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by kerkeslager
2160 days ago
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There are and always will be a lot of people willing to do art for free or even at great personal cost. I've had friends who modeled niche clothes (i.e. corsets) for the clothing producer, in exchange for a discount on the clothes (not even free clothes). I would go so far as to say that a lot of the most interesting art out there happens at break-even or negative valuations. That said, I don't think you're right to place big companies that provide most of the media presence of fashion scenes in that category. Big clothing companies care about selling clothes, not about art, and they'll follow the cheapest, most effective way to do that. A marketing scheme based around supporting artists might happen, but if it happens it will be because market research says it plays well with target demographics, not because of some sense of charity. And it will likely be a token gesture, not a core strategy. Look at what has already happened in fashion in the past: nods to fat shaming have been laughably tiny "plus sized" models, nods to race issues have been light-skinned black women with primarily European features, nods to skin not being perfect have been un-photo-shopped pictures of women who, from what I can tell, have perfect skin to begin with. And the vast majority of the time the gigantic Broadway/Lafayette billboard is a slender white photoshopped woman. The cost of doing this stuff with AI is only going down. Why would you pay a whole photo crew and model when you can send a few low-rez photos of the clothes to a team in Bangalore and get back a video of a "model" with exactly the body specifications you request, doing exactly what you want, for $200? |
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