Cindy Crawford has spoken out for
the first time about the unauthorised release of a supposedly
unretouched photograph of herself. The
model hit the news earlier this year when a photo purporting to be a
pre-Photoshop version of a Marie Claire picture of her went viral.
While many women saw the less-than-perfect image as a positive step, Cindy felt its release was malicious.
'I felt blindsided,' she told Elle Canada. 'I was very conflicted, to be honest.'
The unflattering image showed a then
48-year-old Crawford revealing a less-than-flat stomach while dressed
only in her lingerie.
In the image the 49-year-old had wrinkles and sagging skin around her stomach area.
The photo had allegedly been digitally manipulated to exaggerate any slight flaws.
'That picture didn’t reflect what I saw when I looked in the mirror—even in the worst dressing-room lighting,' she explained.
Cindy's face in its natural state in a leaked, unphotoshopped picture that went viral. |
But Cindy felt she was unable to speak out against it, because so many women saw it as a positive step.
'It put me in a tough spot: I
couldn’t come out against it because I’m rejecting all these people who
felt good about it, but I also didn’t embrace it because it wasn’t real -
and even if it were real, I wouldn’t have wanted it out there,' she
said.
'I felt really manipulated and conflicted, so I kept my mouth shut.'
Cindy said she didn't understand why seeing a bad picture of her should make people feel better.
'Why would seeing a bad picture of
me make other people feel good? I know my body, and I know it’s not
perfect, but maybe I have a false body image; maybe I think I look
better than I do. I think that most women are hard on themselves.'
However she did admit: 'Sometimes,
the images that women see in magazines make them feel inferior—even
though the intention is never to make anyone feel less.
'So somehow seeing a picture of me
was like seeing a chink in the armour. Whether it was real or not isn’t
relevant, although it’s relevant to me. I don’t try to present myself as
perfect.'
When the picture went viral
celebrity snapper John Russo said in a statement to ABC News that the
image - from a 2013 cover shoot with Marie Claire Mexico - was 'stolen
or unlawfully accessed and then altered and distributed to the media.'
Russo added: 'It has been falsely
claimed that this photograph represents an un-retouched image of Cindy
Crawford. This is not true.
'It is a fraudulent altered version of my photograph. I am grateful that this fact has been brought to the public's attention and that corrections are being run in the media.'
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