Welcome to Pattern and Person
Hey friend,
If you’ve ever stood in a dressing room hating the mirror instead of the clothes, you’re in the right place. I’m Tessa Brenner, and for nine years I sat on the other side of the plus-size fashion machine as a buyer at Torrid. I negotiated fit specs with factories in Asia, argued about armhole depth at 2 a.m., and stared at return-rate spreadsheets that would make your head spin. In 2023 I finally left. Not because I stopped loving clothes — but because I got tired of watching the industry treat plus-size bodies like an afterthought.
This blog is what happened next.
The Day I Realized the Pattern Was the Problem
Picture this: I’m in a factory in Vietnam watching a sample come down the line. Size 14 looks perfect. Size 22? The shoulders pull, the armholes cut in, and the side seam twists like it’s trying to escape. The factory manager shrugs and says, “We just scaled the pattern.” That moment hit me like a size tag to the face.
The body was never the problem. The pattern was.
That single sentence became my exit strategy and the entire philosophy of this site. Pattern and Person isn’t just a cute name. It’s a declaration: we’re going to respect both the technical reality of how clothes are made and the real women who wear them.

Why I Left Torrid (And Why I’m Telling You Now)
I didn’t leave because the company was evil. I left because the system is broken in ways most shoppers never see. I watched brands take a size 6 pattern, blow it up on a computer, and call it “plus size.” I fought for — and sometimes won — better grading, deeper armholes, and proper shoulder-to-bust ratios. But every small victory felt like swimming upstream in a river of spreadsheets and quarterly targets.
After nine years I wanted to do something different. I opened a styling studio in Baltimore for professional plus-size women — lawyers, professors, nonprofit directors — who need to walk into rooms and be taken seriously. Women who are done apologizing for their bodies and just want clothes that actually work.
What You’ll Find Here (And What You Won’t)
You won’t find “slimming” tricks, “hide your trouble spots,” or any of that tired diet-culture garbage. I’m not here to sell you urgency or shame.
Instead, you’ll find:
The Pattern Room
Where we go full nerd on pattern grading, armhole science, shoulder-to-bust ratios, and everything the industry hopes you never learn.
The Try-On
The same garment tried on in five to ten sizes. Real photos, real measurements, real talk. No influencer-in-a-size-16 nonsense.
The Buyer’s Desk
Stories from inside the machine — the fights I won, the ones I lost, and what it all means for you in the fitting room.
The Rack
Practical, occasion-based shopping guidance and capsule wardrobes built for real bodies and real lives.
Cuff & Hem
The personal stuff — my six-year-old daughter Nia’s rainbow confidence, candle-making metaphors, board game nights with my wife Laura, and the cats who rule the fabric samples.
The Promise I’m Making You
Every piece of advice here comes from someone who’s actually done the work. I’ve measured thousands of garments. I’ve dressed real clients in real conference rooms. I’ve seen what happens when brands cut corners and what happens when they don’t.
I’ll always tell you the truth, even when it’s uncomfortable for the industry (or for my former employer). And I’ll celebrate the brands doing it right — because they exist, and they deserve your money.
A New Way to Get Dressed
Here’s the shift I want for you: stop asking “Does this make me look thinner?” Start asking “Does this pattern respect my actual measurements?”
Measure your shoulders first. Check the armhole depth. Feel how the fabric moves when you raise your arms. The size tag is the last thing that matters.
My daughter Nia, age six, has never once been told her body is wrong. She picks outfits with absolute joy and zero apology. Watching her reminds me every single day what confidence without conditions looks like. I want that for every woman who reads this blog.
Let’s Do This Together
This is the beginning of something I’ve been wanting to build for years. A space where plus-size women can learn how clothes actually work, find pieces that make them feel powerful, and stop internalizing industry failures as personal ones.
If you’re tired of clothes that gap, pull, twist, or ride up — welcome.
If you’re done with “flattering” language that quietly shames — welcome.
If you just want clothes that fit your shoulders, your bust, your life — welcome home.
The pattern shapes the garment.
The person wears it.
Both matter.
Stick around. We’ve got a lot of great (and sometimes brutally honest) content coming your way.
With warmth and zero tolerance for bad armholes,
Tessa
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