Rawr~♥
(via helixel)
Rawr~♥
(via helixel)
The Mathematics of Beauty
The Fibonacci Sequence is a sequence of numbers where each number is the sum of the previous two—i.e., 0, 1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13, 21, 34…and so on to infinity. The ratio of one number to the next is approximately 1.61803, which is called “phi”, or the Golden Ratio. It’s not a magical mathematical equation of the universe, but it definitely reflects natural, aesthetically beautiful patterns. The ratio been used as the ideal proportion standard by artists and architects throughout history, and it’s also found in nature because it’s one of the most efficient way to pack things together. The human body can mostly be divided up in terms of the golden ratio, with one nose, two eyes, three segments to each limb, five fingers on each hand, and our measurements and proportions also reflect the ratio, especially the proportions of the human face—the width of the nose, position of the eyes, length of the chin. Our attraction to another person increases if their body and features are symmetrical and proportional, since we perceive them to be healthier, and so the Golden Ratio appears to be connected with humans ideals of beauty. It’s worth noting, however, that although the ratio can create a beautiful face, it can’t create a beautiful mind.
(via corgisaurolophus)
* Doctors must sign off on model’s weight
* Advertisers obliged to come clean on “photoshopping”
(Reuters) - Israeli lawmakers have banned underweight models from catwalks and commercials, a measure they hope will reduce eating disorders and promote a healthy body image.
The law, passed late on Monday, says women and men cannot be hired for modeling jobs unless a doctor stipulates they are not underweight, with a body mass index (BMI) — a measure expressing a ratio of weight to height — of no less than 18.5.
The law also bans the use of a person who “appears underweight” and says advertisers must explicitly state if graphic manipulation was done to make a model look thinner in a photo.
Rachel Adato, one of the lawmakers who pushed the bill, said ahead of the vote she hoped the law would protect youth from pursuing unattainable ideals of beauty. “Beautiful is not underweight, beautiful should not be anorexic,” she said.
The fashion industry’s use of wafer-thin models on runways and in magazines has for years sparked heated debate. Critics say the practice promotes an unhealthy body image among women, which contributes to anorexia and other eating disorders.
Designers and agencies have often been criticised for putting relentless pressure on their models to stay unhealthily thin. After two anorexic Latin American models died in 2006, countries including Italy and India banned underweight models from the catwalk.
Adi Barkan, an Israeli fashion photographer and model agent who collaborated with Adato on promoting the law, said impossible standards set by the fashion industry were getting too dangerous.
“I look (back) 15 to 20 years ago, we shot models (sized) thirty-eight. Today, it’s twenty-four.” Barkan said on the set of a photoshoot in Tel Aviv.
“This is the difference between thin and too thin. This is the difference between death and life,” he added.
Danit Rozman, an Israeli model on Barkan’s set, said it was important for young women to accept who they were. “I think it’s better to bring something more real to the industry and in general to the world,” Rozman said. (Additional reporting by Rami Amichai; Writing by Maayan Lubell, editing by Paul Casciato)
I like the manipulation of photos law, but banning underweight models seems unfair. Not everyone fits in the “Average” weight for their height, and are still healthy. I know some girls are just born to skinny and struggle to gain weight their entire lives, but a majority of models just starve themselves for that “perfect skinny”, creating this image in girl’s lives today that creates damaging thoughts and diseases.
By default I’d say this is government meddling in things it shouldn’t. However, this issue in particular is one that causes incalculable amounts of damage to young girls’ self esteem and physical health, so I would approve; at least of the disclaimer.
I’m still iffy over the banning part since not all underweight models are doing something wrong, so it feels unfair to ban them completely. Although it seems that part is based clinically since it calls for a doctor to sign off on the weight which makes it a bit more fair.Two sides to everything.
I remember when I saw this the first time when I was younger I cried.
When I was growing up there were only a small handful things that made you feel visually inadequate…
Mostly it was your hair color/style or the thickness of your thighs…Now there are tons of things from your teeth, tan, wrinkles, cup size, jean size, hair length, abs and on and on…
How about focusing on intelligence, kindness, accomplishments, grace etc?