Nude Women And Girls

Nude Women And Girls




🛑 ALL INFORMATION CLICK HERE 👈🏻👈🏻👈🏻

































Nude Women And Girls
arrow-left-mobile arrow left arrow-right-mobile arrow right Group 7 Gallery Icon Copy 2 Video Play Button Copy 5 Hamburger Menu Instagram Twitter Youtube Share Button 7C858890-6955-48EA-B871-66CE1E33590C Video-Playbutton Copy

By Antoinette Bueno







7:00 AM PDT, August 2, 2017





This video is unavailable because we were unable to load a message from our sponsors. If you are using ad-blocking software, please disable it and reload the page.

Sofia Vergara Poses Naked on Cover of 'Women's Health,' Says She…
‘Reboot’: Go Behind the Scenes With Calum Worthy (Exclusive)
'Modern Family' Stars Reunite for Sarah Hyland and Wells Adams' …
'The Family Chantel': Chantel Shuts the Door on Pedro After Heat…
'The Family Chantel': Pedro Tells Chantel He Wants a Divorce (Ex…
‘Family Feud’: Steve Harvey Shocked by Kristin Chenoweth's NSFW …
Hoda Kotb, Savannah Guthrie and 'Today' Anchors Tearfully Rememb…
Armie Hammer's Aunt Promises to Expose Family Secrets in Shockin…
Sylvester Stallone and Jennifer Flavin Split After 25 Years of M…
Norman Lear Reflects on Legendary TV Career as He Celebrates 100…
Britney Spears’ Lawyer Calls Kevin Federline ‘Cruel’ For Sharing…
'Stranger Things' Star Jamie Campbell Bower Pulls Out Vecna Voic…
Walker Hayes on How His Life 'Completely Changed' After Hit 'Fan…
How Keke Palmer Brought Her ‘Lightyear’ Character to Her ‘Full P…
Ronda Rousey Suspended Indefinitely From WWE After Attacking Sum…
Ellen Pompeo Steps Back From ‘Grey's Anatomy’ Season 19 as She J…
Christopher Walken Has One Last Conversation With His Dying Wife…
Ryan Phillippe Reflects on ‘I Know What You Did Last Summer’ Tur…
Kevin Bacon Reacts to ‘The River Wild’ Remake With Leighton Mees…

This video is unavailable because we were unable to load a message from our sponsors. If you are using ad-blocking software, please disable it and reload the page.

Share Share on Facebook Tweet Share on Twitter
Sofia Vergara is feeling body confident!
The 45-year-old Modern Family actress recently posed nude for Women's Health 's Naked Issue, looking undeniably gorgeous on the September cover. In the accompanying interview, Vergara gets candid about how her body has changed through the years, the work she puts in to maintain her famous physique and why her husband, Joe Manganiello, appreciates her for being herself.
Vergara says posing naked for Women's Health was especially important to her because of the message it's sending.
"Here's a woman, 45, being able to show her body," she points out. "It's not like before, when it was just young girls who would make the cover of a magazine."
Though Mangianello, of course, had some thoughts.
"Joe's like, 'F**k, you're going to be naked in everything now? Why?'" she says with a laugh, referencing a steamy shower scene in her upcoming spy thriller, Bent .
Vergara has no problem getting candid about aging in Hollywood.
"I'm 45. Even if you want to, at this time in your life, you can't be perfect," she explains. "It's not that you hate it, or that you're upset about it, but it is our reality. We're changing. I see it happening to me. I want to look my age, but I want to look great. I think if you are obsessed with this 'I want to look younger' thing, you're going to go crazy."
"People say, 'Oh, you look like you're in your 20s.' Well, it's not true," she adds. "Our skin is different. I had never thought of the word pore, then I'm like, 'Sh**! What do I do with these?'"
Another topic Vergara isn't shy about is her bra size.
"I can barely cover my boobs with two arms -- I'm a 32-triple-D!" she says when noting why most nude magazine poses won't work for her. "My boobs are real, and I had a baby. If I grab them, I can't even cover the nipple!"
The actress is accepting of her body, including that she'll never have six-pack abs. But she does strive to eat healthy, and works out with a trainer three or four times a week using the Megaformer, an advanced Pilates machine.
"Joe built a very nice gym in the house, so I don't have any excuses," she admits. "It's not about having muscle or cut abs. I don't have abs because I'm not 'I need to be like a fit model with a perfect body.' That would take too much effort!"
"It's like torture for me," she later admits about exercising. "I'm in a bad mood two hours before, I'm in a bad mood while I'm doing it, I'm in a bad mood at the end because I have to schedule the next class."
But if there's one thing she does love, it's looking her best for any occasion. Vergara admits she almost always wears lipstick, even if she's at home by herself.
"One of the first things Joe told me when we started dating was, 'I like how you're always very well put together,'" she reveals. "He said, 'I've had girlfriends that are all day long prancing around the house in sweats, no makeup…' I'm not saying that's bad; it's great. For good or worse, it's the way I grew up: Accept yourself but also be better than yourself."
ET spoke to Vergara last month at the Emoji Movie premiere, where she talked about playing the flamenco dancer emoji.
"Who who else is gonna do that than me?" she quipped.

By signing up, you agree to our

Terms of Use and Privacy Policy


By signing up, you agree to our

Terms of Use and Privacy Policy


™ & © 2022 CBS Studios Inc. and CBS Interactive Inc., Paramount companies. All Rights Reserved.


We and our partners store and/or access information on a device, such as cookies and process personal data, such as unique identifiers and standard information sent by a device for personalised ads and content, ad and content measurement, and audience insights, as well as to develop and improve products. With your permission we and our partners may use precise geolocation data and identification through device scanning. You may click to consent to our and our partners’ processing as described above. Alternatively you may access more detailed information and change your preferences before consenting or to refuse consenting. Please note that some processing of your personal data may not require your consent, but you have a right to object to such processing. Your preferences will apply to this website only. You can change your preferences at any time by returning to this site or visit our privacy policy.
Born and raised in Italy, Maria Clara Macrì began to travel the world to meet women from other cultures who, crossing her “lonely path and destiny”, would be willing to take part in her photography projects.
Since 2018, the photographer has been restlessly looking for destinations that could grant her the chance to encounter her next subject. Whether it was Milan or Paris, New York or Los Angeles, what mattered to Macrì was to be able to fully grasp and visually express the complex and intense nature of femininity today.
Focusing on the evolving visual portrayal of the female universe, the photographer’s latest project, In Her Room , explores the relationship between empathy, intimacy, and the contemporary representation of women. Macrì chose to capture her subjects within their own bedrooms, seeing each of those rooms as a safe space where women can experiment with, and discover, their identity for the very first time. 
The result is a series of nudes that – featuring girls from all cultures and walks of life – reflects women’s uniqueness. Entirely shot on film, In Her Rooms will soon become a book.
Below, we speak with Maria Clara Macrì about the importance of countering the mainstream representation of women, the phenomenon of female migration, and the relevance that In Her Rooms has for everyone going through social isolation.
“I could see how each of those women had something that resonated with me. Somehow, they were all reflections of myself” – Maria Clara Macrì
In Her Rooms was shot by yourself all around the world and it features girls coming from all sorts of countries, backgrounds, and ethnicities. What did you want to capture in those rooms?
Maria Clara Macrì: At the beginning of this adventure, I wanted to find the new woman, the woman of the millennium, the one that is striving for freedom just standing for the right to be exactly who she wants to be. I was looking for women that are uninterested in having a marketable value, women that do not recognise themselves in the stereotyped, sexualised images that mainstream media force onto us. I was looking for women that, for these exact reasons, are willing to write a new chapter in the history of humanity.
Going from one room to the other, I realised that my work was also capturing a new kind of relationship, namely the relationship between women and their domestic space. A relationship that, despite conserving an ancestral nature, is no longer determined by historical traditions or gender stereotypes, but brand-new.
Throughout the project, I came to understand that my subjects were showing me what binds us, women from across the world, to one another. Working with them, I could see how each of those women had something that resonated with me. Somehow, they were all reflections of myself. Every time I would meet one of my subjects, I would become more aware of who I am, losing and finding myself again while entering those rooms. Shooting this series enabled me to capture the seeds of a revolution and the fruits are soon to be blossoming.
Where does In Her Rooms stand in relation to today’s mainstream representation of womanhood? And i s there a specific reason why you chose female nudes over other ways of representing women?
Maria Clara Macrì: Although today the diverse faces of womanhood are being more often recognised and represented in the media, the mainstream conception of women’s image is still dominated by sexualising and objectifying portrayals of the female body. I believe this to be strictly linked to the mentality that lies behind the production of such images, which is largely subordinate to the logic of marketing and profit. In Her Rooms has recently attracted more attention, and I think that that is because the goal of this series was not to sell a product. The project was not inspired by a personal economic gain but by the empathy and solidarity I felt towards all women in the world. The series was born by the passion I put into strongly believing that it is time to finally witness the liberation of women’s bodies and identities. In Her Rooms is a cultural experiment where women are photographed not to please the market, but to raise public awareness of the beauty that characterises every human being.
You identify as queer and non-binary. Has your portrayal of women in this series been shaped by any specific queer values? Could you give us some concrete examples of how that’s reflected in the series?
Maria Clara Macrì: Queer means above all inclusion, respect of each other’s differences, and freedom. This is the perspective, the lens through which I observe the world, that is also the perspective I used to shoot In Her Rooms . Given that I define myself as queer not only because of my sexual orientation but especially for my personal way of being – which is reflected in each one of my projects – I believe In Her Rooms and all women I portrayed to be just as queer as I am.
You’ve mentioned that most of the girls featured in your project weren’t born in the cities where you’ve met them. Did the shared experience of moving cities help you feel at ease while interacting with the girls you photographed?
Maria Clara Macrì: Lots of young women are forced to leave their birthplaces to find their real paths, to follow their dreams. This is also my story, as their journeys become part of mine. ‘As a woman I have no country, as a woman I want no country, as a woman my country is the whole world,’ Virginia Woolf said. This is how we feel and this is also how we recognise ourselves as sisters. 
What criteria guided you through the selection of your subjects?
Maria Clara Macrì: To some extent, this project was guided by destiny. I chose my subjects based on the empathetic feelings that attracted me to them, or them to me. I believe that this strong energy I call empathy recognises and attracts people who share similar experiences and, sometimes, even similar physical characteristics. So destiny and empathy played a big role in this project, although when it came to selecting my subjects, I also had some specific features in my mind. My interest always goes to faces that reveal a mixture of different backgrounds, to gazes that reveal deepness or strength. To ways of walking that show a nature exceeding what one is wearing, so that I know for sure that, once nude, that person will still have the same authenticity, just wearing her skin. I chose big cities because I know that is where the vanguards first take place. That is where the new generations from all over the world go to create new cultures and values necessary to defend their own rights. I wanted to visit places that are far from my own homeland to then come back and realise that, from New York to Milan, there is not so much of a difference in being a woman nowadays.
You said that the girls featured in the series described the shootings as “liberating sessions”. Could you give us any insights on the behind-the-scenes of In Her Rooms ?
Maria Clara Macrì: In the first part of my trip I was planning most of the shoots via Instagram, but then I just freely abandoned myself to my destiny. I felt this was the right choice as I wanted coherence when it came to the freedom of the women I was going to capture, as well as to the freedom of my own journey. I didn’t want anything to be planned, as it was that specific freedom that linked the chaos of those girls’ rooms to the chaos of my own life, and to that of life itself. I travelled, being hosted by strangers and, sometimes, my subjects would be generous enough to offer me a couch to crash on. I met one of my subjects in Los Angeles after asking a guy with a guitar at a crossroads if he could suggest to me a nice bar where to spend the evening. He then invited me to his house party in Beverly Hills, and that’s where, as soon as I stepped into his villa, I saw Leila for the first time. A week later, she sent me a DM on Instagram saying that she was interested in taking part in my project and free to shoot that day, so I just ran to her. We had the shooting that same day, but I stayed with her for two days dancing, laughing, and eating delicious food. We basically became sisters.
When I still was in LA, Monica Hernandez replied to an email I had sent her a year before that saying that she would be able to shoot the following week. So I took a plane back to NY, although that wasn’t my original plan. Monica was my link to Leandra, but I won’t tell you more about the book. I don’t want to spoiler too much of the crazy stories behind In Her Rooms . Since every shooting turned into a dialogue, I had brilliant conversations with all of them. Morena helped me decide whether I should fly back to Italy the day after our shooting or follow my instinct and burn the ticket. She explained to me why she thought it was time to go back, but then she added “your inner voice will show up and decide for you. Regardless of what I or your reason can say, at some point, you will know that that was the best decision you could take.” So I burned my ticket and, the morning after that day, the rain made me encounter my next subject at my favourite coffee shop in Bushwick.
“Your room is a space of freedom where you can create, write, and read while remaining in touch with your own body and energy” – Maria Clara Macrì
Would you say that In Her Rooms could encourage people to work on the relationship they have with their own body, ideas, and personality – hence inspiring people to use their quarantine to rediscover themselves – by celebrating the stories and the personalities that are hidden within the walls of those girls’ bedrooms?
Maria Clara Macrì: Definitely. When the quarantine started, I was hit by a form of anxiety that I had never felt before. I was completely shocked, as I guess everyone else was. In the first days of isolation, I couldn’t recognise myself, I was lost and detached. Then I felt the need to look at my handbook, to look at all of them, all of my women, who were there to help me. They reminded me that home is the shelter where you can expand the knowledge you have of yourself and the one you have of the world. Your room is a space of freedom where you can create, write, and read while remaining in touch with your own body and energy. Those women are in my book to remind me that the deepest and most truthful inviolability of freedom resides in our minds and souls, and so in our bodies. The love for life that these women have taught me is an invitation for everyone to react positively to the crisis. To stay inside our rooms will prepare us for the cultural Renaissance that will take place once this has passed. To be able to take care of our bodies and listen to their new needs day after day is, right now, an act of love for the whole community. We need to face this time of crisis and change being aware of its dark sides, but also embracing the light and the cultural rebirth that this can bring about.

Boards are the best place to save images and video clips. Collect, curate and comment on your files.
Unable to complete your request at this time. Please try again later or contact us if the issue continues.
Experience our new, interactive way to find visual insights that matter.
Images Creative Editorial Video Creative Editorial
Best match Newest Oldest Most popular
Any date Last 24 hours Last 48 hours Last 72 hours Last 7 days Last 30 days Last 12 months Custom date range
NUMBER OF PEOPLE AGE PEOPLE COMPOSITION ETHNICITY
7,131 Girls In Nude Premium High Res Photos
© 2022 Getty Images. The Getty Images design is a trademark of Getty Images.
Access the best of Getty Images and iStock with our simple subscription plan . Millions of high-quality images, video, and music options are waiting for you.
Tap into Getty Images' global scale, data-driven insights, and network of more than 340,000 creators to create content exclusively for your brand .
Streamline your workflow with our best-in-class digital asset management system . Organize, control, distribute and measure all of your digital content.
Grow your brand authentically by sharing brand content with the internet’s creators.


www.pexels.com needs to review the security of your connection before
proceeding.

Did you know botnets can be used to shutdown popular websites?
Requests from malicious bots can pose as legitimate traffic. Occasionally, you may see this page while the site ensures that the connection is secure.

Performance & security by
Cloudflare


Wendy Williams Topless
Triss Merigold Nude
Solo Twat

Report Page