The first episode of Trinny & Susannah Undress the Nation tackles the theme of breasts and bras in Britain where Trinny and Susannah state "British boobs need help!". Trinny and Susannah aim to investigate why many British women wear the wrong size bra and aim to promote wearing the correct size bra, and emphasize the benefits.
In the second installment of the series, Trinny and Susannah investiage the fashion issues of men, and ultimately aim to get a nation of well-dressed British men.
The third episode features Trinny and Susannah exploring the theme of shape, where they promote wearing clothes suitable to body shape rather than clothing size.
During the fourth episode Trinny and Susannah investigate the theme of age. They aim to encourage the older generation to reclaim the high street and become more comfortable with shopping.
For the last of series one, uniform is investigated by Trinny and Susannah where the duo want to promote wearing fashionable uniforms to work. They set out to prove that uniforms can improve morale and make a workforce feel better about themselves.
Imagine standing in a clothes shop while two women scream that you've just bought the wrong item. This is not a nightmare but the climax of Trinny and Susannah's latest crusade to stamp out the buying of "bad" clothes across the nation. It makes you wonder how on earth we coped with shopping before T&S.
Trinny and Susannah are on a mission to take a group of ladies and show them the true beauty of their buttocks. After speaking to a group of women who hate their bottoms, they take eight to a life sculpture gallery in Brighton, where their derrieres are cast by award-winning sculptor Jamie McCartney. But excitement soon turns to disappointment when the sculptures are unveiled. Can Trinny and Susannah persuade them to see through the negatives and take small steps to loving their behinds?
The 45 per cent of women in the UK who are a size 16 or above often feel poorly served by the fashion industry. These curvy ladies who love their clothes are faced with frumpy, poorly fitting outfits and scaled-up versions of a size 10 garment which rarely suit anyone larger. Trinny and Susannah aim to prove to retailers that bigger women can look fabulous in stylish clothes, and want to design their own plus-size range.
Today, Trinny and Susannah are on a mission to add some colour in the British woman's wardrobe, but with 60 percent of women attesting to prefer black, and 90 percent of retailers admitting that it's their most successful hue, they have their work cut out for them. They take a group of typical colour-averse consumers and hope to convert them by the showing them secrets of how to choose the right colours for their looks and how to wear them well, before taking their campaign out to the nation.
Trinny and Susannah are on a mission to make Britain glamorous, and to start their campaign they invite 100 women from all over the UK to wear their dressiest clothes to a London nightclub, where they pick five ladies who will learn the golden rules of glamour. Then they set off for a factory in Matlock, where they attempt to convince the reluctant workforce to make more of an effort with their appearance on the factory floor. Can they make the workers realise that a little glamour can change the way they feel?