A professional magazine retoucher has opened up about the bizarre requests he receives from editors and creative directors — claiming he sometimes digitally slims models and celebrities down by about 9kg.
In an interview with beauty website XO Vain, the retoucher — who chose to remain anonymous — said he has been asked to alter everything from fingernails and waist size, to hair colour.
“I’ve got to say, I do generally get asked to retouch women more. It’s always ‘do more, do more, do more’ to the women celebrities than the men,” he told the website. “Male celebrities have actually told us that they don’t want to be retouched at all.”
He also said the biggest request was for women to be slimmed down, and that he sometimes digitally shaves “10, 20 pounds, at least” of his Photoshop subjects.
“With women they always want too thin. They always want thinner waist, thinner legs. And these women are already skinny. Women that you would even think are kind of too thin and they still say, ‘Thin her thighs out a little bit’.”
“You wouldn’t believe the stuff you have to fix on a regular basis. There are disgusting terms that retouchers have coined over the years–‘vagina armpits’ is one.”
“And I’m thinking, What are they seeing? I’m a student of anatomy… I’ll actually look at a current picture of someone before I sit down and do anything–just to make sure that I don’t go too far.”
Top Comments
Using a wide angle lens can be responsible for a subject's arms or legs look larger or longer than they really are, because the lens will produce a distorted image. It's still deceptive... but sometimes is actually used to give a particular impression of a portrait subject.
I am a photographer and I will say plainly that there are almost no images that any viewer will see in a editorial or advertising work that have not been retouched. EVERYBODY does it. Accept that, educate your kids that what you're seeing is not really the truth, it is a hyper-real version of the truth. The reality is that photographers and editors are not about to stop retouching, but YOU have the ability to make up your own mind about believing what you see or not.
Yeah a logo or disclaimer stating the photo has been photo shopped should be mandatory. I'd love if this could be extended to all beauty ads though. I mean, no-one's hair is ever going to compare to computer generated hair. I contacted a well-known hair brand, saying how they lie in their ads and they argued it was "stylistic representation". I have since boycotted their products.