Fashion + Beauty

Wednesday, November 25, 2009

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Was the photoshopped Ralph Lauren model fired for being overweight?

photoshopdisasters.blogspot.com

photoshopdisasters.blogspot.com

Last week Ralph Lauren came under fire for (what looked to be) an extremely altered photo of a model in one of its ads. Bloggers at the website BoingBoing.net posted the image online, and lawyers for Ralph Lauren attempted to sue them for copyright infringement. Unfortunately for Ralph Lauren, this only furthered public interest and outrage over the dangerously thin looking model and, eventually, the clothing company released this apology:

"For over 42 years we have built a brand based on quality and integrity. After further investigation, we have learned that we are responsible for the poor imaging and retouching that resulted in a very distorted image of a woman's body. We have addressed the problem and going forward will take every precaution to ensure that the caliber of our artwork represents our brand appropriately."

Unfortunately,"addressing the problem" may have included firing the model, 23-year-old Filippa Hamilton. She is 5'10" and weighs 120 pounds--clearly more full-bodied than the photoshopped girl we see in the advertisement. Though Hamilton has modeled for Ralph Lauren since she was 15, the company let her go "as a result of her inability to meet the obligations under her contract with us." But the story gets worse: Hamilton says she was let go because she'd become too fat to model for them. "They fired me because they said I was overweight and I couldn't fit in their clothes anymore," she explained. "I was shocked to see that super skinny girl with my face...It's very sad, I think, that Ralph Lauren could do something like that."

Filippa Hamilton in a past Ralph Lauren ad

Filippa Hamilton in a past Ralph Lauren ad

Most of us know that a tall, young woman who weighs 120 pounds is not overweight. But Hamilton claims Ralph Lauren was dissatisfied with her body, and therefore fired her six months ago. However, the company continued to use her image, whittling down her arms, waist, thighs, and possibly several other body parts in the above ad. If they were so unhappy with how she looked, why not get another model for the campaign? Why use the photos and alter and distort them?

Today, Ralph Lauren himself is distancing himself from the ad, claiming, "The image in question was mistakenly released and used in a department store in Japan and was not the approved image which ran in the U.S." So we're confused. They say the photoshopping was an error, that Hamilton is "beautiful and healthy," yet they allegedly fired her for her size? With all these apologies and statements it sounds like the brand still has yet to accept responsibility for their actions.

Hamilton in Italian Elle

Hamilton in Italian Elle

Hamilton in French Vogue

Hamilton in French Vogue

When I searched for more images of Filippa Hamilton, I instantly remembered her—she was the face of Ralph Lauren's fragrance, Romance, has been featured on the cover of international editions of Vogue and Elle, and has appeared in many ads. She's a gorgeous woman. "I think they [Ralph Lauren] owe American women an apology, a big apology," says Hamilton. "I'm very proud of what I look like, and I think a role model should look healthy."

The truth is, models get fired or overlooked all the time for being what the industry considers overweight, we just rarely see or hear about it. Eating disorders are not only common among models, but they're also common among the women and young girls who emulate them. We're happy to see that Hamilton has come forward, and wish more models and celebrities would do the same. It's awesome and empowering when stars admit they've been photoshopped for an ad or movie poster and say how dissatisfied they are about it. With foreign countries banning underweight models from their fashion weeks, and the increasing presence of "plus size" models in women's magazines, we wish the unhealthy representation and falsified depiction of models—and women—would come to an end entirely. Do you think the day will ever come? Sources: [NYDN] [Extra] [Hulu]
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From the Community…

Comments 1-10 of 5,735
  • Doug S's Avatar
    Posted by Doug S Wed Oct 14, 2009 10:45am PDT

    5'10" and 120 pounds and they fired her for being overweight. I used to think the people who did that kind of thing were warped. Now I realize they're just plain sick and need to get help.

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  • karen w's Avatar
    Posted by karen w Wed Oct 14, 2009 10:57am PDT

    wow-boycott

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  • Ramon G(IONE)'s Avatar
    Posted by Ramon G(IONE) Wed Oct 14, 2009 11:17am PDT

    Allison, there is a difference between conditioned, and this model being "overweight"

    5'10" and 120 is already somewhat of an unhealthy weight (too low), if being UNDERWEIGHT is overweight to RL, then they really have some issues. If she truly was somewhere around 10lbs overweight, then sure, why not, violation of a contract, but shes not is thing thing..

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  • Linda's Avatar
    Posted by Linda Wed Oct 14, 2009 11:19am PDT

    I agree with karen-boycot anything related to Ralph Lauren. This company is oppressive, obsessive, offensive, intolerant, unrealistic, and has no ethics or integrity. The model is better off for the termination. Now honey, EAT SOMETHING!!

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  • Fanny's Avatar
    Posted by Fanny Wed Oct 14, 2009 11:26am PDT

    Wow, AllisonRenee, that's pretty harsh.I'ts sad that as a woman you can't have more sympathy for the double standards and the distortion and the unrealistic expectations that RL and so many others inflict upon our sex. No pro athlete has ever been benched because he didn't look "perfect". That's a fate only women have to endure.

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  • mscarol's Avatar
    Posted by mscarol Wed Oct 14, 2009 11:29am PDT

    ohh excuses excuses...

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  • Red's Avatar
    Posted by Red Wed Oct 14, 2009 11:30am PDT

    What's really sad is Ralph Lauren will walk away from this without a scratch. Power breeds dishonesty !

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  • Red's Avatar
    Posted by Red Wed Oct 14, 2009 11:34am PDT

    I totally agree with your thoughts Fanny3.

    Let's not kid ourselves, RL does this to get a reaction and then says sorry it won't happen moving forward and that's the end of it. No concequence for faking this picture. The best thing people can do is stop buying his products and stop by the magazine. Hit them where it hurts, their bank account.

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  • LadyJane's Avatar
    Posted by LadyJane Wed Oct 14, 2009 12:10pm PDT

    I still don't understand why skin and bones is "perfect" and how becoming or having the look of being malnourished is the standard of beauty? RL continues to provide reasons for his products not to gain a profit from my dime.

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  • Orchid's Avatar
    Posted by Orchid Wed Oct 14, 2009 12:12pm PDT

    What gets me is that RL doesn't sell clothes in that super-skinny size anyway. Why fire a model for "being too fat to fit the clothes" and then photoshop her until she's to skinny to fit the clothes?

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