Vogue Italiaさんのインスタグラム写真 - (Vogue ItaliaInstagram)「In the November issue of Vogue Italia, @SamiraLarouci discusses how beauty and politics are extremely interconnected. Beauty has never been more interwoven with civil and social justice causes.  With facial recognition cameras now commonplace across the United States and Europe, a number of artists, activists and makeup artists have joined forces to create what is now known as CV Dazzle (Computer Vision Dazzle), which lends its name from ‘Dazzle camouflage’ (a painterly geometric technique that was used during both World Wars to conceal war ships). CV Dazzle involves using make-up to obscure the four points that facial recognition algorithms tend to pick up: forehead, nose, each cheek and chin. But beyond artists, beauty brands are also being launched with social, and identity politics at the forefront. Los Angeles-based unisex beauty brand @NOTO_Botanics - which was founded by former makeup artist Gloria Noto - using minimalism and the hype of clean beauty is a way to raise money for vital causes. To date, NOTO Botanics has raised over $27,000 for Planned Parenthood, Los Angeles LGBT Center and the Okra Project. “We are still a small company, so being able to give that amount feels truly rewarding” Noto enthuses, adding “We as consumers hold a lot of power into shifting the direction of what capitalism looks like, as well as how culture moves, so we have the opportunity to show that inclusion, ethical practices and sustainability matter to us. I think it's a brand’s responsibility to do their best to help expand what matters, or change what we want and need to see. So I hope that we, as an industry, are truly changing how we operate at our core, and that it can continue to evolve in a positive light for change”. Read the full text via link in bio. @Emrata photographed by @TinaTyrell.」11月12日 21時01分 - vogueitalia

Vogue Italiaのインスタグラム(vogueitalia) - 11月12日 21時01分


In the November issue of Vogue Italia, @SamiraLarouci discusses how beauty and politics are extremely interconnected. Beauty has never been more interwoven with civil and social justice causes.
With facial recognition cameras now commonplace across the United States and Europe, a number of artists, activists and makeup artists have joined forces to create what is now known as CV Dazzle (Computer Vision Dazzle), which lends its name from ‘Dazzle camouflage’ (a painterly geometric technique that was used during both World Wars to conceal war ships). CV Dazzle involves using make-up to obscure the four points that facial recognition algorithms tend to pick up: forehead, nose, each cheek and chin. But beyond artists, beauty brands are also being launched with social, and identity politics at the forefront. Los Angeles-based unisex beauty brand @NOTO_Botanics - which was founded by former makeup artist Gloria Noto - using minimalism and the hype of clean beauty is a way to raise money for vital causes. To date, NOTO Botanics has raised over $27,000 for Planned Parenthood, Los Angeles LGBT Center and the Okra Project. “We are still a small company, so being able to give that amount feels truly rewarding” Noto enthuses, adding “We as consumers hold a lot of power into shifting the direction of what capitalism looks like, as well as how culture moves, so we have the opportunity to show that inclusion, ethical practices and sustainability matter to us. I think it's a brand’s responsibility to do their best to help expand what matters, or change what we want and need to see. So I hope that we, as an industry, are truly changing how we operate at our core, and that it can continue to evolve in a positive light for change”.
Read the full text via link in bio.
@エミリー・ラタコウスキー photographed by @TinaTyrell.


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