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<updated>2009-07-01T14:22:00Z</updated>
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<entry>
  <id>http://adipositivity.phototage.com/archives/9478_1745602162/331312</id>
  <title>Adipositivity 289</title>
  <author><name>The Adipositivity Project</name></author>
  <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://adipositivity.phototage.com/archives/9478_1745602162/331312"/>
  <published>2009-07-01T00:00:00Z</published>
  <updated>2009-07-01T00:00:00Z</updated>
  <content type="html">
 &lt;a href=&quot;http://adipositivity.phototage.com/archives/9478_1745602162/331312&quot; style=&quot;border:0;&quot;&gt;&lt;img src=&quot;http://my-expressions.com/up_media/6300/pblog/9437/et_1246458118.JPG&quot;/&gt;&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br&gt;


Adipose: Of or relating to fat.

Positivity: Characterized by or displaying acceptance or affirmation.



MISSION:

The Adipositivity Project aims to promote size acceptance, not by listing the merits of big people, or detailing examples of excellence (these things are easily seen all around us), but rather, through a visual display of fat physicality.  The sort that's normally unseen.  

The hope is to widen definitions of physical beauty.  Literally.

The photographs here are close details of the fat female form, without the inclusion of faces.  One reason for this is to coax observers into imagining they're looking at the fat women in their own lives, ideally then accepting them as having aesthetic appeal which, for better or worse, often translates into more complete forms of acceptance.

The women you see in these images are educators, executives, mothers, musicians, professionals, performers, artists, activists, clerks, and writers.  They are perhaps even the women you've clucked at on the subway, rolled your eyes at in the market, or joked about with your friends.

This is what they look like with their clothes off.

Some are showing you their bodies proudly.  Others timidly.  And some quite reluctantly.  But they all share a determination in altering commonly accepted notions of a narrow and specific beauty ideal. 

Bookmark adipositivity.com and check back often, as new photographs are added regularly(ish).  And please help spread the message.  The Adipositivity Project: Changing attitudes about the aesthetic validity of big women, one fat fanny at a time.



ABOUT THE PHOTOGRAPHER:

Substantia Jones’ photography has been exhibited in galleries and museums throughout the US East Coast, and has appeared in The New York Times, Time Out New York, and some other publications she can’t recall at this time, but you probably haven’t heard of them anyway.  She is biographied in the 2006 Who’s Who in America (though under the name her momma gave her), and back in the day, she won some photography awards which would sound somewhat Mayberry if listed here, but at the time, they damn near made her cry.  Still kinda do.

She lives in Manhattan, where she also sometimes steps out (more like lays around) in front of the camera, and on some of those occasions, the snapping is done by her trusty sidekick, Dr. H, who also fetches her banana popsicles and maintains her muse, a certain pancake colored dog who’s asked that his name not be mentioned on the Internet.
 
Ms. Jones likes crispy calamari, Squidbillies, and the ika okonomiyaki from Otafuku in the East Village, if only the lines weren’t so long.



ANNOUNCING: TAP Shop is now open! 


To mark the first 100 Adipositivity Project images and to answer those who've asked for T-shirts, calendars, and posters, a CafePress shop has been set up with the requested items, as well as mugs, bumper stickers, mousepads and greeting cards.  Yeah.  Went a little crazy there.  So go get your merch on!


Visit TAP Shop


Thou shalt not reproduce without permission.  
Except for babies.  Make all o' them you want.  
© The Adipositivity Project 2007-2009










  </content>
</entry>
<entry>
  <id>http://adipositivity.phototage.com/archives/9478_1745602162/331311</id>
  <title>Adipositivity 288</title>
  <author><name>The Adipositivity Project</name></author>
  <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://adipositivity.phototage.com/archives/9478_1745602162/331311"/>
  <published>2009-06-29T05:01:07Z</published>
  <updated>2009-06-29T05:01:07Z</updated>
  <content type="html">
 &lt;a href=&quot;http://adipositivity.phototage.com/archives/9478_1745602162/331311&quot; style=&quot;border:0;&quot;&gt;&lt;img src=&quot;http://my-expressions.com/up_media/6300/pblog/9437/et_1245075070.JPG&quot;/&gt;&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br&gt;


Adipose: Of or relating to fat.

Positivity: Characterized by or displaying acceptance or affirmation.



MISSION:

The Adipositivity Project aims to promote size acceptance, not by listing the merits of big people, or detailing examples of excellence (these things are easily seen all around us), but rather, through a visual display of fat physicality.  The sort that's normally unseen.  

The hope is to widen definitions of physical beauty.  Literally.

The photographs here are close details of the fat female form, without the inclusion of faces.  One reason for this is to coax observers into imagining they're looking at the fat women in their own lives, ideally then accepting them as having aesthetic appeal which, for better or worse, often translates into more complete forms of acceptance.

The women you see in these images are educators, executives, mothers, musicians, professionals, performers, artists, activists, clerks, and writers.  They are perhaps even the women you've clucked at on the subway, rolled your eyes at in the market, or joked about with your friends.

This is what they look like with their clothes off.

Some are showing you their bodies proudly.  Others timidly.  And some quite reluctantly.  But they all share a determination in altering commonly accepted notions of a narrow and specific beauty ideal. 

Bookmark adipositivity.com and check back often, as new photographs are added regularly(ish).  And please help spread the message.  The Adipositivity Project: Changing attitudes about the aesthetic validity of big women, one fat fanny at a time.



ABOUT THE PHOTOGRAPHER:

Substantia Jones’ photography has been exhibited in galleries and museums throughout the US East Coast, and has appeared in The New York Times, Time Out New York, and some other publications she can’t recall at this time, but you probably haven’t heard of them anyway.  She is biographied in the 2006 Who’s Who in America (though under the name her momma gave her), and back in the day, she won some photography awards which would sound somewhat Mayberry if listed here, but at the time, they damn near made her cry.  Still kinda do.

She lives in Manhattan, where she also sometimes steps out (more like lays around) in front of the camera, and on some of those occasions, the snapping is done by her trusty sidekick, Dr. H, who also fetches her banana popsicles and maintains her muse, a certain pancake colored dog who’s asked that his name not be mentioned on the Internet.
 
Ms. Jones likes crispy calamari, Squidbillies, and the ika okonomiyaki from Otafuku in the East Village, if only the lines weren’t so long.



ANNOUNCING: TAP Shop is now open! 


To mark the first 100 Adipositivity Project images and to answer those who've asked for T-shirts, calendars, and posters, a CafePress shop has been set up with the requested items, as well as mugs, bumper stickers, mousepads and greeting cards.  Yeah.  Went a little crazy there.  So go get your merch on!


Visit TAP Shop


Thou shalt not reproduce without permission.  
Except for babies.  Make all o' them you want.  
© The Adipositivity Project 2007-2009










  </content>
</entry>
<entry>
  <id>http://adipositivity.phototage.com/archives/9478_1745602162/331310</id>
  <title>Adipositivity 287</title>
  <author><name>The Adipositivity Project</name></author>
  <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://adipositivity.phototage.com/archives/9478_1745602162/331310"/>
  <published>2009-06-25T05:06:37Z</published>
  <updated>2009-06-25T05:06:37Z</updated>
  <content type="html">
 &lt;a href=&quot;http://adipositivity.phototage.com/archives/9478_1745602162/331310&quot; style=&quot;border:0;&quot;&gt;&lt;img src=&quot;http://my-expressions.com/up_media/6300/pblog/9437/et_1245074303.JPG&quot;/&gt;&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br&gt;


Adipose: Of or relating to fat.

Positivity: Characterized by or displaying acceptance or affirmation.



MISSION:

The Adipositivity Project aims to promote size acceptance, not by listing the merits of big people, or detailing examples of excellence (these things are easily seen all around us), but rather, through a visual display of fat physicality.  The sort that's normally unseen.  

The hope is to widen definitions of physical beauty.  Literally.

The photographs here are close details of the fat female form, without the inclusion of faces.  One reason for this is to coax observers into imagining they're looking at the fat women in their own lives, ideally then accepting them as having aesthetic appeal which, for better or worse, often translates into more complete forms of acceptance.

The women you see in these images are educators, executives, mothers, musicians, professionals, performers, artists, activists, clerks, and writers.  They are perhaps even the women you've clucked at on the subway, rolled your eyes at in the market, or joked about with your friends.

This is what they look like with their clothes off.

Some are showing you their bodies proudly.  Others timidly.  And some quite reluctantly.  But they all share a determination in altering commonly accepted notions of a narrow and specific beauty ideal. 

Bookmark adipositivity.com and check back often, as new photographs are added regularly(ish).  And please help spread the message.  The Adipositivity Project: Changing attitudes about the aesthetic validity of big women, one fat fanny at a time.



ABOUT THE PHOTOGRAPHER:

Substantia Jones’ photography has been exhibited in galleries and museums throughout the US East Coast, and has appeared in The New York Times, Time Out New York, and some other publications she can’t recall at this time, but you probably haven’t heard of them anyway.  She is biographied in the 2006 Who’s Who in America (though under the name her momma gave her), and back in the day, she won some photography awards which would sound somewhat Mayberry if listed here, but at the time, they damn near made her cry.  Still kinda do.

She lives in Manhattan, where she also sometimes steps out (more like lays around) in front of the camera, and on some of those occasions, the snapping is done by her trusty sidekick, Dr. H, who also fetches her banana popsicles and maintains her muse, a certain pancake colored dog who’s asked that his name not be mentioned on the Internet.
 
Ms. Jones likes crispy calamari, Squidbillies, and the ika okonomiyaki from Otafuku in the East Village, if only the lines weren’t so long.



ANNOUNCING: TAP Shop is now open! 


To mark the first 100 Adipositivity Project images and to answer those who've asked for T-shirts, calendars, and posters, a CafePress shop has been set up with the requested items, as well as mugs, bumper stickers, mousepads and greeting cards.  Yeah.  Went a little crazy there.  So go get your merch on!


Visit TAP Shop


Thou shalt not reproduce without permission.  
Except for babies.  Make all o' them you want.  
© The Adipositivity Project 2007-2009










  </content>
</entry>
<entry>
  <id>http://adipositivity.phototage.com/archives/9478_1745602162/331308</id>
  <title>Adipositivity 286</title>
  <author><name>The Adipositivity Project</name></author>
  <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://adipositivity.phototage.com/archives/9478_1745602162/331308"/>
  <published>2009-06-21T05:01:26Z</published>
  <updated>2009-06-21T05:01:26Z</updated>
  <content type="html">
 &lt;a href=&quot;http://adipositivity.phototage.com/archives/9478_1745602162/331308&quot; style=&quot;border:0;&quot;&gt;&lt;img src=&quot;http://my-expressions.com/up_media/6300/pblog/9437/et_1245073368.JPG&quot;/&gt;&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br&gt;


Adipose: Of or relating to fat.

Positivity: Characterized by or displaying acceptance or affirmation.



MISSION:

The Adipositivity Project aims to promote size acceptance, not by listing the merits of big people, or detailing examples of excellence (these things are easily seen all around us), but rather, through a visual display of fat physicality.  The sort that's normally unseen.  

The hope is to widen definitions of physical beauty.  Literally.

The photographs here are close details of the fat female form, without the inclusion of faces.  One reason for this is to coax observers into imagining they're looking at the fat women in their own lives, ideally then accepting them as having aesthetic appeal which, for better or worse, often translates into more complete forms of acceptance.

The women you see in these images are educators, executives, mothers, musicians, professionals, performers, artists, activists, clerks, and writers.  They are perhaps even the women you've clucked at on the subway, rolled your eyes at in the market, or joked about with your friends.

This is what they look like with their clothes off.

Some are showing you their bodies proudly.  Others timidly.  And some quite reluctantly.  But they all share a determination in altering commonly accepted notions of a narrow and specific beauty ideal. 

Bookmark adipositivity.com and check back often, as new photographs are added regularly(ish).  And please help spread the message.  The Adipositivity Project: Changing attitudes about the aesthetic validity of big women, one fat fanny at a time.



ABOUT THE PHOTOGRAPHER:

Substantia Jones’ photography has been exhibited in galleries and museums throughout the US East Coast, and has appeared in The New York Times, Time Out New York, and some other publications she can’t recall at this time, but you probably haven’t heard of them anyway.  She is biographied in the 2006 Who’s Who in America (though under the name her momma gave her), and back in the day, she won some photography awards which would sound somewhat Mayberry if listed here, but at the time, they damn near made her cry.  Still kinda do.

She lives in Manhattan, where she also sometimes steps out (more like lays around) in front of the camera, and on some of those occasions, the snapping is done by her trusty sidekick, Dr. H, who also fetches her banana popsicles and maintains her muse, a certain pancake colored dog who’s asked that his name not be mentioned on the Internet.
 
Ms. Jones likes crispy calamari, Squidbillies, and the ika okonomiyaki from Otafuku in the East Village, if only the lines weren’t so long.



ANNOUNCING: TAP Shop is now open! 


To mark the first 100 Adipositivity Project images and to answer those who've asked for T-shirts, calendars, and posters, a CafePress shop has been set up with the requested items, as well as mugs, bumper stickers, mousepads and greeting cards.  Yeah.  Went a little crazy there.  So go get your merch on!


Visit TAP Shop


Thou shalt not reproduce without permission.  
Except for babies.  Make all o' them you want.  
© The Adipositivity Project 2007-2009










  </content>
</entry>
<entry>
  <id>http://adipositivity.phototage.com/archives/9478_1745602162/331306</id>
  <title>Adipositivity 285 - 2nd Anniversary!</title>
  <author><name>The Adipositivity Project</name></author>
  <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://adipositivity.phototage.com/archives/9478_1745602162/331306"/>
  <published>2009-06-17T00:00:00Z</published>
  <updated>2009-06-17T00:00:00Z</updated>
  <content type="html">
 &lt;a href=&quot;http://adipositivity.phototage.com/archives/9478_1745602162/331306&quot; style=&quot;border:0;&quot;&gt;&lt;img src=&quot;http://my-expressions.com/up_media/6300/pblog/9437/et_1245071580.JPG&quot;/&gt;&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br&gt;
The above photo perfectly sums up how I feel on this second anniversary of the Adipositivity Project.  Bare-assed and all huddled up with good people. Happy Anniversary, Adiposers.  And many thanks to all who've supported us.

Substantia Jones



 

MISSION:

The Adipositivity Project aims to promote size acceptance, not by listing the merits of big people, or detailing examples of excellence (these things are easily seen all around us), but rather, through a visual display of fat physicality.  The sort that's normally unseen.  

The hope is to widen definitions of physical beauty.  Literally.

The photographs here are close details of the fat female form, without the inclusion of faces.  One reason for this is to coax observers into imagining they're looking at the fat women in their own lives, ideally then accepting them as having aesthetic appeal which, for better or worse, often translates into more complete forms of acceptance.

The women you see in these images are educators, executives, mothers, musicians, professionals, performers, artists, activists, clerks, and writers.  They are perhaps even the women you've clucked at on the subway, rolled your eyes at in the market, or joked about with your friends.

This is what they look like with their clothes off.

Some are showing you their bodies proudly.  Others timidly.  And some quite reluctantly.  But they all share a determination in altering commonly accepted notions of a narrow and specific beauty ideal. 

Bookmark adipositivity.com and check back often, as new photographs are added regularly(ish).  And please help spread the message.  The Adipositivity Project: Changing attitudes about the aesthetic validity of big women, one fat fanny at a time.



ABOUT THE PHOTOGRAPHER:

Substantia Jones’ photography has been exhibited in galleries and museums throughout the US East Coast, and has appeared in The New York Times, Time Out New York, and some other publications she can’t recall at this time, but you probably haven’t heard of them anyway.  She is biographied in the 2006 Who’s Who in America (though under the name her momma gave her), and back in the day, she won some photography awards which would sound somewhat Mayberry if listed here, but at the time, they damn near made her cry.  Still kinda do.

She lives in Manhattan, where she also sometimes steps out (more like lays around) in front of the camera, and on some of those occasions, the snapping is done by her trusty sidekick, Dr. H, who also fetches her banana popsicles and maintains her muse, a certain pancake colored dog who’s asked that his name not be mentioned on the Internet.
 
Ms. Jones likes crispy calamari, Squidbillies, and the ika okonomiyaki from Otafuku in the East Village, if only the lines weren’t so long.



ANNOUNCING: TAP Shop is now open! 


To mark the first 100 Adipositivity Project images and to answer those who've asked for T-shirts, calendars, and posters, a CafePress shop has been set up with the requested items, as well as mugs, bumper stickers, mousepads and greeting cards.  Yeah.  Went a little crazy there.  So go get your merch on!


Visit TAP Shop


Thou shalt not reproduce without permission.  
Except for babies.  Make all o' them you want.  
© The Adipositivity Project 2007-2009






  </content>
</entry>
<entry>
  <id>http://adipositivity.phototage.com/archives/9478_1745602162/331303</id>
  <title>Adipositivity 284</title>
  <author><name>The Adipositivity Project</name></author>
  <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://adipositivity.phototage.com/archives/9478_1745602162/331303"/>
  <published>2009-06-15T07:28:40Z</published>
  <updated>2009-06-15T07:28:40Z</updated>
  <content type="html">
 &lt;a href=&quot;http://adipositivity.phototage.com/archives/9478_1745602162/331303&quot; style=&quot;border:0;&quot;&gt;&lt;img src=&quot;http://my-expressions.com/up_media/6300/pblog/9437/et_1245068926.JPG&quot;/&gt;&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br&gt;

  



Adipose: Of or relating to fat.

Positivity: Characterized by or displaying acceptance or affirmation.



MISSION:

The Adipositivity Project aims to promote size acceptance, not by listing the merits of big people, or detailing examples of excellence (these things are easily seen all around us), but rather, through a visual display of fat physicality.  The sort that's normally unseen.  

The hope is to widen definitions of physical beauty.  Literally.

The photographs here are close details of the fat female form, without the inclusion of faces.  One reason for this is to coax observers into imagining they're looking at the fat women in their own lives, ideally then accepting them as having aesthetic appeal which, for better or worse, often translates into more complete forms of acceptance.

The women you see in these images are educators, executives, mothers, musicians, professionals, performers, artists, activists, clerks, and writers.  They are perhaps even the women you've clucked at on the subway, rolled your eyes at in the market, or joked about with your friends.

This is what they look like with their clothes off.

Some are showing you their bodies proudly.  Others timidly.  And some quite reluctantly.  But they all share a determination in altering commonly accepted notions of a narrow and specific beauty ideal. 

Bookmark adipositivity.com and check back often, as new photographs are added regularly(ish).  And please help spread the message.  The Adipositivity Project: Changing attitudes about the aesthetic validity of big women, one fat fanny at a time.



ABOUT THE PHOTOGRAPHER:

Substantia Jones’ photography has been exhibited in galleries and museums throughout the US East Coast, and has appeared in The New York Times, Time Out New York, and some other publications she can’t recall at this time, but you probably haven’t heard of them anyway.  She is biographied in the 2006 Who’s Who in America (though under the name her momma gave her), and back in the day, she won some photography awards which would sound somewhat Mayberry if listed here, but at the time, they damn near made her cry.  Still kinda do.

She lives in Manhattan, where she also sometimes steps out (more like lays around) in front of the camera, and on some of those occasions, the snapping is done by her trusty sidekick, Dr. H, who also fetches her banana popsicles and maintains her muse, a certain pancake colored dog who’s asked that his name not be mentioned on the Internet.
 
Ms. Jones likes crispy calamari, Squidbillies, and the ika okonomiyaki from Otafuku in the East Village, if only the lines weren’t so long.



ANNOUNCING: TAP Shop is now open! 


To mark the first 100 Adipositivity Project images and to answer those who've asked for T-shirts, calendars, and posters, a CafePress shop has been set up with the requested items, as well as mugs, bumper stickers, mousepads and greeting cards.  Yeah.  Went a little crazy there.  So go get your merch on!


Visit TAP Shop


Thou shalt not reproduce without permission.  
Except for babies.  Make all o' them you want.  
© The Adipositivity Project 2007-2009













  </content>
</entry>
<entry>
  <id>http://adipositivity.phototage.com/archives/9478_1745602162/331072</id>
  <title>Adipositivity283 - New Poster Giveaway!</title>
  <author><name>The Adipositivity Project</name></author>
  <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://adipositivity.phototage.com/archives/9478_1745602162/331072"/>
  <published>2009-06-11T07:51:59Z</published>
  <updated>2009-06-11T07:51:59Z</updated>
  <content type="html">
 &lt;a href=&quot;http://adipositivity.phototage.com/archives/9478_1745602162/331072&quot; style=&quot;border:0;&quot;&gt;&lt;img src=&quot;http://my-expressions.com/up_media/6300/pblog/9437/et_1244724732.JPG&quot;/&gt;&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br&gt;
To mark the Adipositivity Project's second anniversary on June 17th (I know, right?), a big-ass new poster has been added to the shop.  And it's so flippin' beautiful, gonna jolly well give one away.  The photo mosaic--comprised of over a thousand tiles of hundreds of images--includes all past Adipositivity photos and a bunch from the future, as well as a few outtakes, alternate versions, also-rans, and a couple thrown in just for my own amusement.  Look at it from a few feet away and see what appears.  Hint: it ain't the Liberty Bell.  

Here's how to snag a free one.  Click 'comments' (left sidebar of the site's main page) and leave an adipositive message.  Doesn't have to be about the project or the photos, just make it adipositive.  (You be hatin'?  We be moderatin'.)  In order to be eligible, you must do it by the end of June 17 (Eastern), and you must enter your email address in the e field, so I can find ya if you win.  I promise never to use your addresses for evil (I neither save nor share 'em), and they're not even visible to my helper elves (three of whom will be doing the choosing... yeah, it ain't random, so talk pretty).  You needn't ask to be entered in the contest.  Every comment will be considered, and one will be chosen based on its... adipositivity.  Adiposers are welcome to participate, but don't identify yourself as such.  The elves wanna be fair.  

The winner will be announced in the comments section within a day or so of the 17th, at which time I'll contact ya for your street deets.  Which I will, again, not be using for evil.  

Good luck!

Substantia

UPDATE:  Yes, the giveaway is happily open to those of all countries.

ANOTHER FURTHER DIFFERENT UPDATE:  Those of you receiving notification of new Adipositivity photos via the Fatosphere feeds (Notes from the Fatosphere, Fat Chat) may already have discovered that our updates are no longer being reliably posted to those feeds.  The owner of both feeds doesn't know the reason for this, and it appears we've arrived at the proverbial brick wall.  So if you'd like to be notified when new pics drop (usually Mondays and Thursdays), you may want to add us to your personal feed or make some other arrangements.  I hate saying goodbye to the Fatosphere, but I'm not sure I have any other options.  Open to suggestions, though.  And if you know of others who normally get our updates through the feeds, do me a solid and let 'em know?  Preesh!

  



Adipose: Of or relating to fat.

Positivity: Characterized by or displaying acceptance or affirmation.



MISSION:

The Adipositivity Project aims to promote size acceptance, not by listing the merits of big people, or detailing examples of excellence (these things are easily seen all around us), but rather, through a visual display of fat physicality.  The sort that's normally unseen.  

The hope is to widen definitions of physical beauty.  Literally.

The photographs here are close details of the fat female form, without the inclusion of faces.  One reason for this is to coax observers into imagining they're looking at the fat women in their own lives, ideally then accepting them as having aesthetic appeal which, for better or worse, often translates into more complete forms of acceptance.

The women you see in these images are educators, executives, mothers, musicians, professionals, performers, artists, activists, clerks, and writers.  They are perhaps even the women you've clucked at on the subway, rolled your eyes at in the market, or joked about with your friends.

This is what they look like with their clothes off.

Some are showing you their bodies proudly.  Others timidly.  And some quite reluctantly.  But they all share a determination in altering commonly accepted notions of a narrow and specific beauty ideal. 

Bookmark adipositivity.com and check back often, as new photographs are added regularly(ish).  And please help spread the message.  The Adipositivity Project: Changing attitudes about the aesthetic validity of big women, one fat fanny at a time.



ABOUT THE PHOTOGRAPHER:

Substantia Jones’ photography has been exhibited in galleries and museums throughout the US East Coast, and has appeared in The New York Times, Time Out New York, and some other publications she can’t recall at this time, but you probably haven’t heard of them anyway.  She is biographied in the 2006 Who’s Who in America (though under the name her momma gave her), and back in the day, she won some photography awards which would sound somewhat Mayberry if listed here, but at the time, they damn near made her cry.  Still kinda do.

She lives in Manhattan, where she also sometimes steps out (more like lays around) in front of the camera, and on some of those occasions, the snapping is done by her trusty sidekick, Dr. H, who also fetches her banana popsicles and maintains her muse, a certain pancake colored dog who’s asked that his name not be mentioned on the Internet.
 
Ms. Jones likes crispy calamari, Squidbillies, and the ika okonomiyaki from Otafuku in the East Village, if only the lines weren’t so long.



ANNOUNCING: TAP Shop is now open! 


To mark the first 100 Adipositivity Project images and to answer those who've asked for T-shirts, calendars, and posters, a CafePress shop has been set up with the requested items, as well as mugs, bumper stickers, mousepads and greeting cards.  Yeah.  Went a little crazy there.  So go get your merch on!


Visit TAP Shop


Thou shalt not reproduce without permission.  
Except for babies.  Make all o' them you want.  
© The Adipositivity Project 2007-2009













  </content>
</entry>
<entry>
  <id>http://adipositivity.phototage.com/archives/9478_1745602162/330262</id>
  <title>Adipositivity282</title>
  <author><name>The Adipositivity Project</name></author>
  <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://adipositivity.phototage.com/archives/9478_1745602162/330262"/>
  <published>2009-06-04T05:01:32Z</published>
  <updated>2009-06-04T05:01:32Z</updated>
  <content type="html">
 &lt;a href=&quot;http://adipositivity.phototage.com/archives/9478_1745602162/330262&quot; style=&quot;border:0;&quot;&gt;&lt;img src=&quot;http://my-expressions.com/up_media/6300/pblog/9437/et_1243634401.jpg&quot;/&gt;&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br&gt;
It's World Famous *BOB*!



Adipose: Of or relating to fat.

Positivity: Characterized by or displaying acceptance or affirmation.



MISSION:

The Adipositivity Project aims to promote size acceptance, not by listing the merits of big people, or detailing examples of excellence (these things are easily seen all around us), but rather, through a visual display of fat physicality.  The sort that's normally unseen.  

The hope is to widen definitions of physical beauty.  Literally.

The photographs here are close details of the fat female form, without the inclusion of faces.  One reason for this is to coax observers into imagining they're looking at the fat women in their own lives, ideally then accepting them as having aesthetic appeal which, for better or worse, often translates into more complete forms of acceptance.

The women you see in these images are educators, executives, mothers, musicians, professionals, performers, artists, activists, clerks, and writers.  They are perhaps even the women you've clucked at on the subway, rolled your eyes at in the market, or joked about with your friends.

This is what they look like with their clothes off.

Some are showing you their bodies proudly.  Others timidly.  And some quite reluctantly.  But they all share a determination in altering commonly accepted notions of a narrow and specific beauty ideal. 

Bookmark adipositivity.com and check back often, as new photographs are added regularly(ish).  And please help spread the message.  The Adipositivity Project: Changing attitudes about the aesthetic validity of big women, one fat fanny at a time.



ABOUT THE PHOTOGRAPHER:

Substantia Jones’ photography has been exhibited in galleries and museums throughout the US East Coast, and has appeared in The New York Times, Time Out New York, and some other publications she can’t recall at this time, but you probably haven’t heard of them anyway.  She is biographied in the 2006 Who’s Who in America (though under the name her momma gave her), and back in the day, she won some photography awards which would sound somewhat Mayberry if listed here, but at the time, they damn near made her cry.  Still kinda do.

She lives in Manhattan, where she also sometimes steps out (more like lays around) in front of the camera, and on some of those occasions, the snapping is done by her trusty sidekick, Dr. H, who also fetches her banana popsicles and maintains her muse, a certain pancake colored dog who’s asked that his name not be mentioned on the Internet.
 
Ms. Jones likes crispy calamari, Squidbillies, and the ika okonomiyaki from Otafuku in the East Village, if only the lines weren’t so long.



ANNOUNCING: TAP Shop is now open! 


To mark the first 100 Adipositivity Project images and to answer those who've asked for T-shirts, calendars, and posters, a CafePress shop has been set up with the requested items, as well as mugs, bumper stickers, mousepads and greeting cards.  Yeah.  Went a little crazy there.  So go get your merch on!


Visit TAP Shop


Thou shalt not reproduce without permission.  
Except for babies.  Make all o' them you want.  
© The Adipositivity Project 2007-2009













  </content>
</entry>
<entry>
  <id>http://adipositivity.phototage.com/archives/9478_1745602162/330261</id>
  <title>Adipositivity281</title>
  <author><name>The Adipositivity Project</name></author>
  <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://adipositivity.phototage.com/archives/9478_1745602162/330261"/>
  <published>2009-06-01T05:01:12Z</published>
  <updated>2009-06-01T05:01:12Z</updated>
  <content type="html">
 &lt;a href=&quot;http://adipositivity.phototage.com/archives/9478_1745602162/330261&quot; style=&quot;border:0;&quot;&gt;&lt;img src=&quot;http://my-expressions.com/up_media/6300/pblog/9437/et_1243633925.jpg&quot;/&gt;&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br&gt;

Adipose: Of or relating to fat.

Positivity: Characterized by or displaying acceptance or affirmation.



MISSION:

The Adipositivity Project aims to promote size acceptance, not by listing the merits of big people, or detailing examples of excellence (these things are easily seen all around us), but rather, through a visual display of fat physicality.  The sort that's normally unseen.  

The hope is to widen definitions of physical beauty.  Literally.

The photographs here are close details of the fat female form, without the inclusion of faces.  One reason for this is to coax observers into imagining they're looking at the fat women in their own lives, ideally then accepting them as having aesthetic appeal which, for better or worse, often translates into more complete forms of acceptance.

The women you see in these images are educators, executives, mothers, musicians, professionals, performers, artists, activists, clerks, and writers.  They are perhaps even the women you've clucked at on the subway, rolled your eyes at in the market, or joked about with your friends.

This is what they look like with their clothes off.

Some are showing you their bodies proudly.  Others timidly.  And some quite reluctantly.  But they all share a determination in altering commonly accepted notions of a narrow and specific beauty ideal. 

Bookmark adipositivity.com and check back often, as new photographs are added regularly(ish).  And please help spread the message.  The Adipositivity Project: Changing attitudes about the aesthetic validity of big women, one fat fanny at a time.



ABOUT THE PHOTOGRAPHER:

Substantia Jones’ photography has been exhibited in galleries and museums throughout the US East Coast, and has appeared in The New York Times, Time Out New York, and some other publications she can’t recall at this time, but you probably haven’t heard of them anyway.  She is biographied in the 2006 Who’s Who in America (though under the name her momma gave her), and back in the day, she won some photography awards which would sound somewhat Mayberry if listed here, but at the time, they damn near made her cry.  Still kinda do.

She lives in Manhattan, where she also sometimes steps out (more like lays around) in front of the camera, and on some of those occasions, the snapping is done by her trusty sidekick, Dr. H, who also fetches her banana popsicles and maintains her muse, a certain pancake colored dog who’s asked that his name not be mentioned on the Internet.
 
Ms. Jones likes crispy calamari, Squidbillies, and the ika okonomiyaki from Otafuku in the East Village, if only the lines weren’t so long.



ANNOUNCING: TAP Shop is now open! 


To mark the first 100 Adipositivity Project images and to answer those who've asked for T-shirts, calendars, and posters, a CafePress shop has been set up with the requested items, as well as mugs, bumper stickers, mousepads and greeting cards.  Yeah.  Went a little crazy there.  So go get your merch on!


Visit TAP Shop


Thou shalt not reproduce without permission.  
Except for babies.  Make all o' them you want.  
© The Adipositivity Project 2007-2009













  </content>
</entry>
<entry>
  <id>http://adipositivity.phototage.com/archives/9478_1745602162/329256</id>
  <title>Adipositivity280</title>
  <author><name>The Adipositivity Project</name></author>
  <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://adipositivity.phototage.com/archives/9478_1745602162/329256"/>
  <published>2009-05-28T05:01:08Z</published>
  <updated>2009-05-28T05:01:08Z</updated>
  <content type="html">
 &lt;a href=&quot;http://adipositivity.phototage.com/archives/9478_1745602162/329256&quot; style=&quot;border:0;&quot;&gt;&lt;img src=&quot;http://my-expressions.com/up_media/6300/pblog/9437/et_1243472993.JPG&quot;/&gt;&lt;/a&gt;&lt;br&gt;


Adipose: Of or relating to fat.

Positivity: Characterized by or displaying acceptance or affirmation.



MISSION:

The Adipositivity Project aims to promote size acceptance, not by listing the merits of big people, or detailing examples of excellence (these things are easily seen all around us), but rather, through a visual display of fat physicality.  The sort that's normally unseen.  

The hope is to widen definitions of physical beauty.  Literally.

The photographs here are close details of the fat female form, without the inclusion of faces.  One reason for this is to coax observers into imagining they're looking at the fat women in their own lives, ideally then accepting them as having aesthetic appeal which, for better or worse, often translates into more complete forms of acceptance.

The women you see in these images are educators, executives, mothers, musicians, professionals, performers, artists, activists, clerks, and writers.  They are perhaps even the women you've clucked at on the subway, rolled your eyes at in the market, or joked about with your friends.

This is what they look like with their clothes off.

Some are showing you their bodies proudly.  Others timidly.  And some quite reluctantly.  But they all share a determination in altering commonly accepted notions of a narrow and specific beauty ideal. 

Bookmark adipositivity.com and check back often, as new photographs are added regularly(ish).  And please help spread the message.  The Adipositivity Project: Changing attitudes about the aesthetic validity of big women, one fat fanny at a time.



ABOUT THE PHOTOGRAPHER:

Substantia Jones’ photography has been exhibited in galleries and museums throughout the US East Coast, and has appeared in The New York Times, Time Out New York, and some other publications she can’t recall at this time, but you probably haven’t heard of them anyway.  She is biographied in the 2006 Who’s Who in America (though under the name her momma gave her), and back in the day, she won some photography awards which would sound somewhat Mayberry if listed here, but at the time, they damn near made her cry.  Still kinda do.

She lives in Manhattan, where she also sometimes steps out (more like lays around) in front of the camera, and on some of those occasions, the snapping is done by her trusty sidekick, Dr. H, who also fetches her banana popsicles and maintains her muse, a certain pancake colored dog who’s asked that his name not be mentioned on the Internet.
 
Ms. Jones likes crispy calamari, Squidbillies, and the ika okonomiyaki from Otafuku in the East Village, if only the lines weren’t so long.



ANNOUNCING: TAP Shop is now open! 


To mark the first 100 Adipositivity Project images and to answer those who've asked for T-shirts, calendars, and posters, a CafePress shop has been set up with the requested items, as well as mugs, bumper stickers, mousepads and greeting cards.  Yeah.  Went a little crazy there.  So go get your merch on!


Visit TAP Shop


Thou shalt not reproduce without permission.  
Except for babies.  Make all o' them you want.  
© The Adipositivity Project 2007-2009






  </content>
</entry>
</feed>
