Good read from one of Sonam Kapoor's articles...
"So, for every teen girl leaning into her bedroom mirror, wondering why she doesn’t look like a celebrity: Please know that nobody wakes up like this. Not me. Not any other actress. (Not even Beyoncé. I swear.)
Here’s the real deal: Before each public appearance, I spend 90 minutes in a makeup chair. Three to six people work on my hair and makeup, while a professional touches up my nails. My eyebrows are tweezed and threaded every week. There’s concealer on parts of my body that I could never have predicted would need concealing.
I’m up at 6am every day and at the gym by 7:30. I exercise for 90 minutes and, some evenings, again before bed. It’s someone’s full-time job to decide what I can and cannot eat. There are more ingredients in my face packs than in my food. There’s a team dedicated to finding me flattering outfits.
After all that, if I’m still not “flawless” enough, there are generous servings of Photoshop.
I’ve said it before, and I will keep saying it: It takes an army, a lot of money, and an incredible amount of time to make a female celebrity look the way she does when you see her. It isn’t realistic, and it isn’t anything to aspire to.
Aspire to confidence. Aspire to feeling pretty and carefree and happy, without needing to look any specific way.
And the next time you see a 13-year-old girl gazing wistfully at a blemish-free, shiny-haired Bollywood actress on a magazine cover, bust the myth of flawlessness for her.
Tell her how beautiful she is. Praise her smile or her laugh or her mind or her gait.
Don't let her grow up believing that she's flawed, or that there's anything she's lacking for looking different from a woman on a billboard. Don’t let her hold herself to a standard that’s too high, even for the women on the billboards.
「celebrity without photoshop」的推薦目錄:
celebrity without photoshop 在 Zoe Chan 陳雪兒 Facebook 的精選貼文
You know you're a fashion blogger when...
- Your friends tell you to blog about something.
- It's 2AM and you're writing a post.
- You're thinking about new post ideas 24 hours a day.
- You have had to learn on your own how to use: HTML, CSS, SEO techniques, Blogger, Google Analytics, Wordpress, Typepad, Livewriter, Photoshop...
- You have to know how to take good photographs too.
- You are your own assistant, editor, writer, photographer, manager, agent and community manager.
- You can't attend the fashion presentations all the journalists go to, because you have to be at your "real" work, or have to be at school or university.
- You follow more than 60 blogs.
- You receive more than 150 emails every day.
- You have four (or more) email accounts: the personal one, the one for work, one for the blog, one that you opened ages ago and don't remember the password...
- You've reached the capacity limit of your email account thanks to the 100MB press releases some PR' agencies send (It happened to me. Yes, there's a limit in Gmail)
- It's September and you receive Christmas shopping ideas on your email.
- You feel guilty when you haven't updated in two days, even though no one tells you to do so.
- Your friends can't understand that you work on something that takes you more than two hours a day, for free.
- You read a fashion magazine and you've already seen 99% of the celebrity pics and trends on other blogs.
- You know what Mary-Kate Olsen, Kate Bosworth or Diane Kruger have worn every day for the last four years.
- Your friends and family ask you about what's "in" this season.
- You can't avoid examining everyone's look and when you see a cool outfit, you feel the urge to photograph them to share it with your readers.
- You already know what's in the stores without going shopping.
- You don't remember what you used to do on your spare time when you didn't have a blog.
- Holidays don't exist. You feel that you have to update your blog even if you're in the North Pole.
- You blog about labels you love, but hardly wear (I wish I could afford Isabel Marant)
- No internet connection: apocalypse