Another celebrity is calling out the use of photo editing in magazines -- this time in French publication Madame Figaro.
Emily Ratajkowski, the magazine's latest cover star, says she's disappointed that her lips and breasts appear edited in the final photo. To illustrate her point, the model and actress shared what she says is the un-retouched original photo alongside Madame Figaro's cover.
SEE ALSO: This Forever 21 shirt looks just like another shirt designed to benefit Planned ParenthoodEveryone is uniquely beautiful in their own ways. We all have insecurities about the things that make us different from a typical ideal of beauty. I, like so many of us, try every day to work past those insecurities. I was extremely disappointed to see my lips and breasts altered in photoshop on this cover. I hope the fashion industry will finally learn to stop trying to stifle the things that make us unique and instead begin to celebrate individuality.
"We all have insecurities about the things that make us different from a typical ideal of beauty," she wrote on Instagram. "I, like so many of us, try every day to work past those insecurities."
She added a plea for those in the fashion industry to "stop trying to stifle the things that make us unique and instead begin to celebrate individuality."
Here's a full look at the cover, courtesy of Madame Figaro's Instagram account.
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We've reached out to Madame Figarofor comment.
Ratajkowski's dig follows those of other high-profile women (Zendaya and Kate Winslet, to name a few) whose images have been altered in magazines. Though most glossies have yet to do away with Photoshop, other areas of the fashion industry have taken (admittedly minuscule) steps to ameliorate unattainable beauty standards in fashion. For example, earlier this month, French luxury designers agreed to stopcasting models who are a size 0 or underage.