I would say/agree that to discuss or hint about this woman's bosom or cleavage (as it was very early in this thread) is surely going off-topic. If anything, the discussion should be more about composition, lighting, mood, expression, styling, but shouldn't have hinted anything about bosom.
Come on guys, while it's plainly obviously visible, there's no need to make :bigeyes: or whatever exclamation about her chest. Without having to study biology, we all know what grows on the female chest (and mind you, we have a pair ourselves for goodness sake), so there's no need to draw anymore attention to hers. It does nothing more than to indicate your depravity and it simply puts the women viewers off.
I'm sure the intent of the photographer/poster wasn't to offend. He just wanted comments on his skill.
This image has already been described as "offensive" or "in poor taste" by some CS members, and by at least 1 female CS member. At least 1 CS member also commented that her ambiguous/blank facial expression adds to its "poor taste". I won't readily agree to it since she does have a somewhat cheeky expression (and I don't find it offensive). If I was to rate the image, I would just say it's PG, not M, and surely not R or X. For crying out loud, it's just an image of a woman showing cleavage. You haven't seen the Triumph or Wacoal billboards around S'pore? Or you haven't seen cleavage-exposed bikini girls at Sentosa?
Anyway, cheeky, ambiguous or blank, if this image can be considered downright offensive, then I'm sure many CS members have images in bikinis or lingerie that could similarly be branded as "poor taste" for showing deep cleavage or having that cheeky/ambiguous/blank expression. With all the busty Caucasian women I have shot, my images not only offend tight-a*sed Asian women; I've been labelled negatively as well.
You (and I don't care if you're a photographer or a model) could either open your mind about how Michelle was posed (by herself or by the photographer) and how the image was shot, or close your mind like some tightly wrapped-up dim sim (siew mai) and stifle your own progress.
In a previous issue of PhotoI, Kath Cosgrove wrote an article saying that women are the harshest critics of their own images. I would tend to agree with that. Harsh lighting aside (yes I agree it's fairly harsh for use on women generally), if Michelle was happy with her expression, happy with her low-cut dress, happy with her ample bosom revealed (to the lucky man who operated the camera), in that image, we can cut out much on the criticism.
Enough of the boob-talk. ;p