The moment Perrie Edwards shared holiday pictures from her trip to celebrate her 26th birthday, and the internet reacted with scrutiny rather than warmth, is subtly telling. Her body caught the attention of both fans and tabloid accounts, who noted that she appeared different, fuller, and less like the polished pop product they had become accustomed to seeing on stage. Edwards, on the other hand, refrained from spiraling or issuing a statement that was written in terms of damage control. She just admitted that she had put on weight and moved on. It’s the kind of response that seems simple to give, but it’s rarely the case, particularly for a woman who grew up in a field where dress size has traditionally been viewed as a career variable.
As a member of Little Mix, the four-piece group that won The X Factor UK in 2011, Edwards first gained notoriety. Over the following ten years, the group became one of the most commercially successful girl groups in Britain. The group fulfilled all the expectations of the industry by releasing six studio albums, performing in arenas throughout the UK and Europe, and winning Brit Awards. However, the industry also demanded something else, something unsaid but unrelenting: thinness. It’s hard to believe that pressure to stay “stick-thin” during those years existed in a vacuum around just one member, as former bandmate Jade Thirlwall has since openly discussed.

What Edwards did with her own experience of body scrutiny, instead of just surviving it, is what makes her story worth telling in its entirety. Her fashion brand Disora, which debuted in 2021, expanded its sizing to include sizes 18 and up in March 2023. At the time, only about 6% of fashion retailers were in this category. That figure strikes a deep chord with anyone who has spent years standing in the fluorescent misery of a high-street changing room, watching a supposedly inclusive size fail to zip. The decision may have been influenced more by personal frustration than by business strategy. There is no conflict between the two.
Then came the pregnancy chapter, which gave the public discussion about Edwards’ body a completely new perspective. She disclosed in August 2025 that she had experienced a pregnancy loss at 24 weeks, which she described as traumatizing. She also mentioned that she had gained weight and undergone physical changes during the pregnancy, which had drawn unwanted attention and conjecture.
At 12 weeks, her baby was still healthy despite her continuous bleeding from a blood clot. In an environment where celebrity women are still largely expected to present only the polished version of motherhood, it felt important to be willing to talk about that specific grief. It’s not performative; rather, it’s honest in a way that only arises when you’ve decided to stop prioritizing the comfort of others over your own truth.
Perhaps unintentionally, Edwards appears to have found himself in the midst of a larger cultural moment that is taking place. While the music industry as a whole is gradually acknowledging the physical standards it has imposed on female performers for decades, her former bandmate Jade Thirlwall made headlines in 2025 when she publicly addressed weight gain and denied using Ozempic. Although Edwards isn’t spearheading a movement in the traditional sense, it’s difficult to ignore the fact that the public’s current perception of her feels far more complete than the meticulously cultivated image of the Little Mix era as she juggles body image, loss, fashion entrepreneurship, and a solo career.
Released in September 2025, her debut album Perrie peaked at number three on the UK Albums Chart, demonstrating that fans follow the artist rather than the dress size. It’s still unclear if the industry has fully learned that lesson. However, at least one person in the room gave up waiting for it to catch up.
FAQs
1. Did Perrie Edwards publicly acknowledge her weight gain?
Yes, she acknowledged it briefly and moved on without issuing any formal statement.
2. What did Perrie Edwards do with her fashion brand related to body inclusivity?
Disora extended its sizing to include sizes 18 and above in 2023.
3. Did the pressure to stay thin affect Little Mix members?
Yes, Jade Thirlwall later confirmed the group faced intense pressure to remain stick-thin.
4. Did Perrie Edwards experience pregnancy loss?
Yes, she publicly disclosed a traumatising pregnancy loss at 24 weeks in 2025.
5. How did Perrie Edwards’ solo album perform commercially?
Her debut album Perrie reached number three on the UK Albums Chart.

