^ not exaggerating but maybe more research on the work of designers and sociocultural context when they emerged is important to avoid getting carried away with aggravation. This has nothing to do with feminism or objectification ('turning it into a thing'), 'allyship' is... good I guess?, but obsessing over our natural bodies is not all we do as women and I think throughout her career Rei's rebelled precisely against that, and for the past 10 or so years she seems to have fully moved away from the template and has gone to town exploring mediums and sculpture through traditional fashion resources/textiles/formats. Maybe it isn't that great all the time but this has nothing to do with dehumanization. If anything, constantly reducing womenswear to the visuals of p*rn culture is a bigger problem in fashion right now (given the amount of horndogs designing womenswear), but that usually gets all the 'yes c*nty!' claps, which makes it harder to eradicate because.. no one's feelings seem to be hurt.