Real Life vs. Photoshop Ads

Ray-Ban Colorize Campaign Asks You to Never Hide

With the constant drama that stems from the evil that is Photoshop, we are starting to see more and more artists rebelling against the image editing software.

The latest ad campaign from Ray-Ban, Colorize, might look like it was heavily photoshopped, but it wasn't. The models were painstakingly hand painted by talented makeup artists to look like they were photoshopped. See the sixth and seventh images for behind-the-scenes shots of the painting process.

So why the trouble and the expense? Because Ray-Ban is asking you to never hide behind Photoshop. Wear you colors loud and proud!

Anti-photoshop Movement
Opportunity for businesses to promote authenticity and challenge unrealistic beauty standards.
Handcrafted Advertising
Disruptive innovation to stand out in a digital world by creating unique and visually appealing campaigns.
Embracing Imperfections
Market demand for celebrating flaws and promoting self-acceptance in advertising.

Where This Applies

Cosmetics
Opportunity for cosmetic companies to advocate for natural beauty and highlight their own products' authenticity.
Fashion
Disruptive innovation opportunity for fashion brands to promote diverse and inclusive body image representations in their campaigns.
Advertising
Demand for unique and visually appealing campaigns that challenge traditional editing practices and embrace imperfections.
SCORE
6.6 out of 10
GENDER
10% Men90% Women
MARKETTop markets: North America, Europe, Asia
GENERATION
  • Gen Z
  • Gen Alpha
  • Millennial (primary audience)
  • Gen X (primary audience)
POPULARITY
Popularity 91%
Activity 99%
Freshness 8%

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