The China Mail - AI opens 'endless' doors for fashion models, closes others

USD -
AED 3.672497
AFN 65.999751
ALL 82.67029
AMD 380.869126
ANG 1.790292
AOA 917.000409
ARS 1467.4938
AUD 1.490665
AWG 1.8
AZN 1.697324
BAM 1.676201
BBD 2.015932
BDT 122.308355
BGN 1.676385
BHD 0.37703
BIF 2960.648952
BMD 1
BND 1.287533
BOB 6.941177
BRL 5.376397
BSD 1.000938
BTN 90.271296
BWP 13.375843
BYN 2.907855
BYR 19600
BZD 2.013018
CAD 1.38748
CDF 2175.000177
CHF 0.797375
CLF 0.022538
CLP 884.170486
CNY 6.973201
CNH 6.971125
COP 3715.39
CRC 497.683846
CUC 1
CUP 26.5
CVE 94.501652
CZK 20.8137
DJF 178.238866
DKK 6.404896
DOP 63.541037
DZD 130.02102
EGP 47.142302
ERN 15
ETB 155.849435
EUR 0.85715
FJD 2.27485
FKP 0.745969
GBP 0.74257
GEL 2.690242
GGP 0.745969
GHS 10.729299
GIP 0.745969
GMD 73.498401
GNF 8760.67552
GTQ 7.674804
GYD 209.400885
HKD 7.796285
HNL 26.511671
HRK 6.457397
HTG 130.990183
HUF 331.675977
IDR 16874.85
ILS 3.13868
IMP 0.745969
INR 90.13295
IQD 1310
IRR 42125.000158
ISK 125.830081
JEP 0.745969
JMD 158.749748
JOD 0.70898
JPY 158.005029
KES 129.110026
KGS 87.450297
KHR 4020.380441
KMF 422.000464
KPW 900.000517
KRW 1470.279867
KWD 0.30753
KYD 0.834073
KZT 510.813718
LAK 21636.863058
LBP 89631.172304
LKR 309.383316
LRD 179.661554
LSL 16.43788
LTL 2.95274
LVL 0.60489
LYD 5.429356
MAD 9.214736
MDL 17.005412
MGA 4560.000106
MKD 52.749089
MMK 2100.011455
MNT 3558.20757
MOP 8.038875
MRU 39.930408
MUR 46.66988
MVR 15.4498
MWK 1735.594208
MXN 17.92705
MYR 4.061498
MZN 63.909693
NAD 16.43788
NGN 1424.239726
NIO 36.835632
NOK 10.07095
NPR 144.433731
NZD 1.732305
OMR 0.38447
PAB 1.000938
PEN 3.36075
PGK 4.270636
PHP 59.225013
PKR 280.153667
PLN 3.610045
PYG 6623.214676
QAR 3.648767
RON 4.362403
RSD 100.607986
RUB 78.325034
RWF 1459.284113
SAR 3.749818
SBD 8.123611
SCR 13.842726
SDG 601.499955
SEK 9.17199
SGD 1.285645
SHP 0.750259
SLE 24.149891
SLL 20969.500159
SOS 571.046576
SRD 38.174989
STD 20697.981008
STN 20.99751
SVC 8.758104
SYP 11059.574895
SZL 16.43548
THB 31.240082
TJS 9.313467
TMT 3.51
TND 2.92551
TOP 2.40776
TRY 43.1473
TTD 6.798051
TWD 31.585602
TZS 2499.732175
UAH 43.331405
UGX 3606.429523
UYU 38.986806
UZS 12142.560239
VES 331.293301
VND 26275
VUV 120.295663
WST 2.78398
XAF 562.182198
XAG 0.011895
XAU 0.000218
XCD 2.70255
XCG 1.8039
XDR 0.699174
XOF 562.182198
XPF 102.210738
YER 238.3977
ZAR 16.393065
ZMK 9001.198872
ZMW 19.442837
ZWL 321.999592
  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • RBGPF

    2.2900

    82.5

    +2.78%

  • BTI

    0.4900

    55.68

    +0.88%

  • RELX

    -0.3700

    42.77

    -0.87%

  • CMSD

    0.1750

    23.865

    +0.73%

  • CMSC

    0.0400

    23.31

    +0.17%

  • NGG

    -0.3600

    79.76

    -0.45%

  • JRI

    0.0100

    13.81

    +0.07%

  • GSK

    0.0000

    50.39

    0%

  • BCE

    0.1000

    23.84

    +0.42%

  • RIO

    1.7500

    82.88

    +2.11%

  • BCC

    -0.0900

    82.96

    -0.11%

  • RYCEF

    0.6500

    17.29

    +3.76%

  • BP

    0.1200

    34.41

    +0.35%

  • AZN

    -1.0200

    93.63

    -1.09%

  • VOD

    0.0500

    13.55

    +0.37%

AI opens 'endless' doors for fashion models, closes others
AI opens 'endless' doors for fashion models, closes others / Photo: © AFP

AI opens 'endless' doors for fashion models, closes others

London-based model Alexsandrah Gondora understands the power of being in "two places at the same time" thanks to an AI replica of herself: "She's doing the hard work so I don't have to!"

Text size:

Fashion designers and retailers can book her digital double for photo shoots without her having to travel or physically be there, Gondora told AFP.

It is a solution that "saves time", said the model, who is also walking down in-person runways at London Fashion Week, which runs until Monday evening.

In the fashion industry, artificial intelligence is already used by brands to create visual imagery for e-commerce websites and customised advertising campaigns at a lower cost.

While the technology opens up opportunities for some, critics fear AI will render many professionals, including models, make-up artists and photographers obsolete -- and could risk promoting an artificial standard of beauty.

- Customisable -

In one video, sculpted male models flex their muscles next to glamorous women, with a backdrop of marble pools and gilded mirrors.

But none of it is real: this Christmas campaign was entirely generated with the use of AI by studio Copy Lab for the Swedish underwear brand CDLP.

"We are a very small company: I cannot go to a house in Beverly Hills and shoot a campaign," said CDLP co-founder Christian Larson.

According to Larson, "real" photography has limitations.

"You have a film of this many pictures, the sun will set, and the light will disappear, and the budget will run out," Larson told AFP.

But with AI, "you dive into this black hole of endless options."

Preparing an ad campaign involving a photo shoot in the French Alps for ski eyewear would normally take several months to complete and could cost 35,000 euros ($37,000), but can be done virtually for just 500 euros in a few days, claimed Artem Kupriyanenko, citing a campaign done by his technology company Genera.

London and Lisbon-based Genera boasts a catalogue of 500 AI-generated models, all of which it claims to own the copyrights for.

The avatars can be customised by clients: "We can do any body shape, any gender, any ethnicity," assured Genera's creative head Keiron Birch, who said the practice was "super inclusive".

But AI tends to create a characteristic face type, which differs from generator to generator, said Carl-Axel Wahlstrom, co-founder of Stockholm-based Copy Lab, an "AI creative studio".

MidJourney, for example, has a tendency to generate models with thicker lips.

- Grey area -

Generative AI is trained on banks of images of models that are often retouched or which reflect a dominant "white, Western" aesthetic, explained Wahlstrom.

To obtain less generic results, he refines the descriptions or "prompts" he provides to the AI engines.

And for more "authentic" results, he also trains them on "imperfect" databases, where he has, for example, added images of "regular skin, like my skin, my girlfriend's skin, people that we know's skin."

Alexsandrah Gondora was critical of brands which use AI images created from databases found on the internet without paying the model, who she called the "middleman".

Models also face being duplicated virtually without their knowledge.

The "Fashion Workers Act", due to come into force this summer in New York, hopes to tackle this grey area by enabling models to control the use of AI to reproduce their likeness. But its practical application could prove complicated.

Gondora, however, is compensated for the work done by her digital alter ego and has the final say on how it is used.

This is also the case when she helps bring Shudu Gram, an AI-generated black supermodel, to life.

This virtual character created in 2017 and billed as the "world's first digital supermodel" is followed by 237,000 followers on Instagram.

Gondora and several other real-life black models lend their features to various shoots and projects for Shudu.

Last year, Shudu was a model for a 1960s-inspired collaboration by fashion label MAX&Co and London-based designer Richard Quinn.

When used ethically, AI does not deprive models from diverse backgrounds of opportunities, assured Gondora, who claimed that this technology has "opened certain doors" for her.

One of them is that her AI model is "timeless".

"There is no expiration for my AI... it's timeless. Somewhere out there in the world, my AI will always be young to me, even when I'm old."

C.Smith--ThChM