Jenice Armstrong: Fajas: Not your granny's girdle

April 06, 2011
  • Unhappy with U.S. underwear offerings, Patricia Areila opened Intimate Expressions, where she sells the fajas that are popular in her native Colombia.

EVER HEAR of fajas?

Neither had I.

But after a news release landed in my inbox late last week about a fajas boutique on El Bloque de Oro, a/k/a the Golden Block of North Philadelphia, my curiosity was piqued. Colombian women are legendary for their beauty, and if there was some sort of "secret" to it, as was hinted on the Internet, I wanted to know more. So on Saturday afternoon, I rang the buzzer of Intimate Expressions, at 4648 N.5th St., and walked into an exotic universe of women's girdles.

Once I got past the pretty things that squeeze your middle and the sexy Brazilian bra-and-panty sets up front, I wasn't sure if I'd died and awakened in elasticized heaven or hell. There was some of the usual shapewear I've seen at the mall, but Intimate Expressions specializes in the heavy-duty industrial-strength variety of girdle, the kind that starts at your knees and goes up over your chest and squeezes away every bit of unwanted jiggle. Wear this and nobody's going to be asking, "Want some milk with that shake?" To my novice eye, this was serious stuff, with the intimidating rows of hooks and eyes, zippers and straps to prove it.

Story continues below.

When Patricia Areila started pulling out the fajas, which sell for about $150, I saw that there are varying degrees of squeezitude. She even sells tube-shaped models that tame arm flab.

I didn't try on any of the girdles. My rule is if I try on a dress and it needs something extra to make it work, I find another dress. In hindsight, I wish I had given the fajas a try, though, because I hear they aren't as uncomfortable as they look.

"We have a light, a moderate and a high compression, depending on your tolerance," said Juan Duque, U.S. president of Leonisa, a well-known, Colombia-based manufacturer of fajas that officially entered the U.S. market in 2009. "A lot of people start on light and then they move up to medium and then they move to one of our higher-compression garments."

"Women in Colombia are very into vanity. The standards are very high. It's part of the culture of the country for women," said Duque, now based in Atlanta. "Fajas in Colombia started in the early '90s. That's when they really became mainstream in Colombia."

Areila, who moved to the United States in 1997 to study English at Temple University, would stock up on lingerie when she was back home in her native Colombia because she couldn't find the kind of underwear in this country to which she was accustomed.

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