Chinese Women Bust Sizes Grow
                              BEIJING 
                                (Reuters) - Bra producers have been forced to 
                                offer bigger cup-sizes in China because improved 
                                nutrition is busting all previous chest measurement 
                                records.
                              "It's 
                                so different from the past when most young women 
                                would wear A- or B-cup bras," Triumph brand 
                                saleswoman Zhang Jing told the Shanghai Daily 
                                from the Landmark Plaza of China's commercial 
                                hub.
                              "You...never 
                                expect those thin women to have such nice figures 
                                if they are not plastic."
                              The 
                                report, seen on the daily's Web site Tuesday, 
                                said that the Hong Kong-based lingerie firm Embry 
                                Group no longer produces A-cups for larger chest 
                                circumferences and has increased production of 
                                C-, D- and E-cup bras to meet pressing demand.
                              The 
                                Beijing Institute of Clothing Technology released 
                                a report last week saying the average chest circumference 
                                of Chinese women has risen by nearly 1 cm (0.4 
                                inch) to 83.53 cm (32.89 inches) since the early 
                                1990s, the daily said.
                              This 
                                phenomenon, it said, was due to women eating more 
                                nutritiously and taking part in more sport.
                              Similar 
                                growth in the average height of children prompted 
                                a rethink last year in Beijing on the height allowance 
                                for free bus rides.