#1

Sasha Pallari, a makeup artist and curve model with a solid fanbase of 20.3k followers on Instagram, started the #FilterDrop campaign back in July 2020. She hoped to inspire “more real skin” on social media.
But now the ASA is on board in cracking down the influencer market saturated with heavily misleading filters to promote, sponsor, and sell beauty and fashion products.
The ASA examined two specific examples, one from the tanning brand Skinny Tan that featured influencer Elly Norris in the photos. Turns out, Elly used Instagram’s widely popular in-app filter “Perfect Tan” to further exaggerate her tanned look.
#2

Another case was that of an Instagram promo campaign for the brand Tanologist Tan shared by the influencer Cinzia Baylis-Zullo.
In a heavily airbrushed video, Cinzia told her followers: “Hi guys, I wanted to tell you all about how I’ve been tanning my face recently using these Tanologist face and body drops.”
Sasha Pallari from the #FilterDrop campaign has filed complaints about these two ads to the ASA, and just a day ago, she got the news back from the UK’s regulator of advertising.
#3

The ASA ruled that the filters in these cases indeed breached the CAP Code rules that relate to misleading advertising and exaggeration. This is how exactly their assessment read: “The ads breached CAP Code (Edition 12) rules 3.1 (Misleading Advertising) and 3.11 (Exaggeration).”
#8

This is not a before and after.
I could not achieve this “look” in real life.
No skincare will give me this result.
No makeup will make me this poreless.
So many of us are striving for these unrealistic beauty standards, feeling miserable when we can’t achieve them no matter how much time and money we invest.
And then there are those who have misrepresented themselves online with filters so much, that they now struggle to meet people in person because they can’t live up to the expectation they created.
When filters stop being fun, stop using them. And next time you find yourself comparing yourself to you or anyone else, question what exactly your comparing yourself to.
And do you really think it’s beautiful or have you been told to think so?
Remember: #poresnotflaws
Commenting on the case of the “Perfect Tan” filter used in one of the ads, the ASA stated: “We understood that the filter 'Perfect Tan' by Bianca Petry resulted in a significantly darker skin tone. The filter’s effects were therefore directly relevant to the intended effects of the product.”
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The ASA added: “Because the ads conveyed a tanning effect of the product, we considered that the application of the filter 'Perfect Tan' by Bianca Petry to the images was directly relevant to the claimed performance of the product and gave a misleading impression about the performance capabilities of the product."
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They also issued an order for the ads to be deleted. “The ads must not appear again in the form complained about. We told Skinny Tan and Ms. Norris not to apply beauty filters to photos which promoted beauty products if such filters were likely to exaggerate the effect the product was capable of achieving,” the ASA stated.
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#19

I did a flick through some of the filters I’ve seen recently and did some before an afters..
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