The 10th most read post on Mamamia this year, was about a different kind of photoshopping. In it, we asked you to consider whether the western world even knows what a real vagina looks like any more?
The world famous Sports Illustrated swimsuit edition cover has leaked for 2012 and it shows model Kate Upton in all her bikini-clad glory, but er, without her vagina.
Jezebel asks: “So did they photoshop out part of Kate’s cleft of Venus, to put it delicately? Really the whole area meets her thighs in kind of a flat, strange way—even a Barbie doll has more realistic, prominent-looking genitalia.”
That’s right. They have completely removed any trace of the fact that Kate has a vagina. At all.
Last year we brought to your attention the fact that all the vaginas we see in magazines are digitally altered. All of them.
It came to a head when a bunch of Playboy memorabilia was auctioned by Christies. Among the items for sale were some original prints of Playboy bunny centrefolds complete with their original mark-up notes. These are the written instructions given by the art director about what must be digitally altered.
Even though these proofs are from the 90s, before air-brushing became as extreme as it is today, there are still loads of alterations to ‘soften’ nipples, ‘remove stubble’ and ‘thin’ pubic hair as well as remove all stretch marks, blemishes and cellulite.
But what about the vaginas? Oh yes, they have to be air-brushed too. Although it is not enshrined in law like it is in Australia.
Top Comments
This is an incredible article, one that all women should see. Not only does the photoshopping of genital detail from soft porn magazines impact upon women's body-image, but it also creates a clinical attitude towards female sexuality in general- the vagina is just a means to an end, and sex is masturbation in a vagina.
I'm also interested to know what the laws pertaining to the depiction of male genitalia in soft porn magazines are.
Great article, thanks Mamamia & Kirsten Drysdale