Did Sofia Vergara Use Photoshop In Her Latest Mirror Selfies? Some Fans Think So
On October 22nd, Vergara, 51, captioned her two-part upload: "#sofiavergara jeans for @walmart" with a denim pant and red heart emoji. She added: #theMarisol." In the pics, she donned a low-rise pair from her fashion line along with a loose-fitting lacy black tank top, a shimmering silver charm necklace and chunky rings.
Users headed to her comment section to share their thoughts. "Wow nice fitting jeans," one wrote as another added: "Always gorgeous." Someone else took a closer look at the background in the Modern Family alum's selfies, and asked: "why is the fireplace bending?"
One other chimed in, writing to the America's Got Talent judge: "Not the photoshopping in Walmart jeans." More began to call this out, too. "Photoshopped, bent fireplace," another quipped as someone replied: "It's bent towards her back/ waist in the first slide, then perfectly straight in the second slide."
While Vergara has not responded to these latest photo-editing claims, this also isn't the first time she has been accused of this. Last month, the popular Instagram account @celebface (where fans often compare photos of celebrities that might have gone under the knife or used photo editing apps and filters) shared a video of Vergara applying powder foundation, and fans claimed to see a filter blurring her face as she moved her hand.
"I just don’t get it. How can showing a super edited version of yourself make you feel good? It’s so contradictory," one commented at the time as someone else wrote: "This is so sad. I worry about the next generation and all the impacts this will have on them."
While it can’t exactly be proven that Vergara used face-editing apps, many commenters were convinced, noting that specific effects are more noticeable than others.
"Facetune has a video editing feature now – it mainly is for the face (duh) but I think u can slim urself too! I love using facetune’s features, no shade! But it’s funny that people don’t think we can tell. Takes one to know one," one wrote.
Another chimed in: "Yes it’s called PrettyUp I use it." Another replied: "The sad thing is all of these women are gorgeous in reality and still feel pressured to attain unattainable standards. It’s not the celebs, it’s the shallowness of the industry."