In the same issue of Life and Style, Kim Kardashian went unairbrushed, too. I couldn’t find photos, but never fear—she’s done this lots before. She went naked and as-is in the May issue of Harper’s Bazaar. “The message [of this shoot] is embrace your curves and who you are,”
Kim also sent the same message in 2009, when she went unairbrushed in a bikini in (you guessed it) Life & Style. Deja vu.
Around the same time, Britney Spears released before and after retouching versions of her Candies campaign. I spent like an hour noting the subtle differences.
Kim also sent the same message in 2009, when she went unairbrushed in a bikini in (you guessed it) Life & Style. Deja vu.
Around the same time, Britney Spears released before and after retouching versions of her Candies campaign. I spent like an hour noting the subtle differences.
Bethenny Frankel did this, too, when she was criticized for looking way too perfect in her PETA ad. “Everything I’m about is being honest and being upfront,” she said. “So if people are talking and saying [the photo] was airbrushed…then, you know what? Here’s the picture.” She looks pretty good there, too.
Marion Cotillard was brave and agreed to go without airbrushing on the September cover of Vanity Fair. She looks gorgeous and actually her age. Joy Bryant also went nude and unretouched in Harper’s Bazaar, in the same spread Kim Kardashian appeared in. Wait, she looks incredible. That doesn’t help. Sadie Frost guest-edited Grazia magazine last year, and included a photo of herself naked without retouching. “I want to make a big point here,” she said. “It’s not about taking my clothes off and using digital trickery to make me look slimmer. I’m like any other woman. I have bits I like—my boobs, my shoulders, my arms—and bits I don’t—my bum and my stomach.” Claudia Schiffer posed for a Tank magazine cover topless and without retouching. Her face looks amazing, but I see a few too many bones for comfort in the body. |
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