keithwms
Member
An interesting article in The Economist that I thought might interest some of you.
http://www.economist.com/blogs/babb...hing?fsrc=scn/tw/te/bl/physicalimplausibility
The gist is that, surprise surprise, photoediting does seem to have real consequences on the way people think about body image. In fact, the American medical Association has officially condemned extreme photo alterations. And so some scientists have figured out a way to quantify the extent to which certain photos were edited...
And yes we men don't seem to perceive any ethical problem with photoshopped breasts...
http://www.economist.com/blogs/babb...hing?fsrc=scn/tw/te/bl/physicalimplausibility
The gist is that, surprise surprise, photoediting does seem to have real consequences on the way people think about body image. In fact, the American medical Association has officially condemned extreme photo alterations. And so some scientists have figured out a way to quantify the extent to which certain photos were edited...
And yes we men don't seem to perceive any ethical problem with photoshopped breasts...

Retouching/photoediting is a tool if misused it can lead to disaster (visual and political)if used properly it can do a lot of good (visual and political). If you retouche the photo of a girl with some skin defects who perceives herself as ugly frog even though she only has a severe case of akne and create a swan by retouching you as a photographer retoucher can elevate the self worth of said girl. I am not really that ugly.