emmelinemay: (Default)
emmelinemay ([personal profile] emmelinemay) wrote2007-06-12 03:21 pm

think you look a bit chunky in a photo?

nevermind. Photoshop can fix it.

I knew photoshop was used a lot to tidy up edges, remove the odd bulge, take away blemishes, and generally make ordinary women feel inadequate my making other ordinary women look unrealistically beautiful.

But that's just scary.

[identity profile] emmelinemay.livejournal.com 2007-06-12 02:55 pm (UTC)(link)
I wonder if someone could photoshop a picture of me so I'd look gorgeous

it's the prevalence of pictures like this that make you think you aren't good enough in the first place, when YOU ARE.

the VAST majority of pictures of women in the media (and a lot on the internet of us lot1) are photoshopped. LIke i say - 'ordinary women' - women JUST as pretty/unique/gorgeous in their own way - are made to look unrealistically pretty and that makes the rest of us feel inadequate.

1 - But not mine, as i fail at photoshop. I can just about remove red eye.

[identity profile] sushidog.livejournal.com 2007-06-12 02:57 pm (UTC)(link)
Yeah, I know, it's infuriating; we're made to feel bad about a little bit of cellulite, or body hair, or just about being a normal healthy weight or whatever, because think that beautiful women don't have those things, but actually, they _do_, they just have them air-brushed out. Grr.

[identity profile] obsessive-katy.livejournal.com 2007-06-12 03:08 pm (UTC)(link)
OK, not really saying much due to the quality of the publication, but Sunday's Observer came with the monthly Woman section. *shudder*

On the front they had a curvy lady and some quote about being the next big thing or something. Inside they had 4 pages with fashion pictures involving women who are size 16. (you can see the article here)

But there was something really wrong with the pictures. They all looked plasticky and unreal - heavily airbrushed to get rid of the dimpled skin and cellulite but still retaining the belly bulge.

I thought it was really bad as they seemed to be saying that they were showing real women...and then they go and smooth them over anyway.

Makes me angry.

xx

[identity profile] obsessive-katy.livejournal.com 2007-06-12 03:10 pm (UTC)(link)
ACK! The headline was actually the vomitous 'Who's a Big Girl Then?' ARGH!

xx

[identity profile] sushidog.livejournal.com 2007-06-12 03:31 pm (UTC)(link)
Interesting article; it's a shame the photos aren't attached, i'd have been interested to see them!

There's an artist who takes photos of ordinary women doing ordinary things, but topless, and I was looking at his webpage yesterday; lots of photos of women in various locations in New York, SOme of the photos are really beautiful, but one thing that struck me was how many of the women in them clearly felt quite negatively about their bodies; even (perhaps even especially) those who had perfectly lovely figures felt fat and imperfect, and thought the photo of them was ugly. I think it's simply because we're not used, as that article says, to seeing beautiful photos of women who are not skinny and "perfectly" proportioned, so when we look at ourselves, we see someone big and ungainly, rather than someone normal-sized and gorgeous.