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This has been known for a while, actually. They're walking fantasies of what some real women want to look like. The pity is, we can't seem to get women with this amazing feminine psychic talent to create anything else. They go into a clothing store, can't fit into a size 8 pair of jeans, and *bam* another fantasy thin woman comes into existence.I think thin women around the world would be quite befuddled to find out that they are, in fact, not real.
Percent of noninstitutionalized adults age 20 years and over who are overweight or obese: 67% (2005-2006)
I remember when Photoshopping the models caught on; I watched an art director take a magnificently svelte swimsuit model-- a black woman-- and turn her into an Anime caricature with hips half her real size, legs a third longer, skin much lighterLiar said:I think thin women around the world would be quite befuddled to find out that they are, in fact, not real.
As a generality, "real" in Europe tends to be much more fit than "real" in the US.
I remember when Photoshopping the models caught on; I watched an art director take a magnificently svelte swimsuit model-- a black woman-- and turn her into an Anime caricature with hips half her real size, legs a third longer, skin much lighterand-- bright green eyes.
I wondered why he had paid a model in the first place.
As a generality, "real" in Europe tends to be much more fit than "real" in the US.
I remember when Photoshopping the models caught on; I watched an art director take a magnificently svelte swimsuit model-- a black woman-- and turn her into an Anime caricature with hips half her real size, legs a third longer, skin much lighterand-- bright green eyes.
I wondered why he had paid a model in the first place.
IMO, waif-like models are used because it's easier to make clothes look good when you don't have to take into account real curves. It's just bone laziness on the part of fashion designers. Think wire clothes hangers . . .
Have to say this line really pissed me off and thought it deserved a special mention.Louisa von Minckwitz, who owns the German-based Louisa Models agency, told The Associated Press she believed the ban on models was a marketing gag that would not last for long.
"Women want to see clothes on a beautiful, aesthetically pleasing person," von Minckwitz said.
She's looking at a reduction in her paycheck-- of course she's going to say that!Have to say this line really pissed me off and thought it deserved a special mention.
Variety is what I'd like to see in the magazines. Not a ban on thin figures, but thin models along with medium-sized and big ones.