me:face previous comment-16: "In the spirit of plasticity you could remove the small lines around your eyes, mouth, and on the bridge of your nose." (click image for larger view)
The tan, it's too much. Nobody likes to look at a sunbench tan. So a little lighter, please. And the hair, it looks a bit dead at the ends. I'd put a little wax in it, just for some more shine.
I'm looking for a democratic perfect image of myself. So it is up to you to give me directions how I should change my face and body. Please always react on the last retouched image in the blog and chose between me-face or me-total. What do you like to have changed in order to see your beauty in me. big eyes/small eyes/cheek bones/large mouth/thinner/taller/skin tone/,.....what is your idea off beauty in me?
Besides biology and culture, there are other factors determining physical attractiveness. The more familiar a face seems, the more highly it is usually judged to be attractive, an example of the mere exposure effect. Also, when many faces are combined into a composite image (through computer morphing), people usually view the resulting image as more familiar, attractive, and beautiful than the faces that were combined to make the composite. One interpretation is that this shows an inherent human preference for prototypicality. That is, the resultant face emerges with the salient features shared by most faces, and hence becomes the prototype. The prototypical face and features is therefore perceived as symmetrical and familiar. This reveals an "underlying preference for the familiar and safe over the unfamiliar and potentially dangerous". However, critics of this interpretation point out that compositing computer images also has the effect of removing skin blemishes such as scars, and generally softens sharp facial features. Classical conceptions of beauty are essentially a celebration of this prototypicality. This shows the importance of prototypicality in the judgment of beauty, and also explains the emergence of similarity of the perception of attractiveness within a community or society, which shares a gene pool.
3 comments:
The tan, it's too much. Nobody likes to look at a sunbench tan. So a little lighter, please. And the hair, it looks a bit dead at the ends. I'd put a little wax in it, just for some more shine.
The tan is definitely too much - you'll become Victoria Beckham if you're not careful.
Of course we all like the real you best, but an unchanging picture of the real you would make for a pretty crap blog.
I beg to differ:
http://www.everyday.noahkalina.com/
Sure, Noah changes everyday, as we all do. But, there's no Photoshop there - not even an attempt at "perfection".
I find that the simplest things in life are often the most beautiful. Just be.
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