

Tænk, hvis jeg havde fået retoucheret min grydefrisure, de sprækkede læber eller fået gjort kinderne smallere. Og netop derfor er dette billede et skønt minde fra min skoletid. ?Man er som man er, det ka' ikke laves om Man går rundt og ser ud, som man gjorde da man kom Du ka' drømme om at være en kineser i New York Men man er som man er, og det er godt nok? Hvis jeg aldrig havde mistet mit leverpostejsfarvede hår, havde jeg da nok foretrukket det. Wonky teeth or whatever else it may be,” the PM wrote on Instagram. “Edited child photos? No, right? We are who we are. Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen is among those who have posted childhood photos on social media. “I just want him to look back on the photo when he is older without noticing the discolorations on his teeth,” Darlene Popkey Nielsen told DR in the report.įocus on the trend has provoked a reaction from several politicians and public figures using the hashtag #delditskolefoto (share your school photo), with the overriding message ‘you are who you are’, referencing a popular Danish children's song. In one report, photographers described requests from parents to edit images by removing things like zits and cuts.Īnother DR report featured a parent who said that she had asked for scratches and cuts to be removed from her four-year-old son’s picture, and for discolorations to be removed from his teeth. School photos have been the subject of public debate in Denmark this week after a report featuring parents who have their children’s images digitally enhanced.īroadcaster DR earlier this week reported on the trend of parents requesting an idealized outcome of their kids' class photos.
