Glamour photography
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Glamour photography is the photographing of a model to emphasize the subject, instead of the fashions or products endorsed.
Today, nude or semi-nude photographs of models appear in softcore publications like Playboy, Perfect 10, or in the pages of tabloid newspapers like Britain's The Sun's Page 3; however, glamour photography does not have to include nudity as evidenced today by the many lad mags.
Standards of glamour photography have changed over time, reflecting changes in social morals. For example, in the early 1920s, USA photographers like Ruth Harriet Louise photographed celebrities to glamourise their stature. During World War II pin-up pictures of movie stars in swimsuits were extremely popular among US servicemen.[citation needed] In the 1950s and early 1960s, photographers such as Peter Gowland produced glamour images with partial nudity.[1]
[edit] Related photography genres
[edit] Notable glamour photographers
- Peter Basch
- Richard Fegley
- Rolando Gomez
- Ron Harris (Nude photographer)
- Peter Gowland
- George Hurrell
- Ruth Harriet Louise
- Harrison Marks
- David Mecey
- Bill Moore
- Pompeo Posar
- Suze Randall
- Herb Ritts

