Older Women Galleries

Older Women Galleries




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Older Women Galleries
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Women As Old As 78 Get Transformed Into Pin-Up Girls, And The Result Will Surprise You
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Even in your twilight years, you are still entitled to feel attractive and sexy, if you wish. Chrissy Sparks, from Birmimgham, UK, is a master of incredible boudoir photography, and is able to bring the best out in any woman using make-up, lighting and editing techniques.
“I want everyday women to have access to a full photoshoot experience and magazine cover style images that models usually do,” Chrissy told the Mirror. “Through my work, I celebrate women of all shapes and sizes and believe that with the right posing, lighting and styling, I can bring out the best in a woman’s beauty.”
From her Birmingham studio Dollhouse Photography , which has over $250,000 worth of lingerie, corsets, dresses, costumes and other accessories, Chrissy and her team shoot women of all ages. It is, however, the older ladies that have the most startling transformations. “After the photoshoot I work on the photographs in post-production,” she says. “I remove cellulite, muffin tops, scars, bruises, spots and uneven skin tone. “I also reduce lines & wrinkles, smooth the silhouette and enhance muscle tone.”
“The reasons they want a shoot are varied – it could be something just to make them feel sexy. I have a knack at assessing a client’s face, skin and posture to look past signs of ageing and capture images that bring out the best in a woman.”
“Most mature clients want to look well for their age and are not interested in chasing after their youth.”
While Chrissy acknowledges that many of her clients arrive very nervous and with body hangups, she says that the results of the photoshoots often do wonders for self-esteem. “The reactions have been everything from bursting into tears of delight, thank you cards and gifts, and many heart warming accounts of how the shoot has boosted their self esteem and confidence,” she says.
“Seeing the women so happy with their images makes the long hours and huge personal investment into the business worth every bit.”
Scroll down to check out the incredible images for yourself, and let us know what you think in the comments!
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Greta is a Photo Editor-in-Chief at Bored Panda with a BA in Communication.In 2016, she graduated from Digital Advertising courses where she had an opportunity to meet and learn from industry professionals. In the same year, she started working at Bored Panda as a photo editor.Greta is a coffeeholic and cannot survive a day without 5 cups of coffee... and her cute, big-eared dog.Her biggest open secret: she is a gamer with a giant gaming backlog.
It's a good way to remind that inside every grandma lives a young and wild girl XD
When I wake up I feel 18, until I pass the mirror
When I wake up I feel 50 years old, until I pass the mirror. Then I feel like 60 years old. And then I remind myself, that I'm still in my thirties. I'm not an early bird at all. ;)
My mother always said she thought that was why people's eyesight went bad - so you couldn't see the wrinkles. Then magnifying mirrors were invented... Rats.
Everyone looks better when you photoshop their wrinkles away. What's the point of this?
It's not only Photoshop, but also make up, poses, lighting... Result is great :)
Yes...exactly. You can see in their poses, that wearing make-up and nice lingerie, gave them much more confidence.
It's a ton of photo shop and picture editing. The only thing that's even close to the original picture is the general shape of these women. No amount of makeup is going to make their skin that tight. I get why someone would want to have these done, but in reality it's just someone that is still insecure as an older adult. How do you get to that age and still feel so unhappy with your own body? We live in a time when people who do these things are heralded a being strong for doing these ridiculous things to feel beautiful. But then society does the same thing when an old person goes on America's got talent to do an "Old timey cabaret type dance" for fun. So society decides that everything is positive for some random reason and that all of these things people do are empowering. Well these photos are anything but, they are completely fake. I hear people rag on beautiful models and say that they're mostly airbrushed and fake. But when an older lady this it's empowering? This is the same thing period, people don't get to decide that what's empowering for one person is fake and unrealistic for another. This just goes to show how society is now collectively insecure and needs the world to shape around their brittle emotions.
sometimes people forget what they used to be what they used to look like. they look happy in there pin-up pictures why take it away from them. you live in the digital age you should be used to photoshop none of these women are nor have they seen there former selfs in this detail EVER! and its way more then photoshop there was a a very talented photographer behind all the pics photoshop can only do so much its not the miracle tool you think it is you still need a good shot with great lighting and centered to turn out the results after you edit the picture.
Agreed: This is totally idiotic. So the point is to make us think: "Wow, they are so old and ugly before they are artificially airbrushed!" If being airbrushed into a young body and face makes these women feel better, then I feel very sorry for how terrible they must feel about themselves in their day-to-day lives.
It's just to make them feel young again, and remind themselves age is a state of mind.
"Editing techniques" is definitely right...
This comment is hidden. Click here to view.
Exactly ! It's just like sticking facetuned pics of old people onto young girls bodies...
It's a good way to remind that inside every grandma lives a young and wild girl XD
When I wake up I feel 18, until I pass the mirror
When I wake up I feel 50 years old, until I pass the mirror. Then I feel like 60 years old. And then I remind myself, that I'm still in my thirties. I'm not an early bird at all. ;)
My mother always said she thought that was why people's eyesight went bad - so you couldn't see the wrinkles. Then magnifying mirrors were invented... Rats.
Everyone looks better when you photoshop their wrinkles away. What's the point of this?
It's not only Photoshop, but also make up, poses, lighting... Result is great :)
Yes...exactly. You can see in their poses, that wearing make-up and nice lingerie, gave them much more confidence.
It's a ton of photo shop and picture editing. The only thing that's even close to the original picture is the general shape of these women. No amount of makeup is going to make their skin that tight. I get why someone would want to have these done, but in reality it's just someone that is still insecure as an older adult. How do you get to that age and still feel so unhappy with your own body? We live in a time when people who do these things are heralded a being strong for doing these ridiculous things to feel beautiful. But then society does the same thing when an old person goes on America's got talent to do an "Old timey cabaret type dance" for fun. So society decides that everything is positive for some random reason and that all of these things people do are empowering. Well these photos are anything but, they are completely fake. I hear people rag on beautiful models and say that they're mostly airbrushed and fake. But when an older lady this it's empowering? This is the same thing period, people don't get to decide that what's empowering for one person is fake and unrealistic for another. This just goes to show how society is now collectively insecure and needs the world to shape around their brittle emotions.
sometimes people forget what they used to be what they used to look like. they look happy in there pin-up pictures why take it away from them. you live in the digital age you should be used to photoshop none of these women are nor have they seen there former selfs in this detail EVER! and its way more then photoshop there was a a very talented photographer behind all the pics photoshop can only do so much its not the miracle tool you think it is you still need a good shot with great lighting and centered to turn out the results after you edit the picture.
Agreed: This is totally idiotic. So the point is to make us think: "Wow, they are so old and ugly before they are artificially airbrushed!" If being airbrushed into a young body and face makes these women feel better, then I feel very sorry for how terrible they must feel about themselves in their day-to-day lives.
It's just to make them feel young again, and remind themselves age is a state of mind.
"Editing techniques" is definitely right...
This comment is hidden. Click here to view.
Exactly ! It's just like sticking facetuned pics of old people onto young girls bodies...
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Is nakedness invisibility’s opposite? Maybe not, but, if it’s unapologetically displayed, it can be a kind of antidote to erasure.
“Bebe on Sand,” 2014. Photographs by Jocelyn Lee
“Deborah at Aquinnah Beach in September,” 2020.
“Nancy at 78, Maine at 18 (Aunt and Grandniece),” 2018.
“Nancy Floating at Quitsa Pond,” 2016.
“Judith at Home,” 2009. Photographs by Jocelyn Lee
“Bebe and Pagan in the Red Room,” 2004.
“Bebe and Pagan Pregnant with Twin Girls,” 2012.
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Some clichés about the cycle of life are true. When you are raising young children, the days are long and the years are short. And when you’re a woman, you will, at about age fifty, become invisible. All our lives, as girls and younger women, we prepare ourselves to be looked at. We grow accustomed to registering —to attracting, evading, or denouncing the male gaze. In “ Mrs. Dalloway ,” Clarissa, newly aware of herself as a woman of a certain age, walks down the street thinking, “This body, with all its capacities, seemed nothing—nothing at all.” The cultural critic Akiko Busch, quoting that line from “Mrs. Dalloway,” notes that “a reduced sense of visibility does not necessarily constrain experience.” True, but it takes some getting used to, and when it’s punctuated, as it often is, by condescension—when strangers are suddenly addressing you not even as “Ma’am” but, with a verbal wink, as “young lady”—you may not want to get used to it.
Is nakedness invisibility’s opposite? Maybe not, but, if it’s voluntarily, unapologetically displayed, it can be a kind of antidote to diminishment and erasure. A nude portrait of a woman older than, say, sixty is an unusual image—even a taboo one. To make such photographs, and, even more so, to pose for them, is an act of defiance. In the course of her career, the photographer Jocelyn Lee has been drawn to nude bodies of all shapes and ages. Her latest book, “Sovereign” (Minor Matters Books), features a selection of her photographs of women who range in age from their mid-fifties to their early nineties, posing naked, frequently outdoors and in natural settings.
Lee’s color images of older women are painterly, classical, but also frank. Skin puckers, crinkles, and sags. Bellies poof and pleat. A silver-haired woman stands knee-deep in a pond strewn with autumn leaves, looking directly at the camera, her elbows angled back like wings to reveal one intact breast and one mastectomy scar. A naked woman sits on a blanket of moss in the woods, her breasts and belly soft, so at ease she might be napping. In “Nancy at 78, Maine at 18,” a woman and her grandniece stand nude on a beach. Side by side, their long-legged, curly-headed bodies rhyme, but also remind us of the ways time will remake our familiar, corporeal selves. The image is not some grim memento mori, though. The women lean comfortably toward each other, touching shoulders; the younger woman’s arm loops through the elder woman’s. Behind them, the sea and sky are a light-suffused blue.
Lee, who is fifty-nine, lives part of the year on a lush, wooded property outside of Portland, Maine. She’s taken some of the portraits of older women at a pond near her house, and others on beaches at Martha’s Vineyard and elsewhere. The natural settings, devoid of sociological detail and inherently beautiful, tend to banish ironic readings and extend a certain benevolence to the naked subjects. We aren’t in paradise here—nobody in these photos looks that naïve—but we are not in any sort of judgment-laden social space, either. Lee told me that she hoped the locations implied the warmth of sun on the body—“that kind of comfort and love”—and communicated the idea that we are “all essentially sensual creatures.”
“The camera can be very cruel depending on how you use it,” she said. “There’s a whole tradition of photography that’s based on criticality and cruelty. Diane Arbus —whom I love, by the way—looked for unflattering moments to create a sense of drama. Sometimes that can be done with the juxtaposition of elements in a space, the exaggeration of the appearance of wealth or poverty, harsh lighting.”
Lee said that, by contrast, her work had sometimes been criticized for being “too earnest or romantic.” But she made her peace with that a long time ago. Through her photography, Lee has always tried to understand “what lay ahead.” When she was still in college, long before she had children herself, she photographed a pregnant friend in the nude as part of her thesis project. “This was before the Demi Moore Vanity Fair cover; people didn’t really know what a pregnant woman looked like,” she said. Through the years, she took many nude photographs of her mother, who, she says, had a remarkable ease in her own skin. Lee continued taking pictures of her as she was dying of cancer.
I’m about six months older than Lee, and, all in all, I consider aging to be far better than the alternative, as my own mother, who died at sixty, the age I am now, used to say. Still, I prefer the cloudy mirror in my bathroom to any in which I can see myself clearly. The older women who posed for Lee in the nude include professors, writers, artists, an astrologer, a hospice worker, and a small-town mayor. To me, they seem very brave, but it bothers me to say so. We all have bodies; if we’re lucky, we all get old, or at least older. Why not show what it looks like?
Two of Lee’s subjects, Judith and Nancy, have been posing for her for decades. Both told me that they don’t love how they look in some of the images, but that they treasured the experience of making them with Lee, whose process is creative and collaborative. Nancy, who is eighty, said, “I cringe when I look at the images, but I know that when I’m ninety I’m gonna say, ‘Ooh, look how great I looked!’ ” Her grandniece Maine, who posed with her, is a photography student. Maine told me that Lee’s image makes her happy because her grandaunt and she look so alike in it. “It’s like seeing myself in sixty years, and I sort of love that,” she said. “I think Nancy is beautiful.” Lee told me that she plans to photograph the pair every year.
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