Words matter. These are the best Curves Quotes from famous people such as Jameela Jamil, Vanessa Marcil, Lindsey Vonn, Sebastian Horsley, Rick Moranis, and they’re great for sharing with your friends.
I thought it would be more of a challenge than it was to cater for every size, but as you’re aware of a woman’s curves – they’re kind of like a race track – you can create something glamorous and beautiful.
I’m not ready to be a woman yet, I’d like it if my body were more boyish. Maybe I’ll like my curves when I’m older but right now they kind of make me squirm.
People get nervous driving around corners, thinking they’re going to tip over. But you can go soooo much faster through the curves than you realize.
A woman is supposed to have curves like an old Bentley, not like some old bike.
Well, whether it’s on film or on TV, you don’t want to throw too many curves at your audio and video guys.
I do find that as a curvy girl, as I guess I’ve sort of been deemed, I don’t think you want to run your curves off, because then you’re just not yourself.
Over the holidays, and even during filming, I realized that I actually like my body, even if it’s not perfect according to the book. I just feel sexy. For the first time, I don’t want to get rid of the curves. I just want to tone it up. My body is comfortable, and it’s not unhealthy, so I’m going to rock with it.
Men are governed by lines of intellect – women: by curves of emotion.
I love my curves.
I like to be able to get swift curves in the plant drawings that are usually drawn in five to ten minutes.
With a stretch belt, anything can be a dress – a dinner napkin, a tablecloth, even a towel. Just wrap and snap, and away you go in an incredible outfit. Another plus is that the belt will pull all eyes to your lovely curves, and they even look good around a coat or a jacket.
A figure with curves always offers a lot of interesting angles.
I don’t get this whole super-skinny obsession. I really think women look more beautiful when they let their curves show.
It’s a refreshing moment to find a pair of jeans that just fit my curves perfectly and keep their shape – I hate when they start getting baggy at the knees.
Cindy Crawford, Naomi Campbell, Linda Evangelista, Helena Christensen and Claudia Schiffer really proved to me that curves and fashion can work in beautiful harmony.
I definitely have curves. I don’t intend on losing them.
You can see from the curves that I’m not working out – it’s just jelly!
I tend to curve my back or pop my hip on the side. I always like to turn a little bit profile, and if you put one of your knees in, it also gives the illusion of more curves. There are a lot of tricks – you learn on the job sometimes.
It wasn’t until I read ‘SI Swim’ that I was like, ‘Wow, I love my freckles, I like my thighs, I like my curves.’
Time repeats itself, so it’s up to you to keep up with the curves of the music and keep reinventing yourself so you can be better than what you are.
Novelists are stamina merchants, grinders, nine-to-fivers, and their career curves follow the usual arc of human endeavour.
I’m not ashamed of showing my curves to the world. Bodies are beautiful when they’re full and healthy and fit. I’ve always had curves and I’ll always be proud of them.
I’m trying to throw more curves because I’m always throwing fastball, slider, fastball, slider.
I was going through puberty and was much curvier than other girls, which made me insecure. Then I saw J. Lo on the cover of ‘Latina’ magazine, and she embraced those curves and was proud of who she was.
We aren’t upset when Paramount makes a $200 million movie that flops, but if a charity experiments with a $5 million fundraising event that fails, we call in the attorneys. So charities are petrified of trying bold new revenue-generating endeavors and can’t develop the powerful learning curves the for-profit sector can.
I don’t believe in being a size 0. I don’t believe in starving. Women should totally embrace their curves.
I always love wearing Vivienne Westwood. Her dresses just seem to fit me perfectly, and she makes dresses for girls with curves – I love that.
Bottom line: Black men like curves. When they’re crooning to women about how beautiful they are in an R&B song, the ladies you see in the video don’t reflect what those guys like.
In judging of a beautiful statue, the aesthetic faculty is absolutely and completely gratified by the splendid curves of those marble lips that are dumb to our complaint, the noble modelling of those limbs that are powerless to help us.
Some of my best songwriting choices started as mistakes or learning curves, when I accidentally hit a ‘wrong’ key or something. I try not to lose that the more I learn the how’s and why’s of piano.
First, there is the bare beauty of the logs themselves with their long lines and firm curves. Then there is the open charm felt of the structural features which are not hidden under plaster and ornament, but are clearly revealed, a charm felt in Japanese architecture.
It’s important for a woman to feel good in her clothes. It’s OK to have curves and to work them.
I turn my feet in when I’m sitting down. I tend to put my arms across me when I’m sat thinking; I bend forwards. Loads of protective curves.
After the baby, I got bigger, and I like it. I like me better now than when I was young and skinny. I don’t understand this extreme fashion for being anorexic-skinny. We forgot about women with curves – real women. We’re not embracing that anymore.
Working with Victoria’s Secret, it is very celebrated to have curves.
I feel most glamorous in tight-fitting dresses that hug my curves, and the highest heels.
I like having curves – I’m proud of them!
A lot of people think the path to success is a straight line, but it’s not. It has got many turns and curves, and you just got to go with the ebbs and flows of it all.
I was just so lucky with ‘Real Women Have Curves.’ At that point, I would have done an insurance commercial. I would have done anything.
I would love it if people could look at chubby folks with all of our curves, bumps and ridges and just say ‘She’s beautiful’ just like that. You don’t have to get on a treadmill as long as your blood pressure is under control and you eat healthy, God bless.
I have a boy’s body. I would prefer to have more curves because I think that’s more beautiful. I would much rather have J. Lo’s body than mine.
I love curves; I’m all about curves. I don’t have many, which is really sad, but I think the more the better.
I don’t like seeing celebs looking too skinny, I love it when they look healthy and comfortable in their bodies and embrace their curves.
My curves became an integral part of who I am as a dancer, not something I needed to lose to become one.
My goal is to develop curves on my body.
I knew that if I was going to be a model, that it was going to be in the body type that I am. As an athlete, as a woman with hips and thighs and curves, that was me.
I’m not straight up and down. I have curves.
Some of the things I did in my early career were massive learning curves because I had no one to guide me. You learn very quickly because it costs you torment and trouble.
Honestly, maybe I’m not as skinny as I’ve been at some point in my life, but I like how I look! You look at Beyonce, at Rihanna, at Jennifer Lopez and they have curves you can grab onto.
Cultivate your curves – they may be dangerous but they won’t be avoided.
Old Vespas are very appealing to me. I love the way they feel. I love the way they smell. I love the curves on them. I have one of the earliest Vespas ever made, from the 1950s.
The more important argument against grade curves is that they create an atmosphere that’s toxic by pitting students against one another. At best, it creates a hypercompetitive culture, and at worst, it sends students the message that the world is a zero-sum game: Your success means my failure.
I’m a woman, of course I still have curves on me, and that’s ok. I had a baby and I’ve worked hard. And I don’t think women should have to feel that kind of pressure. I’ve done it really healthfully, and I took my time.
Whether you’re tall or shorter, or a little bigger, more curves, skinny – you just have to be proud of what you have, and everyone is beautiful.
It took me a while to accept that I’m not going to have the curves other girls get.
If you can’t say where you’re going, you’re not going to get there. And I’ve known all along where I’m going, and sometimes the road takes a few curves that you didn’t see, but you’ve got to stay the path.
Many tech companies experience steep growth curves that require them to build their teams at breakneck speeds.
I don’t have a lot of curves, and I’m very skinny, so I always feel like I have to fake my curves a little bit.
In life, as in art, the beautiful moves in curves.
It’s easy to make clothes for a model, but when you can put them on real women and real curves, that’s the test.
Music is the expression of the movement of the waters, the play of curves described by changing breezes.
It’s important to be fit, but you shouldn’t get too skinny. You need to have curves.
It took me a while to warm to the ’20s costumes on ‘Downton.’ I love it when women accentuate their curves, and that era was all about hiding them. The shapes they wore then were in tune with female empowerment. Cutting off their hair and hiding their busts was a way of saying, ‘We’re equal to men!’
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