‘I’m sexy’: Proof Celeste looks like this

‘I’m sexy’: Proof Celeste looks like this

Landing {a magazine} cowl is an enormous deal – particularly once you’re a celeb recognized for celebrating “real” our bodies.

But when Celeste Barber appeared on the entrance of prestigious ladies’s journal Marie Claire this week, the Australian comic wasn’t hit with the wave of assist you’d count on.

Instead, the 40-year-old’s entrance web page copped a barrage of criticism.

While Celeste – who was photographed in a pink swimsuit with cutouts by designer Melissa Odabash to have a good time the journal’s annual wellness challenge – described feeling “banging” through the shoot, social media customers claimed Celeste had been “highly filtered”.

One claimed they “could hardly recognise her” as one other condemned the journal editors for “photoshopping the sh*t out of what would have been a naturally beautiful pic of Celeste”.

But whereas each Marie Claire and Celeste are but to handle the criticism, the reality lies in plain sight, on newsstands throughout the nation.

Nicky Briger, editor of Marie Claire Australia, revealed in her editor’s letter that Celeste had a “no retouch request”, a requirement Briger stated they have been joyful to oblige.

During the shoot on Sydney’s Maroubra seaside late final 12 months, she defined Celeste – who is thought for her parodies mocking unrealistic magnificence requirements – had approached her with the request whereas they huddled underneath an awning to cover from a “freak storm”.

“Celeste pulled me aside. ‘Look, I don’t want any retouching, OK? I like the way I look,’” Briger wrote.

“She pointed to an image on photographer Georges Antoni’s camera of her rocking a neon-orange one-piece with generous side cut-outs.

“’That’s a sexy body – why change it?’”

Briger stated she “couldn’t agree more”, including it was another excuse why they knew Celeste was “the perfect person to helm our annual wellness issue”.

“She’s confident in her own skin and preaches self-acceptance to all who’ll listen. Put simply, she’s the real deal,” she penned.

“So when Celeste delivered her no-retouch request, I knew we’d made the right cover choice.”

Celeste has since additionally revealed one other element in regards to the “tongue-in-cheek” photograph shoot, which options the mother-of-two – who additionally has two stepdaughters with husband Api – in an array of various health situations.

“I had a fractured coccyx during this shoot, she’s professional,” she wrote on Instagram in a publish thanking Marie Claire for “having me on your cover”.

“I shot my @netflix special the night before and was exhausted but I loved every second of this and felt banging.”

She detailed the minor modifying tweaks made in a separate publish, stating “they photoshopped out my strapless bra” in a single snap and cheekily poking enjoyable on the picture of her levitating, writing: “There’s not trickery here, I can actually fly.”

The February challenge of Marie Claire Australia is on news stands now.

Originally printed as Proof Celeste Barber’s Marie Claire cowl wasn’t edited amid ‘filter’ claims