DC Kids also announced that 10 percent of proceeds from its latest collection will be donated to the Down Syndrome Association of Miami.
While the trend of using people with disabilities like Downs Syndrome in fashion campaigns and the media is hardly new (like Ryan Langston who modeled for Target and Nordstrom to Lauren Potter who plays Becky on Glee), writer S.E. Smith on xoJane sees it a bit more cynically. In this article she wished that these models with disabilities were incorporated a bit more subtly into the ads and catalogs vs. companies like Dolores Cortés who seem to be using it as an opportunity for press. She followed up by saying, “It means that casting disabled models is still viewed as progressive, daring and in need of celebration, rather than something unremarkable that doesn’t necessitate commentary.”
However, where I agree with the article in xoJane is in the implication that designers are using their choice to feature a person with a disability to get more press. That doesn’t sit well with me. Supposedly, Dolores Cortés is issuing press release after press release about her decision to use Valentina and last Friday carried her down the runway when she showed off her new collection in Miami Beach. Scoff at my cynical judgment if you will, but how many of you knew who Dolores Cortés was before she decided to use a baby with Downs Syndrome in her campaign? All I’m saying is, let’s just hope Dolores Cortés sees her beautiful model as a person and not a prop for her own gain.