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Body Art Nudists Beach
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If you’ve been to Vegas or searched random things on Google, you’ve probably seen people dressed only in body paint. We talked to the “it” girl in body painting and discovered that it’s not just a strange way to play dress up or an excuse to get naked.
Robin Slonina owns her own body painting studio called Skin City in Las Vegas and is also a judge on Skin Wars , a body painting competition on Game Show Network (yes, there is a reality show about this and it.is.intense ).
Rest assured, this isn’t about doodling designs on your body with Crayola paint. Robin received a fine arts degree, and prior to body painting she was a mural painter in Chicago. She moved to Las Vegas after falling for a Cirque du Soleil performer and found a way to make her art thrive in Sin City… by painting murals on bodies.
It’s not just about stage shows, pole dancers or contortionists. She has private clients, too, and that is where the magic happens. “A lot of people from all over the country and all over the world find our website. They actually plan trips to Las Vegas specifically to come to Skin City and get body painted,” Robin explained. “We’ve had a school teacher from Iowa come just to live out a fantasy of getting painted like Wonder Woman with full pampering.” Think of it as a spa weekend getaway without the massage.
The transformation is something Robin describes as rewarding. “Most of these women have never had a makeover like this so when they look in the mirror it’s just amazing to watch their expression as they really start to fully embody this transformation,” she says. “The way they walk is different after they’ve been painted.”
One of the most emotional jobs she’s had is with military wives who came in and got painted in their husband’s army fatigues. Most jobs involve a photo shoot and these are no different. “[We] send the pictures off as a reminder and a token of love to their partners who are quite isolated,” said Robin.
As you can guess, it takes a long time to get body painted. Robin can really get to know her clients. They share stories and even have to take laughing breaks. “When you’re body painting someone it’s almost like [being] a hairdresser. They really open up and they talk. It can be quite an emotional and almost spiritual experience.”
And did we mention funny? Several grooms have actually come to the studio to get the famous Mike Tyson tattoo painted on their face a la The Hangover film and surprise their brides at the altar. Robin has also done zombie-themed weddings and weddings where the bride and groom were painted into their gown and tuxedo. Clothes are overrated anyways, right?
I’m starting to imagine all the possibilities — just think of Coachella. Your own temporary tattoos for summer beach days? Decorating your arm before girls’ night out? You may not be a trained fine artist, but Robin doesn’t think that should stop you from having some fun with body paint. “You can always find good, fun reference pictures online,” she points out and recommends starting with patterns like cheetah spots and zebra stripes. “It’s a really fun way to heighten your outfit for the night.”
And getting the supplies is as easy as buying makeup. Robin recommends Chromacake by MAC , sold at select MAC stores, or Makeup Forever products which are carried at select Sephora stores. “You can [also] experiment with pressing cosmetic grade glitter into the wet paint.”
In the meantime, for more inspiration, you can catch Robin and the outrageous body painting competition on Skin Wars , premiering tonight 9/8c on Game Show Network .
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If you’ve been to Vegas or searched random things on Google, you’ve probably seen people dressed only in body paint. We talked to the “it” girl in body painting and discovered that it’s not just a strange way to play dress up or an excuse to get naked.
Robin Slonina owns her own body painting studio called Skin City in Las Vegas and is also a judge on Skin Wars , a body painting competition on Game Show Network (yes, there is a reality show about this and it.is.intense ).
Rest assured, this isn’t about doodling designs on your body with Crayola paint. Robin received a fine arts degree, and prior to body painting she was a mural painter in Chicago. She moved to Las Vegas after falling for a Cirque du Soleil performer and found a way to make her art thrive in Sin City… by painting murals on bodies.
It’s not just about stage shows, pole dancers or contortionists. She has private clients, too, and that is where the magic happens. “A lot of people from all over the country and all over the world find our website. They actually plan trips to Las Vegas specifically to come to Skin City and get body painted,” Robin explained. “We’ve had a school teacher from Iowa come just to live out a fantasy of getting painted like Wonder Woman with full pampering.” Think of it as a spa weekend getaway without the massage.
The transformation is something Robin describes as rewarding. “Most of these women have never had a makeover like this so when they look in the mirror it’s just amazing to watch their expression as they really start to fully embody this transformation,” she says. “The way they walk is different after they’ve been painted.”
One of the most emotional jobs she’s had is with military wives who came in and got painted in their husband’s army fatigues. Most jobs involve a photo shoot and these are no different. “[We] send the pictures off as a reminder and a token of love to their partners who are quite isolated,” said Robin.
As you can guess, it takes a long time to get body painted. Robin can really get to know her clients. They share stories and even have to take laughing breaks. “When you’re body painting someone it’s almost like [being] a hairdresser. They really open up and they talk. It can be quite an emotional and almost spiritual experience.”
And did we mention funny? Several grooms have actually come to the studio to get the famous Mike Tyson tattoo painted on their face a la The Hangover film and surprise their brides at the altar. Robin has also done zombie-themed weddings and weddings where the bride and groom were painted into their gown and tuxedo. Clothes are overrated anyways, right?
I’m starting to imagine all the possibilities — just think of Coachella. Your own temporary tattoos for summer beach days? Decorating your arm before girls’ night out? You may not be a trained fine artist, but Robin doesn’t think that should stop you from having some fun with body paint. “You can always find good, fun reference pictures online,” she points out and recommends starting with patterns like cheetah spots and zebra stripes. “It’s a really fun way to heighten your outfit for the night.”
And getting the supplies is as easy as buying makeup. Robin recommends Chromacake by MAC , sold at select MAC stores, or Makeup Forever products which are carried at select Sephora stores. “You can [also] experiment with pressing cosmetic grade glitter into the wet paint.”
In the meantime, for more inspiration, you can catch Robin and the outrageous body painting competition on Skin Wars , premiering tonight 9/8c on Game Show Network .
The stories you care about, delivered daily.
SheKnows is a part of Penske Media Corporation. © 2022 SheMedia, LLC. All Rights Reserved.
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When it came time for Cathy Bartlett-Horwood to drop her dressing gown to the floor and stand naked in her village hall in front of her friends, she was nervous. The 60-year-old has had a complicated relationship with her weight for many years. She was so nervous, in fact, that she was physically sick beforehand.
Nevertheless, she persisted. Bartlett-Horwood became part of a group of brave women who’ve come to be known as the "Wonders of Whimple." The "wonders" are thus-named because they posed naked in the village’s most scenic spots for a calendar celebrating the beauty of the village's female population.
This calendar is more than a photographic paean to the female form. It’s a fundraiser for this village's year-long mission to change the way its residents feel about their bodies.
The village’s name is one you might not have come across before, for the village itself is deep in the heart of rural Devon—a county in the south west corner of England. Readers imagining a scene not unlike the idyllic filming location of the 2003 film Calendar Girls wouldn't be entirely off the mark.
Whimple is comprised of winding lanes dotted with thatch-roofed whitewashed cottages with the occasional farm thrown in for good measure.
But, beyond the chocolate box prettiness of the village, its 1,173 inhabitants have been working hard to acknowledge and embrace the beauty of their own bodies. It's by no means been an overnight flick-of-a-switch process for many of the people involved.
Gill Wilson— an eating disorders therapist—is the woman behind the movement. It all started in January 2016, when Gill organised screenings of a documentary in the village called Embrace (opens in a new tab) .
The film—created by Australian activist Taryn Brumfitt after a successful Kickstarter campaign—explores the issue of "body loathing" and aims to inspire people to change the way they think and feel about their bodies.
"After having my three children, I ended up hating my body," says Brumfitt in the documentary. "So I trained hard, and I'm standing there in my perfect body and I’m not happy." Brumfitt says she didn't want her daughter to grow up feeling the same way so she traveled the world to find out why so many people hate their bodies.
Wilson’s decision to screen the documentary in the area is one backed up by research. According to Dove’s Global Beauty and Confidence Report, which surveyed 10,500 women from around the world, British women have one of the lowest self-esteem scores, and just 20 percent said they liked the way they looked.
Alarmingly, a 2016 report by the Children’s Society found that girls are “less happy than they used to be” about their physical appearance. The research found that more than one-third of UK girls are unhappy with the way they look, a 30 percent rise over five years.
Wilson says that after she put on two screenings in the village, people came forward with ideas to further the notion of embracing one’s body image. One of which was a calendar.
“I was getting loads of emails, and the biggest messages was that the film needs to be shown in schools, but you need a licence for it to be shown in schools,” says Wilson. But, the idea of the calendar presented a solution to the licence issue—the proceeds raised by the Wonders of Whimple could pay for licences.
Word of the calendar spread through the village, and slowly but surely people came forward and signed up to take part in it. “Once people knew their friends were doing it, they’d say 'oh, if you're doing it, I'll do it,'” says Wilson.
This was exactly how Bartlett-Horwood came to be involved in the calendar. “I knew some of my friends were taking part, and I thought, hey why should I just tell them how proud I am of them when I can actually do it too!” Her photo now sits pride of place on the calendar’s February page, and she’s also on the front cover.
“I have spent years battling with my weight and worrying how I look in front of my family and friends,” she says. “But, why when I am healthy and happy I have wonderful people around me wh
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