What Beauty Looks Like, From Argentina to Vietnam

Journalist Esther Honig sent an untouched image to Photoshop designers around the world. She had one request: "Make me look beautiful."

Esther Honig sent an untouched image to Photoshop designers around the world. She had one request: Make me look beautiful. (Esther Honig)

Esther Honig sent an untouched image to Photoshop designers around the world. She had one request: Make me look beautiful. (Esther Honig)

It started with a self-portrait. Esther Honig sent a photograph of herself, lit simply and shot from the shoulders up, to a designer in Sri Lanka. She sent a simple request along with the photo: "Make me look beautiful."

Honig is a journalist and social media manager based in Kansas City, Missouri; in her work, she'd come across the international freelancing site Fiverr, and noticed how many people on the service were advertising their skills in Photoshop. She got an idea: What would happen if she asked designers from different countries to manipulate her photo—with nothing but a request to "make her look beautiful"?

Honig did just that, asking a group of some 40 designers to Photoshop her into their own idea of beauty. (As a response to anyone confused by her request, Honig would ask the designer to make her look "like a woman in one of their country's fashion magazines.") The results of this exchange are collected in Honig's project Before & Afterwhich offers a revealing, if not at all scientific, insight into various countries' and cultures' assumptions of beauty. There's a lot of lightened skin. And lightened eyes. And heightened hair. Some images give Honig some clothes. One gives her a tattoo.

I asked Honig whether any of the global Photoshops particularly surprised or impressed her. She replied:

"Morocco was the most surprising image, the way the concept of "make me beautiful" was interpreted in this instance left me breathless. In turn the image I received from the U.S. (blond hair) made me shriek, it's been manipulated so radically that it was like looking in the mirror to see a warped image of my own face."

Here's the original, untouched image of Honig:
The original, untouched image of Esther Honig (Photo: Esther Honig)
The original, untouched image of Esther Honig (Photo: Esther Honig)
And here are the results of the Photoshopping, country by country.

Argentina


Argentina.jpg


 

Australia:
AUSTRALIA.jpg


Bangladesh
Bangladesh.jpg


Bulgaria
Bulgaria.jpg


Chile
Chile.jpg


Germany
Germany.jpg


Greece
Greece.jpg


India
India.png


Indonesia
Indonesia.jpg


Italy
Italy.jpg


Kenya

Kenya.jpg


 

Morocco
Morocco.jpg


Pakistan

Pakistan.jpg


 

Phillipines
Phillipines.jpg


Romania
Romania.jpg


Serbia
Serbia.jpg


Sri Lanka
Sri Lanka.jpg


Ukraine
Ukraine.jpg


United Kindgom
United Kingdom.jpg


United States 1

United States 1.jpg



 

United States 2

United States 2.jpg


 

Venezuala
Venezuala.jpg


Vietnam
Vietnam.jpg
This article was originally published on The Atlantic. Click here to view the original. © All rights reserved. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency.

TheAtlanticLogo. 02.jpg


 

 


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2 min read

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By Megan Garber

Source: The Atlantic


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