OK so I got sick of the waffling back in forth here on this forum. so I actually looked for REAL DATA regarding the biggest two concerns for proportions for CLL patients
first arm length: Arm length was found to have NO real correlation to attractiveness (to women, not insecure proportion obsessed people on this forum) at amounts plus or minus 3 standard deviations. I couldn't find what SD this study used. but another study has the average percentage of wingspan to height at 102.4% with a sd of 2.7%. This means having a wingspan to height ratio of 94.3 - 110.5% will not affect how attractive you look. this would generally mean that, for example, a 72 inch tall person would need a (slightly below) 68 inch wing span.
Now Leg to body ratio (as far as im aware this is the same as SHR, if not let me know): leg to body ratio actually DOES have an effect on attractiveness, however the people on this forum tell you not to cross 50% and if you do you will look like a freak.... well thats entirely wrong.
The study found that 50% is the ideal most attractive leg to body ratio ( pretty sure this is what Da Vinci said as well). They tested values of 0.447, 0.462, 0.477, 0.491, 0.506, 0.521 and 0.535, with lower indicating shorter legs. While 50% was found to be the best in general... check out this chart.
Values in the range of -1 - 2sds have nearly the same rating of attractiveness, all being better than -2/3 and +3.
So essentially anything in the range of 0.477-0.521 leg to body ratio (this would mean 0.523-0.479% SHR) would be the best values
studies cited:
https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/10.1098/rsos.171790 ( you can see the arms chart here, its basically flat )
https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/10.1098/rsos.170399I am aware the way ive came to these conclusions is a little bit sloppy so have a margin of error here, but it's definitely interesting to look at the this data. everyone please check my work and ensure I havent majorly screwed up somewhere here, im prone to small mistakes. Lets all help ourselves make the best decisions