Dec 9, 2013

How to cheat at selfies: Guide to the 'digital surgery' apps that can zap zits, whiten teeth and airbrush out imperfections

Dailymail.co.uk - Almost everyone is aware that celebrities in magazines are usually digitally enhanced to have flawless skin and dazzling white teeth, but how about your friends’ photos on social networks?

A new breed of photo editing app is gaining popularity as people seek to digitally doctor their selfies so that they too can looks ‘perfect’ on social media sites.

One free app, Perfect365, which calls itself a ‘one-tap makeover,’ allows people to opt for a ‘natural touch up,’ which can include smoothing out their skin, eradicating pores and covering up spots far more effectively than concealer.

Users of the app can also opt for a ‘trendy makeover’ allowing them to try out new makeup looks with beguiling names such as ‘ocean breeze’ as well as filters that also have attractive names such as ‘lavender’.


While there are lots of options available, the company said 80 per cent of its users opt for the ‘natural,’ setting which blurs imperfections and evens out skin tone almost undetectably.

While photo retouching technology has long been available in expensive computer packages and used in fashion magazines, the rise of free photo editing apps has enabled more people to make their selfies picture perfect.

However, as social media is meant to be a spontaneous snapshot of life, many people are not freely admitting to using technology to make themselves look better.

While countless selfies are posted on social media networks such as Twitter and Instagram every day, relatively few people disclose they have used photo touch-up technology by using a hashtag such as #Perfect365.

According to The Huffington Post, just 50,000 selfies on Instagram have been marked with the tag but the Perfect365 app has been downloaded a staggering 17million times since its launch in 2011.

Caroline Tien-Spalding, director of consumer marketing at ArcSoft, which owns Perfect365 believes there is more pressure to project yourself looking at your very best.

‘You don’t know how long that photo is going to live or how long the impression that you’re putting out there will last,’ she said.

A number of apps, such as Pixtr and FaceTune allow users to boost specific facial featuresfrom brightening their smile to enhancing their eyes, which is an extension of red eye eradicating tools that have been used for years.

The apps also allow people to get the extra healthy celebrity glow at the tap of a button.

A collection of apps called ModiFace, which have collectively been downloaded over 27million times, allow people to change the shape of their bone structure significantly so that they can almost look like cartoon characters.

Demand for the apps largely comes from young females and 70 per cent of FaceTune users are female, while two thirds of Perfect365’s users are under the age of 24.

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