
H&M has won praise for promoting realistic-looking women's bodies by becoming the latest high-street fashion retailer to leave its swimwear models' stretch marks, arm hair, scars and blemishes on show instead of airbrushing them out.
The Swedish fashion giant joins the likes of ASOS, Boohoo and Missguided in ceasing to cover up its models' natural skin. It comes mere months after Monki, which is part of the H&M Group, won praise for showing natural-looking women's bodies in photos that notably didn't pander to the male gaze.




The brand's swimwear models on its website are shown with stretch marks on their legs and bums, small scars, hair on their forearms and facial moles, which brands still tend to airbrush out despite growing customer demand to see bodies that look more like theirs represented in fashion campaigns.
H&M's models look refreshingly at ease with themselves and their bodies, which makes a refreshing change from what we're used to seeing while bikini shopping online.
The move was widely praised on social media, with some pointing out "how far [the brand] has come" since it was accused of modelling its swimwear on computer-generated bodies in 2011, and lauding it for its body-positive stance.
I love these photos, stretch marks, scars & hair on their arms shows that these women have lived a life as normal people & they still look stunning. https://t.co/RhSH2FZAs6
— Lou Nelson (@Lulam70) July 26, 2018
Thank you @hm for reinforcing more positive body images and saying no to airbrushing! 👏 #positiverolemodels #womensupportingwomen
— Dr Larisa Corda (@DrLarisaTV) July 26, 2018
H&M becomes the first leading retailer not to airbrush stretch marks https://t.co/90SdAxetog via @MailOnline
look how far @hm has come! from using virtual bodies to real bodies without airbrushing https://t.co/OVspOdnvu8 pic.twitter.com/5Y9Xvl7v6f
— SOz (@snyx) July 4, 2018
I salute @hm for this, showing the world the 'real' womenhttps://t.co/DmgaXKdSPj
— Julia Rollo (@rollo_julia) July 26, 2018
Always been a fan of @hm but even more so this morning. Well done for showing #BodyPositivity with your models and not photoshopping stretch marks out of your photos. pic.twitter.com/6W6V4ZBncM
— Caitlin McEvoy (@crmcevoy) July 14, 2018
I was scrolling through H&M’s website and I saw this super cute swimsuit. So I look more into it and as you can see, they have not edited their stretch marks out! I’m so proud of @hm like they’re really supporting natural bodies, I love it pic.twitter.com/FWkBnt02Tt
— emma (@emmathewho) July 21, 2018
H&M NOT COVERING UP STRETCH MARKS IS ON ANOTHER LEVEL (and that's not the first time i see it)
— 𝙑𝙖𝙡𝙚𝙧𝙞𝙖 (@tripxswitch) July 9, 2018
H&M YOU'RE DOING AMAZING SWEETIE pic.twitter.com/3HjNzJHB7r
However, some suggested there was a long way to go until brands like H&M are truly representative of all women, highlighting the fact that all the models are slim and conventionally attractive and that there is little cellulite on show.
H&M didn't airbrush out some very skinny models' stretch marks and arm hairs and people are saying it's amazing. The bar for what we celebrate as progressive in ad campaigns is so low. Maybe cast a model who reflects the size of the average woman? https://t.co/8auqyuSkpG
— Rebecca Sullivan (@beck_sullivan) July 26, 2018
H&M stops airbrushing bikini models who proudly show off their stretch marks - The Sun
— Sharon (@sbarton28) July 26, 2018
Good! Now we need more models of all shapes & sizes with other normal body traits like cellulite so children grow up knowing we are all different & thats fine! https://t.co/qxtvhzEYZo
You don't get a prize for putting women's stretch marks in a photo. You should be doing that anyway! They're still all thin and beautiful with perfect skin though, of course.https://t.co/XMO75xTQnV
— Kathryn (@kathrynblack07) July 26, 2018
But H&M has made some positive steps when it comes to size inclusion recently. The brand announced last month that it would be making its sizing bigger after years of customer complaints that its clothes were smaller than other high-street items of the same size.
We eagerly await to see which high-street retailers will be next to buck the archaic airbrushing trend.
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