Kate Moss - posting requires reading thread rules, see post #1

i don't think she'll show up in paris....would be great, but she hasn't done so in many years...
 
can't wait to wear my rag and bone coat again manana-- i bought it last month to look like a pirate! but it's still too hot in ny for it
 
i think she needs a bit of colour atleast a navy blue or something, she is killing me with grey black and white!!!!
 
she looks so different in those new candids...think it's something with her face maybe...
 
Kate Moss
leaving Groucho Nightclub
London, England - 02.10.07
credit WENN
 

Attachments

  • get_preview.php 1.jpg
    get_preview.php 1.jpg
    31.9 KB · Views: 36
  • get_preview.php 2.jpg
    get_preview.php 2.jpg
    33.6 KB · Views: 30
  • get_preview.php 3.jpg
    get_preview.php 3.jpg
    25.3 KB · Views: 35
Kate Moss mascara ads banned after complaints her lashes were false
Mascara ads showing Kate Moss sporting "traffic stopping" eyelashes have been banned after complaints that the supermodel's lashes were false.
The magazine and TV ads for Rimmel said that the 'Magnif'eyes mascara' produced 70 per cent more lift, with a 'unique vertical life brush' helping wearers 'get the London look'.
Moss features in both the magazine ad and the TV commercial - but two viewers complained that they did not believe her eyelashes were genuine and that the ads exaggerated the effect of the mascara.
rimmel02210_468x611.jpg

The offending Rimmel ad
Ad firm J Walter Thompson (JWT) insisted that Moss was not wearing false eyelashes, but did not provide documentary evidence to back it up. The firm admitted the lashes were enhanced after the shoot.
The Advertising Standards Authority investigated complaints that the lashes were false and also challenged whether Rimmel could back up their claim that the mascara provided 70 per cent more lift.
Rimmel said it had developed existing brush technology by creating a mascara brush that provided greater lash lift and claimed it had tested the claim of 70 per cent more lash lift on ten female panellists.
It provided a table and a sample before and after shot, claiming the results showed the average increase in lash lift from roof to tip was 74.7 per cent.
The Broadcast Advertising Clearance Centre (BACC) said they were satisfied that the demonstration sequences were an accurate reflection of the capabilities of the product and supported the claims made in the TV ad.
However, the ASA concluded that it could not be proved the lashes weren't false - and ordered the company not to repeat the claims. It also found the 70 per cent claim could be misleading.
rimmeleye02210_468x363.jpg

Fake: viewers complained the eye lashes were exaggerated
A spokesman said: "The ASA was concerned that Rimmel had failed to provide evidence that confirmed Kate Moss was not wearing false lashes.
"We were also concerned that JWT said they had retouched the lashes in post production, but had not provided data that clarified the extent to which that had altered the appearance of the lashes.
"Because we had not received documentary evidence that Kate Moss was not wearing false lashes in the ads we concluded that the images of the eye lashes in the press and TV ads may have exaggerated the benefits of the product, and were likely to mislead consumers.
"The ASA acknowledged the evidence submitted by Rimmel to support their claims '70% more vertical lashes' in the press ad and '70% more lash lift' in the TV ad.
KateMossDM2208_468x674.jpg

The real thing: Kate Moss with her natural lashes
"We noted that the measurements used in the test were taken from digital images of the eye before and after the mascara was applied, and were not taken from the actual lashes themselves.
"We considered that some consumers could interpret the claim to refer to an increase in actual lash length, rather than the length of the lashes as it appeared in the digital images.
"Because the claim '70% more lash lift' referred to an increase in the appearance of the lash length, and not an actual increase, we concluded that the ad could mislead.
"We told Rimmel not to repeat the ad in its present form. We advised them to include a disclaimer in future ads where post production techniques had been used to increase the effects of a product, or where false lashes had been used.
credit dailymail
 
Last edited by a moderator:

Users who are viewing this thread

New Posts

Forum Statistics

Threads
212,605
Messages
15,190,893
Members
86,514
Latest member
mipssavage
Back
Top
monitoring_string = "058526dd2635cb6818386bfd373b82a4"
<-- Admiral -->