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Leyla Yurchick |
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Kelli Correa |
Female
Fitness Model
Coverage
of all OCB Fitness Model events appears in
Fitness & Physique Magazine. Images from
contests are also used to coincide with articles
printed in the magazine.
Female Fitness Model Guidelines
The Fitness Model division consists of two parts:
Swimwear, and Fitness Apparel.
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Leyla Yurchick |
Yenny Polanco |
Kristen Doran |
Part I – Swimwear
The Swimwear round consists of a stage runway walk
performed in a two-piece swimsuit. Competitors are free
to use the suit style, color, and pattern of their
choice, as long as suits aren’t thongs or T-backs.
Jewelry is permitted.
Scoring for the Swimwear round is based on two areas:
Fit Body and Presentation/Appearance. Scoring is
on a scale of 1-10 for each portion, with ten being the
best. These two parts combine for a possible 20
points total for the round.
For
the Fit Body area, physiques should appear symmetrical,
toned, physically fit and athletic.
For
the Presentation/Appearance area, suit style/cut/fit,
grooming, poise, attractiveness, overall
self-confidence, and ability to present in a marketable
manner are considered.
Small, appropriate accessories (coordinated with attire
being worn) are allowed but not required. Unrelated
accessories that don’t coordinate with outfits should be
avoided and can result in lower scoring. Any
accessories used should be able to be worn, not have to
be carried.
Examples of appropriate accessories are (keeping in
theme with swimwear) sunglasses, beach/bikini wraps,
pareos, sandals, high heels, headbands, scrunchies,
bellychains, and similarly themed items.
Examples of inappropriate accessories are unrelated,
oversized, or distracting items such as scuba tanks,
balls, snorkel and fins, inner
tubes, surf boards, etc.
It
should be kept in mind that while swimwear is the attire
for this round, the backdrop in stage photos will be
drapery or banners – not a beach, ocean, boardwalk, etc.
Photos that appear more realistic would be more
appropriate for media submissions, so it stands to
reason that large or out of place accessories could make
images appear out of place for the stage setting.
Part II – Fitness Apparel
The Fitness Apparel round consists of a stage runway
walk performed in fitness model-type outfits, such as
sports bras/crop tops, skorts, fitted singlets, spandex
shorts, workout apparel, etc. Jewelry is permitted.
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Yenny
Polanco |
Kelli Correa |
Megan DosVais |
Scoring for the
Fitness Apparel round is based on two areas: Fit Body
and Presentation/Appearance. Scoring is on a scale of
1-10 for each portion, ten being the best, for a
possible 20 points total for the round.
For the Fit Body area, physiques
should appear symmetrical, toned, physically fit and
athletic.
For the Presentation/Appearance area,
appropriateness and fit of attire, grooming, poise,
attractiveness, overall self-confidence, and ability to
present in a marketable manner are considered in
scoring.
Small appropriate accessories
(coordinated with attire being worn) are allowed but not
required. Unrelated accessories that don’t coordinate
with outfits should be avoided and can result in lower
scoring if used. Any accessories used should be able to
be worn, not have to be carried.
Examples of appropriate accessories
are headbands, wristbands, sneakers, sunglasses,
scrunchies, visors/hats, and similar items.
Examples of inappropriate accessories
are unrelated, oversized, or distracting items such as
tennis rackets, golf clubs, balls, dumbbells, surf
boards, skis, etc.
It should be kept in mind that while
attire is fitness apparel for this round, the backdrop
in stage photos will be drapery or banners – not a
tennis court, aerobics studio, gym, etc. Photos that
appear more realistic would be more appropriate for
media submissions, so it stands to reason that large or
out of place accessories could make images appear out of
place for the stage setting.
Some examples of appropriate fitness
related themed outfits are tennis, track & field,
workout wear, and general fitness apparel. Some examples
of themed outfits that could seem out of place for a
stage setting are indians, baseball or football players
and police officers.
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Keedra Brown |
Megan DosVais |
Tara Iula |
General Information:
Competitors are introduced individually for the Swimwear
and Fitness Apparel rounds and will walk out to
house music
and perform a “T” stage/runway walk. They will
walk out to the rear center of the stage, then walk up
to the center front of the stage and perform a series of
quarter turns. A walk follows that to stage left
with a brief pause, then a walk to stage right with a
brief pause. Finally, the contestant will walk to
the front center of the stage with pause, and then exit
the stage diagonally to the side from which they
entered. The walk resembles a “T,” which is how it
got its name.
Competitors are encouraged to pose in a more model-like
manner at pausing points and not just do typical quarter
turn stances as is routinely done in figure competition.
Competitors can spice it up by flinging hair, resting
one hand overhead and putting on or removing sunglasses
for example.
If
entering from the right side of the stage:

If
entering from the left side of the stage:

Scoring
Scores can be whole numbers, or decimals to the tenth.
Example of a judge's scoring sheet:
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# |
Part
I
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Part
II
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Total |
Place |
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12 |
16.0 |
16.5 |
32.5 |
1 |
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15 |
14.5 |
16.5 |
31.0 |
2 |
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19 |
12.5 |
13.5 |
26.0 |
3 |
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26 |
11.1 |
14.0 |
25.1 |
4 |
After judges
complete scoring each part of the contest their scores
are summed. Scores are then converted to placements for
each judge on their respective score sheet. The
competitor with the highest total points on a score
sheet is assigned first place. The competitor with
the second highest total points is placed second on the
score sheet, and so on.
Should summed points be the
same for two or more competitors on a judge’s sheet the
judge assigns his/her final placements for the tied
competitors based on his/her overall impressions.
Once
judges’ scores are marked as placements on their sheets,
scorecards are turned over to a tabulator and all
judges’ ranks are tallied to determine placements for
the contest. A highest and lowest rank for each
competitor is dropped as a safeguard against bias
(whether conscious or subconscious) either for, or
against a particular competitor by a particular judge,
and also to safeguard against human error. The remaining
judges placements are summed, and the lowest sum
receives first place in the class. Second lowest sum
receives second place, and so on. If a tie occurs, the
competitor who was ranked higher by a majority of all
judges on the panel is placed higher. For example, if
competitor A scores 1, 2, 3, 2, 3, 2, 4 and competitor B
scores 4, 3, 1, 3, 2, 3, 1 on a judging panel consisting
of seven judges, both sums total 12 (after dropping a
low and high mark). Since Competitor A was ranked higher
by four of the seven judges, she would therefore receive
the higher placement.
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Comp |
J1 |
J2 |
J3 |
J4 |
J5 |
J6 |
J7 |
Total |
Place |
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A |
1 |
2 |
3 |
2 |
3 |
2 |
2 |
11 |
1 |
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B |
2 |
3 |
1 |
3 |
2 |
3 |
1 |
11 |
2 |
Additional Information:
Either the Swimsuit or Fitness
Apparel round could be done at prejudging while
the other round is done at finals, or both
rounds may be performed at both prejudging and
finals. Check with the promoter of an event to
find out what format will be used for a
particular show (if it doesn't state it on the
entry form).
Competitors are encouraged to
submit photos (from a past shoot, taken during
training in a gym, etc.) to Fitness & Physique
Magazine to be considered for possible use in
print.
Email
or P.O. Box 1006 Bryans Road, MD 20616
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