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US lingerie brand praised for featuring 'curvy', un-airbrushed teenager in latest campaign

Aerie released a pledge in 2014 to use un-airbrushed photos of women wearing its products

Alexandra Sims
Monday 25 January 2016 11:38 EST
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Barbie Ferreira, 19, featuring in Aerie’s latest campaign
Barbie Ferreira, 19, featuring in Aerie’s latest campaign (Aerie/ YouTube)

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A US lingerie brand has been praised for its revolutionary marketing after using a “curvy”, un-airbrushed teenager to model in its latest campaign.

Barbie Ferreira, a self-proclaimed “curve model”, is one of four women to feature in Aerie's, a lingerie line from American Eagle, #AerieREAL campaign, which claims to feature “real” women, “real” bodies and no Photoshopping.

Nineteen-year-old Ms Ferreira, who has been dubbed the “Queen of in-between”, stars in the brand's The Real You Is Sexy advertisement, which aims to foster body positivity through “loving your real self”.

The campaign video shows Ms Ferreira, who boasts over 200,000 Instagram followers, in a pink bikini reciting nuggets of body positive wisdom.

“I am unapologetically myself, no matter what anyone’s opinion is,” Ms Ferreira says in the video.

“Not being retouched in the images is something that’s very important to me - people knowing that, that’s what I look like without anyone’s perception of what my body needs to look like.”

Both Ms Ferreira and Aerie's campaign have been widely praised on social media:

Speaking to i-D in November Ms Ferreira said the term “plus-size" was “inaccurate” and praised Instagram for providing a “raw, uncensored platform” for girls to model without limitations on their size or look.

“We cast Barbie because she’s got nothing to hide, she’s strong and beautiful - she embraces her real self, which is the spirit of the Aerie Real message,” Aerie global brand president, Jen Foyle, told Refinery29.

Aerie released a pledge in 2014 to always use un-airbrushed photos of women wearing its products. At the time, the line's "style and fit expert", Jenny Altman, told ABC News the company wanted to "show everything", including birth marks and tattoos.

Last year Victoria’s Secret was attacked by commenters on Facebook for using a highly air-brushed image in one of its social media campaigns. The brand has since faced backlash from its customers to become more savvy to Photoshopping in adverts.

According to Business Insider, Aerie's sales increased 18 per cent in the second quarter of 2015, compared to just 3 per cent at Victoria’s Secret.

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