PHOTO: JOHN PARRA/GETTY IMAGES.
Photoshop snafus in glossies usually involve excessive slenderizing, or reconfiguring a body part in a manner that makes it look plain bizarre, not better. (Or, sometimes, awkwardly just leaving an entire body part out of the picture — which happens way more often than you’d think.) But Gigi Hadid’s cover of Vogue China had some more specific detailing done: The model’s signature birthmarks are mysteriously absent from the photo.
Hadid’s lack of freckles and/or moles is especially conspicuous because a wide expanse of her abs are on display — a place where she has several spots. Hadid has once even said these marks, which she gets checked regularly, make her recognizable from the neck down. In an interview with Allure last year, she stated, “A lot of people get mad at me when they’re Photoshopped out. But I don’t want them Photoshopped. If they are, that’s the client’s decision. I love them.”
Hadid posted an image of the recent Vogue China cover on her Instagram a week ago, with no mention of any strange digital manipulations.
Her followers certainly noticed the alterations, though: “Where are her moles?” wrote one user, while another lamented the aggressive tweaks: “They edit you too much, you [sic] gorgeous birth marks and all.” There are over 4K comments on the post, including ones demanding some answers: “WHERE ARE YOUR CUTE LIL FRECKLES…WHY WOULD YOU PHOTOSHOP THAT."
Photoshop snafus in glossies usually involve excessive slenderizing, or reconfiguring a body part in a manner that makes it look plain bizarre, not better. (Or, sometimes, awkwardly just leaving an entire body part out of the picture — which happens way more often than you’d think.) But Gigi Hadid’s cover of Vogue China had some more specific detailing done: The model’s signature birthmarks are mysteriously absent from the photo.
Hadid’s lack of freckles and/or moles is especially conspicuous because a wide expanse of her abs are on display — a place where she has several spots. Hadid has once even said these marks, which she gets checked regularly, make her recognizable from the neck down. In an interview with Allure last year, she stated, “A lot of people get mad at me when they’re Photoshopped out. But I don’t want them Photoshopped. If they are, that’s the client’s decision. I love them.”
Hadid posted an image of the recent Vogue China cover on her Instagram a week ago, with no mention of any strange digital manipulations.
Her followers certainly noticed the alterations, though: “Where are her moles?” wrote one user, while another lamented the aggressive tweaks: “They edit you too much, you [sic] gorgeous birth marks and all.” There are over 4K comments on the post, including ones demanding some answers: “WHERE ARE YOUR CUTE LIL FRECKLES…WHY WOULD YOU PHOTOSHOP THAT."
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