantial, because the world population is growing taller as well as heavier," Rosengren said. "We might be looking at substantially more AF in the future."

    A previous study found that husky or tall young men were more likely to develop atrial fibrillation as they aged, particularly if they gained weight, Rosengren said.

    To see if this also occurs in women, Rosengren and her colleagues reviewed data on 1.5 million Swedish women.

    Using a national birth registry, the researchers gathered information on women with a first pregnancy (average age 28). The registry contained data on height and weight, which the researchers used to determine each woman's body surface size. The registry also had information on other heart risk factors such as diabetes, high blood pressure and smoking.

    The investigators tracked the women for 16 years on average. During that time, more than 7,000 women were hospitalized with atrial fibrillation, at an average age of 49.

    Compared to the smallest women, the largest women had a 2.6-times increased risk of atrial fibrillation, after adjusting for other risk factors, the researchers found. They also found that the risk increased with women's initial body size.

    Rosengren said having a big body means having a big heart with larger-than-usual atria, which raises the risk of atrial fibrillation.

    Dr. Allan Stewart is director of aortic surgery for Mount Sinai Health System in New York City. He said heart muscle tissue serves a dual function. Each cell contributes to the regular heart muscle contractions that pump blood through the body. But the cells also pass along an electrical impulse that controls the rhythm of the heartbeat, he explained.

    Big atria challenge this heart function. "You have the same number of cells, but when they're stretched and they increase in size, it interrupts the electrical pathway of the heart," Stewart said. "You go from a normal rhythm to atrial fibrillation."

    Just being big in and of itself likely adds to the problem, said Stewart, who wasn't involved in the study.

    "You're more likely to have more pressure against your heart and more pressure against your lungs, and these can cause the atrium to distend," he said.

    Still, larger females shouldn't worry. Even in big women, the absolute risk of developing atrial fibrillation remained low in this study, less than 0.5 percent, noted Dr. Neil Bernstein. He's a cardiac electrophysiologist with Lenox Hill Hospital in New York City.

    "The more interesting fact will be the data as this group ages, since there is a well-known increase in the incidence of atrial fibrillation with age," said Bernstein, who had no role in the study.

    Based on these findings, people who are naturally big or tall need to eat right, exercise and take other lifestyle steps to protect their heart health, Stewart and Bernstein said.

    It also would pay for doctors to keep a closer eye on the heart health of tall or husky men and women as they grow older, Stewart added.

    The findings were presented Friday at a meeting of the European Society of Cardiology in Malaga, Spain. Studies presented at meetings are usually considered preliminary until published in a peer-reviewed medical journal.

    More information

    For more on atrial fibrillation, visit the American Heart Association.

    SOURCES: Annika Rosengren, M.D., professor, internal medicine, University of Gothenburg, Sweden; Allan Stewart, M.D., director, aortic surgery, Mount Sinai Health System, New York City: Neil Bernstein, M.D., cardiac electrophysiologist, Lenox Hill Hospital, New York City; April 7, 2017, European Society of Cardiology meeting, Malaga, Spain

    Last Updated:

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  • The girl who is too tall to walk

    The girl who is too tall to walk: Teenager who stands at SEVEN FOOT relies on a wheelchair as her bones can't support her body 

    • Rumeysa Gelgi, 19, from Turkey is world's tallest female teenager
    • Has Weaver Syndrome, which causes accelerated bone growth 
    • Says her parents help her cope as they always made her feel special
    • Features in new TLC series of Body Bizarre

    By Siofra Brennan For Mailonline
    Published: 10:25 GMT, 28 September 2016 | Updated: 12:40 GMT, 28 September 2016

    Towering at a staggering seven foot tall, Rumeysa Gelgi is the world's tallest teenage girl. Hailing from Safranbolu, a small town in the north of Turkey, the 19-year-old always stood out from her friends growing up. Rumeysa said: 'I received long stares from people because I looked different and they were naturally curious about me.

    The teenager suffers from a rare condition called Weaver Syndrome - at the time of her birth in 1997 there had only been 20 reported cases. People with the condition experience rapid growth from birth, as well as other health issues such as a lack of knee and elbow extension, making activities like walking or running very difficult.

    She added: 'I became aware of my health condition when I was about five or six years old. I started to wonder why I looked different from other kids of my age.' As well as Weaver Syndrome, Rumeysa also suffers from scoliosis, a condition which has given her a curvature of the spine.

    Due to her rapid growth, Rumeysa has issues getting around as her bones struggle to support her body and she relies on her parents' help. Her mother, Safiye Gelgi, gave birth to her six weeks prematurely as doctors noticed she was above average size even as a baby due to her condition. Safiye said: 'Rumeysa was a big baby at the very early stages of my pregnancy.

    'My doctor told me that she was not a normal baby. Because of that she was born early at seven and a half months.'

    Growing up Rumeysa's condition became more apparent as she rapidly grew and had more distinct features. 'She was taller than normal. She had deep, raspy voice. Her hands and feet were big. She looked very unusual not like other babies.' Safiye added.

    Despite her rare condition the tall teen remains upbeat, thanks in part to her loving parents. She said: 'As a child I questioned myself but I never felt unhappy. I overcome this with my parents' help. 'They told me that this syndrome is was rare. Because of them I felt the most important person in the world.' Rumeysa was certified the tallest female teenager in the world by Guinness World Records in 2014. Rumeysa said: 'It's one of my biggest dreams to be awarded with this record. 'Being a record-holder is a very amazing thing. I know that only the special people can make it and I know I'm one of them now.'

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  • The Height of Ignorance: Why the Media is Fascinated with the Link Between Covid-19 and Height

    Jemima Sinclair considers the importance our society places on height, in light of new data that suggests taller people are more susceptible to catching Covid-19.

    By Jemima Sinclair - 21st August 2020

    A new study by data scientists in UK, US and Norway has just suggested that men over 6ft tall are almost twice as likely to get Covid-19 than others, and there's a lot to unpack here. 

    To begin with, and most importantly, this is potentially key evidence that the virus is airborne and spread through aerosols, something that may further our understanding of the virus and lead towards a quicker development of treatment and vaccines. Furthermore, the widespread reaction to this particular study highlights some of the major problems with media-driven responses to Covid-19; every major newspaper has focused on the extent to which height is a predicator for Covid-19, while severely underreporting the study's other findings that link Covid-19 with activities typical of people of lower socioeconomic status, such as shared kitchen and living spaces. 

    However, as a woman who is over 6ft tall, my knee-jerk reaction was not to consider either of these things. Instead, I headed straight into the Tall Girl mind-set that not only is being tall objectively terrible, as proven by the fact that we're more susceptible to Covid-19, but being tall and female is worse, because female results weren't even included in the study. So not only are we shafted by the disadvantage of being tall, but as girls, we're also marginalised within the tall community because 'so few women' are over 6ft that there's no point in studying them. Poor us.

    But then I gave myself a metaphorical slap around the face. In times as bizarre and frankly dystopian as these, the audacity of someone just over 6ft complaining about a 'disadvantage' is laughable. Anyone who's seen the 2019 Netflix film 'Tall Girl' (or more likely its hundreds of parodies on TikTok) will remember the backlash at the title character whining, 'You think your life is hard? I'm a high-school junior wearing… men's Size 13 Nikes. Beat that.' One TikTok user succinctly replied to this, 'I've got cancer'. In other words, minor inconveniences based on being slightly above average height are not grounds for believing your life is harder than anyone else's. I'm not saying it's always a joy to be a tall girl, especially in senior school – standing in the back row of school photos, occasionally being referred to as 'giraffe', and (most crushingly) watching my short friends date all the available tall boys were all part of the typical Tall Experience. But everyone has a terrible time for some reason in school, and out of that environment, the biggest height-related issue I face now is worrying the Top-Shop sale will run out of tall jeans. And I'm well aware that in the current circumstances, it would be an insane privilege to put energy into worrying about that. 

    Not every tall person has it as easy though. My 'little' brother, 6'8 at seventeen years old, faces far more trouble in his daily life thanks to his height – doorways are too low, beds are too short, hardly any clothes are available in his size and so on – and yet at the moment his biggest worry is his future. As one of the Year 13 students confronted with cancelled A Levels and government-decided grades this year, he hasn't got the luxury of worrying that his feet will be hanging off a single bed in halls; all he cares about is whether he'll be going to university in the first place. 

    Even if he did have time to worry about his height, there's a good chance he wouldn't: a wealth of evidence suggests that tall people have had happier childhoods, are more likely to succeed, and end up wealthier than average. Livescience, links greater height to better nutrition in childhood and suggests taller people are more likely to be hired for jobs, while a study from Exeter University in 2016 demonstrated that for men, every 6.3 cm in height added about £1,580 to their annual salary (the Guardian article which reported this adds, characteristically, 'A smaller effect was seen for women'). This all seems to suggest what many people have suspected for centuries: people (especially men) who are tall, are more fortunate than those who are not.

    Therefore, though this Covid-19 study demonstrates there's a way in which tall people actually do have it rough, the universal tall experience is fairly decent. Beyond this, the fact that reports are downplaying the study's other findings in favour of a focus on height suggests a more worrying trend. At first, this focus makes complete sense: it gives strong evidence that Covid-19 is an airborne virus, which is pretty ground-breaking. But it's interesting that the connection between height and Covid-19 fascinates us more than the other links found in this study. Shared kitchens, use of public transport, and lower income levels are also reported in the study to be predicators of Covid-19, but these are relegated to further down the list in most of the articles available. Even in the stupor of a locked-down summer, it doesn't take much thinking to realise that these other findings are fairly conclusively linked to lower socioeconomic status. 

    With a cynical mind-set (the kind that can only come from months stuck at home watching the news with my parents), it could seem as though the sensational appeal of the 'height link' exemplifies the media's boredom with talking about those pesky poor people. It seems reporters have reached their breaking point for pretending to care about the multiple studies showing that BAME people, the elderly, people with underlying conditions and those with lower incomes are disproportionally affected, instead rejoicing that finally, there's an angle on Covid-19 that isn't depressingly linked to poverty and disadvantage.  And as previously discussed, tall people statistically fit this profile far less than anyone else. 

    The height focus may also imply that tall people (and perhaps by extension people of higher socioeconomic status) are seen as unfairly targeted by the virus, while those who are more disadvantaged somehow deserve it more. There's definitely a sense that the government and media see other factors as preventable (Just travel by car! Just spend time in your own garden!), despite these solutions' links to higher incomes. In contrast, height is seen as random, even though it can be anything but. 

    It's a fairly dark reading, but these are fairly dark times. Hopefully it'll turn out that all this is just quarantine-brain talking, and the truth is people care about all these factors equally. But I won't hold my breath to find out – even if it does halve the risk of Covid-19 at my height. 

    SOURCES

    The study: https://www.medrxiv.org/content/10.1101/2020.07.13.20152819v1

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  • Volvo is launching an initiative to protect female car occupants

    Volvo will share crash-safety data to help make other cars safer

    by Jake Holmes | March 20, 2019 3:30 PM PDT

    Volvo wants to help reduce injuries and deaths from car accidents, regardless of manufacturer, so it is embarking on a new initiative to share information with other carmakers. Volvo announced Wednesday at a press conference in Sweden that it will share its data on crash-test safety with other automakers for free. It was announced along with Volvo's plans for in-car cameras designed to counter intoxicated and distracted driving.

    The data-sharing move comes in the 60th anniversary year of the automaker's decision to equip all cars with three-point seatbelts as standard. Back then, Volvo decided not to charge other companies to use the technology. Three-point belts thus quickly spread worldwide, which Volvo Cars CEO Håkan Samuelsson told journalists "has probably saved over one million lives, not in Volvos only but in all brands."

    Volvo has a huge trove of crash-test data that it can share, and it's thanks in part to those three-point belts. In 1966, the company began studiously examining crashes involving Volvo cars to see whether seatbelts made a difference (spoiler alert: they reduced injuries by 50 percent). Then in 1970, Volvo formed the Accident Research Team, which is on-call 24-7 to visit any crash site involving a Volvo within a one-hour drive of the company's headquarters in Gothenburg, Sweden. For Volvo crashes further afield in Sweden, the company draws on insurance records, medical data and surveys sent to the involved drivers to build up even more information.

    "And that provides in-depth information, which is a world of information … of the injury mechanisms and the occupants' different needs for protection," Lotta Jakobsson, senior technical specialist at Volvo Cars Safety Center, told journalists.

    Jakobsson emphasizes that Volvo won't be sharing raw data points, but rather interpretations and analyses other companies can use to make their cars safer. As well as the altruistic goal of helping improve car safety, the sharing initiative is intended to help Volvo learn from what other companies are doing: "I also want to learn something," Jakobsson said.

    The announcement goes hand-in-hand with Volvo's launch of Project EVA, which stands for Equal Vehicles for All. Jakobsson says that carmakers don't test with a very diverse set of dummy sizes and designs, and as a result, women, as well as people outside of average heights and weight ranges, tend to fare much worse in car crashes. Project EVA's goal is to focus specifically on addressing that deficit by recognizing that computer models and dummies need to represent more body types.

    "People are different, nobody looks exactly like that," Jakobsson said, pointing at a nearby crash-test dummy.

    For one specific example of how the company has already addressed this, she cites Volvo's WHIPS anti-whiplash seat design introduced in 1998. Volvo data showed women, and especially tall women, were significantly more likely to incur whiplash neck injuries in crashes than men. (Why? "Still there's no good answer for this," Jakobsson said, though she says it's believed women's necks are more flexible.)

    As a result of that data, Volvo's WHIPS seats specifically focused on cutting down those whiplash injuries -- and data showed a 30-percent reduction in whiplash claims as a result. And that's exactly the type of safety improvement Volvo hopes it and other carmakers will be able to make as a result of Project EVA.

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  • What Your Height Says About Your Health

    Yes, how tall or short you are decides a few health issues you may experience in your lifetime, says a study. Read on to know more…

    By: Praveen Kumar Published: Thursday, December 22, 2016, 8:01 [IST]

    Most of us would love to be tall. However, many factors like genetics and lifestyle factors decide your height. And then does height decide your health?Well, some studies say that being tall or short can also decide the kind of health issues you experience or may not experience.Yes, some health issues are seen more in short people and some are seen more in tall people. So, read on to know what height says about health.

    Heart Issues

    A recent study claims that women who are tall have 25% fewer chances of suffering heart issues compared to shorter women. Though many other factors play a role, height can also be one factor. The taller a person is, the better it is for cardiovascular health.

    Cancer

    When it comes to cancer, shorter women are at an advantage, says a study. Some types of cancers like colon cancer, breast cancer and kidney cancer seem to affect tall people more.

    Blood Clots

    Another advantage of being short is that the chances of developing blood clots are lesser. The chances of suffering stroke due to clots in the blood are more in tall women, says a study.

    Pregnancy

    Tall women have higher chances of undergoing an effortless pregnancy. Also, the chances of developing gestational diabetes are lower in them. According to studies, shorter women may undergo more stress during pregnancy.

    Dementia

    Even in the case of dementia, taller women are at an advantage. According to a study, shorter women have higher chances of suffering from dementia.

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  • Why Tall Women Should Eat Their Vegetables

    By |

    NEW ORLEANS — Taller women are more likely to have physical or mental health problems by the time they reach their mid-70s than their shorter counterparts, a new study finds. However, rather than resigning to such a fate, women can take certain steps to ward off the negative effects of a tall stature.

    Several factors, including genetics and certain circumstances that take place early in life, influence how tall a person will be, the researchers wrote.

    Previous research showed taller people have a reduced risk of heart disease, but a greater risk of cancer, said Wenjie Ma, a doctoral student in epidemiology at Harvard University's School of Public Health and the lead author of the study. Ma presented her findings here Tuesday (Nov. 15) at the annual meeting of the American Heart Association's Scientific Sessions.

    But researchers didn't know how women's height would affect their overall health as they aged, Ma told Live Science.

    In the study, the researchers analyzed data on more than 68,000 women who were enrolled in the Nurses' Health Study. The women's heights, along with information about their BMI, smoking status, physical activity levels and diets, were recorded in 1980, when their average age was 44. [5 Key Nutrients Women Need As They Age]

    The study follow-up continued until 2012, when the researchers determined which women met the criteria for "healthy aging." A "healthy ager" was defined as a woman who had no reported memory problems, no physical problems, no mental health limitations and was free of 11 chronic diseases, such as cancer, Type 2 diabetes and kidney failure.

    The women were placed into five groups based on their height, Ma said. The median heights of the groups were 62 inches (157.5 cm), 63 inches (160 cm), 64 inches (162.6 cm), 66 inches (167.6) and 68 inches (172.2 cm).

    Compared with the group that had a median height of 62 inches, the women in the 68-inch group were less likely to meet the criteria for healthy aging, Ma said. The findings did not change when the researchers adjusted for factors such as ethnicity, marriage status, menopause status and family history of disease.

    It's not clear why taller women may be less likely to experience healthy aging — future studies should look at this question, the researchers said.

    But when the researchers studied the women's lifestyle factors, including diet, they found that tall women who reported eating a healthy diet fared better than those who didn't. In other words, eating a healthy diet appeared to soften the association between taller height and unhealthy aging.

    The healthy diet that appeared to have a positive effect was rich in fruits, vegetables and whole grains, Ma said.  

    The researchers noted that the study found an association, and does not prove there is a cause-and-effect relationship between being taller and experiencing more health problems during aging.

    More research is needed to see if the findings apply to other groups of people, the researchers said. The findings have not been published in a peer-reviewed journal.  

    Originally published on Live Science.

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  • Woman who is 6ft 4ins with size ELEVEN feet resorts to designing her own range of shoes after struggling to find footwear to fit
    • Caroline Stillman has designed 10 pairs of shoes for women with large feet
    • Wears a size 11 and is 6ft 4in tall as a result of Marfan Syndrome
    • Was buying footwear in a size 8 shoe when she was just 12 years old
    • 23-year-old will launch Carobella shoes online in coming months

    By Martha Cliff for MailOnline
    Published: 12:36 GMT, 13 April 2016 | Updated: 15:44 GMT, 13 April 2016

    A woman is set to launch her own collection of footwear after struggling to find shoes to fit her size 11 feet.

    Caroline Stillman, 23, from Rutland, Leicestershire, stands at 6ft 4in tall and was wearing an adult size eight shoe before she was 12.

    Throughout her teens she struggled to find footwear in her size - meaning that while her friends wore fashionable designs, the leggy blonde was left in frumpy flats.

    Frustrated at the lack of options for tall women with big feet, Caroline - who wears a size 10 or 11 shoe depending on the shop - decided to take matters into her own hands.

    Caroline, whose legs alone are more than 3ft long, studied a fashion course at her local college before enrolling at the London College of Fashion.

    Spurred on by the petite, small-footed fashionistas around her, she began thinking up designs for shoes she would love to wear herself but had never been able to.

    Now, after years of pining to wear beautiful shoes, Caroline has turned her dream into a reality - and will launch her own range of footwear this summer.

    The shoes - fashionable flats inspired by top designers like Valentino and Christian Dior - will be made in sizes eight to 11 and sold on her website.

    Caroline said she hopes her shoes will be stocked at fashionable high-street stores like Topshop and Selfridges one day.

    She said: 'I was really interested in fashion from an early age but I struggled to find nice shoes to go with my outfits.

    'I remember going into shoe shops with my mum as a child and trying on size eight adult ladies' shoes when I was about 10 or 11. It was frustrating.

    'If I was going somewhere nice with my girlfriends they would always have really nice shoes. I thought I would never be able to wear or find anything like that.

    'I would always have to buy shoes from different websites. There wasn't a big range of styles and there weren't any fashionable ones at all.

    'They would all be aimed at older women - not teenagers or girly girls, like me.'

    After walking through her teenage years in unfashionable footwear, desperate Caroline decided enough was enough.

    She said: 'I've always been into fashion, so I decided to study fashion design at college.

    'That was when I realised there was a gap in the market. I started designing and making shoes that I would love to wear myself.

    'I thought, if I can make these shoes easily then why can't I make them for other girls?'

    She added: 'I'm launching this range because I think everyone deserves to be able to experience wearing a beautiful pair of shoes.

    'I hope that I can help bring that dream to life for some people who might find it harder to find shoes like myself.'

    Caroline's height is due to Marfan Syndrome, an inherited chromosomal disorder which can cause heart and eye problems as well as exceptional growth.

    Common complications include a leaky and enlarged aortic valve, meaning Caroline is being closely monitored by medics and will one day have to have open heart surgery.

    Sufferers also often have extra-long arms and legs, are tall and thin and have long, slender fingers - like the Stillmans.

    Although being tall is not unusual in the family - Caroline's mother, Sarah, stands at 6ft tall and her brother Sam, 24, is 6ft 7ins - she hasn't always felt normal.

    At secondary school, cruel bullies taunted her relentlessly about her height, calling her a 'lanky b****' and 'giraffe legs'.

    Caroline, who has just graduated from her final year at De Montfort University with a degree in footwear design, said: 'I was always tall, always different, even as a little girl.

    'In primary school I didn't have any problems but at secondary school I was teased all the time. Girls would call me lanky and a giant.

    'It made me feel so horrible. I didn't have a problem with how I looked, so it was horrible that other children did.'

    The teasing was so severe that Caroline was forced to move from Uppingham Community College in Rutland, Leics., to Stamford Girls School, Lincs.

    Since then, Caroline said most people have been supportive and complimentary, and she was even approached by a model scout about a job on the catwalk.

    But the passionate entrepreneur decided she would rather design shoes than model them and set up Carobella Boutique, in spite of warnings from doubtful tutors.

    Her first range, which is set to be unveiled in the coming months, will consist of around 10 pairs of luxury flat shoes for tall women.

    'The shoes are all kind of simple. I have got big feet so I don't really want them to stand out any more than they do already,' she said.

    'They are all very elegant and beautiful. I'm so excited to let everyone see them.'

    Caroline's dad, Bill, who is 6ft tall himself, added: 'Dealing with the Marfan Syndrome has been really difficult for the family.

    'I'm so proud of what Caroline has achieved.' 

    Read the original article (contains pictures)

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