Standards
[edit]
A variety of plastic size markers commonly attached to a clothes hanger in stores to indicate an item's size
International standards[edit]
There are several ISO standards for size designation of clothes, but most of them are being revised and replaced by one of the parts of ISO 8559 which closely resembles European Standard EN 13402:
ISO 3635:1981, Size designation of clothes: Definitions and body measurement procedure (withdrawn, replaced by ISO 8559-1)
ISO 3636:1977, Size designation of clothes: Men's and boys' outerwear garments (withdrawn, replaced by ISO 8559-2)
ISO 3637:1977, Size designation of clothes: Women's and girls' outerwear garments (withdrawn, replaced by ISO 8559-2)
ISO 3638:1977, Size designation of clothes: Infants garments (withdrawn, replaced by ISO 8559-2)
ISO 4415:1981, Size designation of clothes: Men's and boys' underwear, nightwear and shirts (withdrawn, replaced by ISO 8559-2)
ISO 4416:1981, Size designation of clothes: Women's and girls' underwear, nightwear, foundation garments and shirts (withdrawn, replaced by ISO 8559-2)
ISO 4417:1977, Size designation of clothes: Headwear (withdrawn, replaced by ISO 8559-2)
ISO 4418:1978, Size designation of clothes: Gloves (withdrawn, replaced by ISO 8559-2)
ISO 5971:1981, 2017, Size designation of clothes: Pantyhose
ISO 7070:1982, Size designation of clothes - Hosiery
ISO 8559:1989, Garment construction and anthropometric surveys: Body dimensions (withdrawn, replaced by ISO 8559-1)
ISO 8559-1:2017, Size designation of clothes: Part 1: Anthropometric definitions for body measurement
ISO 8559-2:2017, Size designation of clothes: Part 2: Primary and secondary dimension indicators
ISO 8559-3:2018, Size designation of clothes: Part 3: Methodology of the creation of the body measurement tables and intervals
ISO 8559-3:2023, Size designation of clothes: Part 4: Determination of the coverage ratios of body measurement tables
ISO/TR 10652:1991, Standard sizing systems for clothes (withdrawn)
Asian standards[edit]
Chinese standards[edit]
GB 1335-81
GB/T 1335.1-2008 Size designation of clothes - Men
GB/T 1335.2-2008 Size designation of clothes - Women
GB/T 1335.3-2008 Size designation of clothes - Children
GB/T 2668-2002 Sizes for coats, jackets and trousers
GB/T 14304-2002 Sizes for woolen garments
Japanese standards[edit]
JIS L 4001 (1997) Sizing systems for infants' garments
JIS L 4002 (1997) Sizing systems for boys' garments
JIS L 4003 (1997) Sizing systems for girls' garments
JIS L 4004 (1997) Sizing systems for men's garments
JIS L 4005 (1997) Sizing systems for women's garments
JIS L 4006 (1997) Sizing systems for foundation garments
JIS L 4007 (1997) Sizing systems for Hosiery and Pantyhose
Korean standards[edit]
KS K 0050 (2009) Men's wear
KS K 0051 (2004) Women's wear
KS K 0052 Infants
KS K 0059 Headgear
KS K 0070 Brassiere
KS K 0037 Dress Shirts
KS K 0088 Socks
Thai standards[edit]
Wacoal (1981, 1987)
Australian standards[edit]
L9 - Women's clothing - Apparel Manufacturers Association of NSW - 1959-1970
AS1344-1972, 1975, 1997 Size coding scheme for women's clothing
AS1182 - 1980 - Size coding scheme for infants and children's clothing
European standards[edit]
The European Standards Organisation (CEN) produced a series of standards, prefixed with EN 13402:
EN 13402-1: Terms, definitions and body measurement procedure (2001, withdrawn and replace by ISO 8559-1:2020)
EN 13402-2: Primary and secondary dimensions (2002, withdrawn and replaced by ISO 8559-2:2020)
EN 13402-3: Size designation of clothes. Body measurements and intervals (2004, 2007, 2014, 2017)
EN 13402-4: Coding system (2006)
These are intended to replace the existing national standards of the 33 member states. It is currently in common use for children's clothing, but not yet for adults.[when?] The third standard EN 13402-3 seeks to address the problem of irregular or vanity sizing through offering a SI unit based labelling system, which will also pictographically describe the dimensions a garment is designed to fit, per the ISO 3635 standard.
German standards[edit]
DOB-Verband (1983)
French standards[edit]
AFNOR NF G 03-001 (1977) - Human body - Vocabulary - Pictogram;
AFNOR EXP G 03-002 (1977) - Women Measures
AFNOR EXP G 03-003 (1977) - Men Measures
AFNOR EXP G 03-006 (1978) - Measures of babies and young children
AFNOR EXP G 03-007 (1977) - Size designation of clothes for men, women and children
AFNOR NF G 03-008 (1984) - Tights - Sizes - Designation - Marking
Russian standards[edit]
GOST R 53230-2008 (ISO 4415-1981) Size designation of clothes. Men's and boy's underwear, nightwear and shirts
British standards[edit]
Clothes-size label with EN 13402-3 pictogram and body dimensions in centimetres (found on a high-visibility jacket sold in the United Kingdom)
BS 3666:1982 Specification for size designation of women's wear
BS 6185:1982 Specification for size designation of men's wear
BS 3666:1982, the standard for women's clothing, is rarely followed by manufacturers as it defines sizes in terms of hip and bust measurements only within a limited range. This has resulted in variations between manufacturers and a tendency towards vanity sizing.
Yugoslavian standards[edit]
Slovenia, Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, North Macedonia and Serbia still use the JUS (F.G0.001 1979, F.G0.002 1979, F.G0.003 1979) standards developed in the former Yugoslavia. In addition to typical girth measurements clothing is also marked to identify which of 5 height bands: X-Short, Short, Medium, Tall, X-Tall, and body types: Slim, Normal, or Full, it is designed to fit.
American standards[edit]
US standards[edit]
CS-151-50 - Infants, Babies, Toddlers and Children's clothing
CS 215-58 - Women's Clothing (1958)
PS 36-70 - Boys Clothing (1971)
PS 42-70 – Women's Clothing (1971)
PS 45-71 - Young Men's clothing
PS 54-72 - Girls Clothing
ASTM D5585-95 (2001)
ASTM D6829-02 (2008)
ASTM D5585-11 (2011) (withdrawn, 2020)
ASTM D6240-98
ASTM D6960-04 – Women's Plus sizes (2004)
There is no mandatory clothing size or labeling standard in the US, though a series of voluntary standards have been in place since the 1930s. The US government, however, did attempt to establish a system for women's clothing in 1958 when the National Bureau of Standards published Body Measurements for the Sizing of Women's Patterns and Apparel. The guidelines were made a commercial standard and were even updated in 1970. But the guide was eventually degraded to a voluntary standard until it was abolished altogether in 1983. Private organization ASTM International started to release its own recommended size carts in the 1990s.
Since then, the common US misses sizes have not had stable dimensions. Clothing brands and manufacturers size their products according to their preferences. For example, the dimensions of two size 10 dresses from different companies, or even from the same company, may have grossly different dimensions; and both are almost certainly larger than the size 10 dimensions described in the US standard. Vanity sizing may be partly responsible for this deviation (which began in earnest in the 1980s).