
This Artist Decided To Show What Disney Characters Would Look Like If They Had Realistic Bodies
Disney gave us a colorful bunch of friends to grow up with. Some were bold, expressive, and charismatic. Others were quiet, deep thinkers, carrying a world of emotions in their kind hearts. But as different as they were on the inside, most of them were very similar on the outside.
So artist Wyethe Smallish decided to try and see what they would look like if they were built differently. "I have my own body image issues that I work on, and a major way that I do that is through my art," Wyethe told Bored Panda. "So as a therapeutic exercise I wanted to alter some characters I really loved growing up."
But what started as a personal project has already touched hundreds of thousands of people—after Wyethe shared her works on social media, they quickly went viral, receiving tons of praise from people who really appreciate such a refreshing take on their beloved characters.
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Ariel
Mulan
The Disney Princess franchise is comprised of thirteen princesses and a number of associated heroines. Regardless of any actual title(s) they have, each official Disney princess is properly addressed (within the franchise) with the title of "Princess" preceding their name.
They are: Snow White, Cinderella, Aurora, Ariel, Belle, Jasmine, Pocahontas, Mulan, Tiana, Rapunzel, Merida, Moana, and Raya.
"Growing up as a little girl, I always looked up to [Disney's] princesses and admired [their] stories," Wyethe said.
"I noticed that they all had the exact same body proportions, and that made it harder for me to relate to them as I grew up."
Princess Aurora
Jasmine
Rapunzel
Having said that, Wyethe really enjoys the Disney character design. "It is a gorgeous style!"
However, she believes that, "as a society in this day and age, body representation not only makes the image more relatable, but it also helps with body acceptance and body appreciation."
Jasmine
Cinderella
Jasmine
Princess Tiana
"Overall there has been an enormous amount of positivity and appreciation for these illustrations," Wyethe added. "I receive messages every day saying how these images have helped heal their inner child. That makes it so worthwhile to me."
But we should remember that there's more to her art than this series. "While I do appreciate the love I have gotten from these drawings, as an artist this is not what I focus on. I may make more videos from time to time, but I have no desire to pursue this any further than a therapeutic exercise."
Mulan
Jasmine
Princess Aurora
Princess Tiana
The classic Disney movies have long been criticized for the problematic messages they transmit to impressionable girls, including the idea that you need a man to be happy, that you should wait around until you meet the man of your dreams, and that, once you marry the prince, you will live happily ever after.
But the image of feminine physical perfection often takes center stage when it comes to criticism towards the studio. For example, in their paper 'Mirror, mirror on the wall: Whose figure is the fairest of them all?', anthropologist Toe Aung of Pennsylvania State University and independent researcher Leah Williams said, "Disney princesses have extremely small waist-to-hip ratios that are nearly impossible to achieve naturally."
Princess Tiana
Rapunzel
Elsa
Ariel
Aung and Williams argue that such characters "might heighten or reinforce our preference for lower waist-to-hip ratios, and the perception that physically attractive individuals with lower waist-to-hip ratios possess morally favorable qualities."
So instead of building girls' self-esteem, the way these princesses look might actually bring the opposite result in the long run.
Cinderella
Rapunzel
Belle
Meg
But since beauty is a subjective trait, Aung and Williams focused on a measurable quality: the female characters' waist-to-hip ratio.
Using screenshots, they determined the "minimum waist and maximum hip widths" for 11 official Disney princesses, and the main characters of the phenomenally popular Frozen as well as seven Disney villains, including Maleficent from The Sleeping Beauty and Ursula from The Little Mermaid.
Princess Aurora
Meg
Princess Aurora
Princess Tiana
They found the median waist-to-hip ratio of the characters was a ridiculously low 0.535, meaning their waist measurement is just 53 percent of their hip measurement.
That is far below the 0.7 that is widely accepted as ideal and, surprisingly, even lower than that of the traditional Barbie doll, which is 0.56.
Such an hourglass figure is "nearly impossible to achieve naturally," the researchers highlighted.
Belle And Adam
Meg
Prince Eric
Cinderella
Ariel
Note: this post originally had 53 images. Itâs been shortened to the top 30 images based on user votes.
People really loved Wyethe's Disney series
And even requested a few other characters for her to transform
Image credits: fartscapade
Image credits: fartscapade
Image credits: fartscapade
Image credits: fartscapade
Image credits: fartscapade
Image credits: fartscapade
Am i the only one who watched cartoons knowing they *weren't* real people and wouldn't look like such? Like, I was a little kid, I didnn't care about realism
Thank you!!! Someone like me!!!
Right? People don't look like cartoons, and animals can't sing.
What's boogered up about this is that even on a subconscious level it makes children think that's how you're supposed to look. I LOVE Disney but honestly as an adult who has dismorphic ideologies, and grew up with that, the pressure to look like that is still there. I LOVE that this person is normalizing different body types and I'm all for body positivity so I'm glad they did this and I wish more Disney princesses would be normalized.
No, I did too. And I looked at my Barbie doll and thought, well that's not right. We must just be weird!
My parents even talked with me about that that Barbie had weird bodily proportions, and we we were comparing it with our own bodies. Like, how long would my legs be if I was sized like Barbie? That was actually kinda funny.
I looked at my Barbie doll and thought " nice doll to play with" . Never ever once did I think about my own body or that I had issues. OMG they're toys
I agree @Bethany Heller !!
NOOOOOO I did nottt I wish I had thought that tho
For real! It depends on art style too. Like, if you want them to look 100% realistic, make it live action or something.
isn't shaming someone for being thin the same thing this is supposed to be protesting? (been nice knowin' ya. i'll be banned after this for sure!)
Totally agree. very one sided here
Um, Iâm not sure if âbeing thinâ is the deal here. Many, most actually, of these characters wouldnât have been able to actually keep upright with their original proportions. Some of these were made a bit chubby but most were just altered to be actually physically possible. Not fat, just capable of human life. Itâs easy to get your sight slightly skewed because normality changes in peoples heads, but most Disney princesses wouldnât have any room at all for internal organs for instance. Itâs a biiiig mistake to equate âpossible, human bodyâ with âfatâ, but I see it all the time. And it kind of matters because even if kids rarely think âhm, itâs important I donât assume these ideas about physical appearance are achievable and that I donât get a warped sense of self in the futureâ, what they see is what they learn. Period. What they see is what they learn.
what i learned from cartoons growing up is that art is a beautiful medium that can exaggerate & simplify details as it wishes, & that not every art style is realistic. did phineas & ferb teach me that i should have a triangular head? no, it taught me that even if it looks completely different from disney, both art styles are awesome in their own way. that the point of creating a cartoony art style is to make strong silhouettes to make actions easy to read (easier for animators to do when their character is thin, just look how unclear the silhouettes become in many of the altered versions). the point of animation is also to tell a usually fictional story, so of course it won't be realistic. so that means the character designs will be optimized for animating & storytelling, not anatomy lessons. addressing a kid's body image issues is the job of parents, doctors, therapists, etc. it is not the job of the artist to completely change their style when someone has a deeper self-worth issue.
AMEN.
Yes and my mom grew up with that, tall and "gangly"she was harassed constantly and called ugly and a walking board and no guys were interested in her until years later
My sister too. She is just naturally thin. Even after 2 kids, she is just slim. Picked on at school for being too thin. She's beautiful btw!
She sounds gorgeous
Thinking that on most of them!
No, it's not, simply because the Disney proportions for thinness are completely wrong. Nobody has that type of waist, not even anorexic. Disney princesses don't look like many real people and media's have been trying to show this type of beauty as something women should all strive for (in advertisments, fashion magazines etc). Real photos ended up being photoshopped to look more like those Disney princesses. And Disney definitely was at the origin of this. So although I agree that the artist should have also shown maybe one princess with a very thin structure to show how different it would have been from the Disney princesses, I don't think the article is trying to shame thin people in the least.
and I quote: "She looks like a stick in the right picture". "She looks anorexic." Are you aware of how many times slim or thin girls have been called a "stick" or "anorexic"? That kind of language is damaging, hurtful, and not ok, just like it's not ok to call someone else a "potato sack" or "fat".
im fairly skinny and i'm not a fuhkin bendy stick, i have organs
2 out of 3 obesity genes here
Nice try iblew, but I think they are being shamed for being impossible.
then where is the companion post where the artist slimmed down comically obese characters? They are cartoons, yes proportions are exaggerated. GEEZE-A-LOO!
People are sensitive about that simply because it happens everyday irl to actual models and people in media. Eveyone is all editted down to look like the "ideal body". They rarely ever make being a health (not obese, not skeletal) seem like a mythical thing. Hell there's so many "Drop the weight, become attractive" things in media I'd have a hard time finding something positive about gaining any weight. When I was younger I was obese and my family celebrated me losing weight. My cousin on the other hand was sickly thin so our family celebrated her gaining weight. That is how it should be, not "ugh why is being fat/thin being celebrated just be NoRmAL"
Being fat and over weight is not healthy and people need to stop normalizing it. I'm not being mean or calling out over weight people, but its just science facts. We don't need to be rail thin either though. Even chubby isn't good. This needs to be taught at young age. You need to maintain a healthy weight.
Do these cartoons really look fat and overweight to you?
Most looked healthy and normal. Some like Megara were definitely chubby
Most of them definitely look more pudgy than they would at the correct weight for their ages. Problem is that we're all so used to seeing people being 20-30+ pounds overweight that the "correct" weight looks abnormal to us.
A lot of them, yes. Like they only went for fat, flabby fat in most those cases, not muscular or fit but larger just flabby.
Most of them, yes.
yes
Thing is, the edits are fat because the models that inspired these characters looked very healthy and were not this big. They would've definitely been overweight if they had the body types of the edits. The Western obesity problem has skewed people's senses of normalcy in a profound way. The original characters were fairly average when their films came out in 59, 89, 92, etc. The newer characters just represented active, young teenagers.
active, young teenagers aren't shaped like hourglasses. as someone said above, these are normal body shapes, the originals could not even house the internal organs.
The originals are to skinny and a lot of the new ones are above average weight
I am a teenager and *am* shaped like a hourglass. At 15, I had 60 cm waist with 90 cm bust (65 cm underbust) and 90 cm a*s. I'm not kidding. Finding clothes, especially bras and pants was a b***h. I painfully stood out against my classmates and started getting catcalled at 12
The problem is that you thinking the realistic versions are too fat. Some fat is normal on womens body, so maybe they are healthy women
Perhaps they were healthy too as 'too thin' we can't guess the health of a cartoon. Some of the renderings are too fat and flabby esp for the lifestyle some of these characters lived. It's not realistic for the story. Example the time of Cinderella being "too thin" was seen as ugly and undesirable and so she was to be shown in that light. She was food deprived, worked hard every day, and lived in deplorable conditions. She would look like a concentration camp prisoner, in this story it's showing seemingly unattractive people can have beautiful souls and in the end her outside matched her inside. Is it rather derivative? Yes, but these are fairy tales.
I completely agree however it's not much better if they're showing twig ppl so that ppl like me starve themselves desperate to be skinnier. Also it's not as easy as you think to lose weight, *especially* if you have slower metabolism and it's in genes to be overweight.
Dude most of these characters wouldn't have the food or the money to buy food to get fat. Save Jasmine, most Disney princesses have terrible backstorys of poverty abandonment and seclusion
That part
Yeah but this is showing that too skinny isnât good either
This comment has been deleted.
Some people just are "chubby" naturally (like chubby cheeks, they're so cute!!!), With slower metabolism and other genetics and they do try to maintain a "healthy" body weight but they struggle too. I think that should be normalized. And so should being skinny, I agree but with how things are presented how people are bullied if they don't have the perfect body (not too "fat", not too "skinny") it's hard living in our society yk.
Ok, Iâll admit, some of these do look a bit unrealistic depending on their situations, but ALL OF THE âBEFORESâ LOOK LIKE EATING DISORDERS
And eating disorder is not a look or a specific appearance. A lot of fat people have eating disorders or the onset of behaviors that could easily become eating disorders. And all of these characters were based on real women who were incredibly petite and would be considered outrageously skinny in comparison to the flashier average bodies in the US today. That's the problem- you need to quit stigmatizing thin people in order to uplift fat people.
THANK YOU Ebony Rose. Have an upvote :)
Okay, for a woman to be a chubby is the most normal thing! Woman are born with more fat than men so they can reproduce. And it is a heathy weight being chubby. Men can also be chubby and be healthy. Some people just carry more weight than others and thatâs a healthy weight. Your healthy weight is different to someone elseâs healthy weight. For me when I was 12, a healthy weight was about 40kg I believe and I weighed about 55kg and naturally I thought, oh I must be carrying a bit more fat. I was, because that was my body. Because that was my healthy weight, because that was my familyâs genes.
these drawings are not even fat or overweight, they are what women's bodies look like. it is rare for a real human girl to have wide hips and big breasts but no stomach weight. what should not be normalized is calling these body types fat. i have the same body type as most of these drawings and i used to tell myself that i was fat to the point where i stopped eating and self-harmed every time i felt the urge to eat, but i realized that saying i was fat just wasn't true. however, lots of girls and women with these body types still struggle, and you telling them the lie that they see in the mirror every day can't possibly help.
This. With the very small possible exception of Meg (and I think that might just be because she was always scary thin even w/o comparison, and her poses), I donât see anyone who looks overweight, maybe âbig bonedâ or stocky but not unhealthy.
Maybe the new cartoons should show their latest bloodwork too lol
I look like those newer cartoons and my blood work is great. Also swim 1-2 miles almost daily. Body type is not an Indicator of health. Ask my dad. He looks like a super hero and his cholesterol is through the roof.
Lol wanna check those triglycerides?
Am i the only one who watched cartoons knowing they *weren't* real people and wouldn't look like such? Like, I was a little kid, I didnn't care about realism
Thank you!!! Someone like me!!!
Right? People don't look like cartoons, and animals can't sing.
What's boogered up about this is that even on a subconscious level it makes children think that's how you're supposed to look. I LOVE Disney but honestly as an adult who has dismorphic ideologies, and grew up with that, the pressure to look like that is still there. I LOVE that this person is normalizing different body types and I'm all for body positivity so I'm glad they did this and I wish more Disney princesses would be normalized.
No, I did too. And I looked at my Barbie doll and thought, well that's not right. We must just be weird!
My parents even talked with me about that that Barbie had weird bodily proportions, and we we were comparing it with our own bodies. Like, how long would my legs be if I was sized like Barbie? That was actually kinda funny.
I looked at my Barbie doll and thought " nice doll to play with" . Never ever once did I think about my own body or that I had issues. OMG they're toys
I agree @Bethany Heller !!
NOOOOOO I did nottt I wish I had thought that tho
For real! It depends on art style too. Like, if you want them to look 100% realistic, make it live action or something.
isn't shaming someone for being thin the same thing this is supposed to be protesting? (been nice knowin' ya. i'll be banned after this for sure!)
Totally agree. very one sided here
Um, Iâm not sure if âbeing thinâ is the deal here. Many, most actually, of these characters wouldnât have been able to actually keep upright with their original proportions. Some of these were made a bit chubby but most were just altered to be actually physically possible. Not fat, just capable of human life. Itâs easy to get your sight slightly skewed because normality changes in peoples heads, but most Disney princesses wouldnât have any room at all for internal organs for instance. Itâs a biiiig mistake to equate âpossible, human bodyâ with âfatâ, but I see it all the time. And it kind of matters because even if kids rarely think âhm, itâs important I donât assume these ideas about physical appearance are achievable and that I donât get a warped sense of self in the futureâ, what they see is what they learn. Period. What they see is what they learn.
what i learned from cartoons growing up is that art is a beautiful medium that can exaggerate & simplify details as it wishes, & that not every art style is realistic. did phineas & ferb teach me that i should have a triangular head? no, it taught me that even if it looks completely different from disney, both art styles are awesome in their own way. that the point of creating a cartoony art style is to make strong silhouettes to make actions easy to read (easier for animators to do when their character is thin, just look how unclear the silhouettes become in many of the altered versions). the point of animation is also to tell a usually fictional story, so of course it won't be realistic. so that means the character designs will be optimized for animating & storytelling, not anatomy lessons. addressing a kid's body image issues is the job of parents, doctors, therapists, etc. it is not the job of the artist to completely change their style when someone has a deeper self-worth issue.
AMEN.
Yes and my mom grew up with that, tall and "gangly"she was harassed constantly and called ugly and a walking board and no guys were interested in her until years later
My sister too. She is just naturally thin. Even after 2 kids, she is just slim. Picked on at school for being too thin. She's beautiful btw!
She sounds gorgeous
Thinking that on most of them!
No, it's not, simply because the Disney proportions for thinness are completely wrong. Nobody has that type of waist, not even anorexic. Disney princesses don't look like many real people and media's have been trying to show this type of beauty as something women should all strive for (in advertisments, fashion magazines etc). Real photos ended up being photoshopped to look more like those Disney princesses. And Disney definitely was at the origin of this. So although I agree that the artist should have also shown maybe one princess with a very thin structure to show how different it would have been from the Disney princesses, I don't think the article is trying to shame thin people in the least.
and I quote: "She looks like a stick in the right picture". "She looks anorexic." Are you aware of how many times slim or thin girls have been called a "stick" or "anorexic"? That kind of language is damaging, hurtful, and not ok, just like it's not ok to call someone else a "potato sack" or "fat".
im fairly skinny and i'm not a fuhkin bendy stick, i have organs
2 out of 3 obesity genes here
Nice try iblew, but I think they are being shamed for being impossible.
then where is the companion post where the artist slimmed down comically obese characters? They are cartoons, yes proportions are exaggerated. GEEZE-A-LOO!
People are sensitive about that simply because it happens everyday irl to actual models and people in media. Eveyone is all editted down to look like the "ideal body". They rarely ever make being a health (not obese, not skeletal) seem like a mythical thing. Hell there's so many "Drop the weight, become attractive" things in media I'd have a hard time finding something positive about gaining any weight. When I was younger I was obese and my family celebrated me losing weight. My cousin on the other hand was sickly thin so our family celebrated her gaining weight. That is how it should be, not "ugh why is being fat/thin being celebrated just be NoRmAL"
Being fat and over weight is not healthy and people need to stop normalizing it. I'm not being mean or calling out over weight people, but its just science facts. We don't need to be rail thin either though. Even chubby isn't good. This needs to be taught at young age. You need to maintain a healthy weight.
Do these cartoons really look fat and overweight to you?
Most looked healthy and normal. Some like Megara were definitely chubby
Most of them definitely look more pudgy than they would at the correct weight for their ages. Problem is that we're all so used to seeing people being 20-30+ pounds overweight that the "correct" weight looks abnormal to us.
A lot of them, yes. Like they only went for fat, flabby fat in most those cases, not muscular or fit but larger just flabby.
Most of them, yes.
yes
Thing is, the edits are fat because the models that inspired these characters looked very healthy and were not this big. They would've definitely been overweight if they had the body types of the edits. The Western obesity problem has skewed people's senses of normalcy in a profound way. The original characters were fairly average when their films came out in 59, 89, 92, etc. The newer characters just represented active, young teenagers.
active, young teenagers aren't shaped like hourglasses. as someone said above, these are normal body shapes, the originals could not even house the internal organs.
The originals are to skinny and a lot of the new ones are above average weight
I am a teenager and *am* shaped like a hourglass. At 15, I had 60 cm waist with 90 cm bust (65 cm underbust) and 90 cm a*s. I'm not kidding. Finding clothes, especially bras and pants was a b***h. I painfully stood out against my classmates and started getting catcalled at 12
The problem is that you thinking the realistic versions are too fat. Some fat is normal on womens body, so maybe they are healthy women
Perhaps they were healthy too as 'too thin' we can't guess the health of a cartoon. Some of the renderings are too fat and flabby esp for the lifestyle some of these characters lived. It's not realistic for the story. Example the time of Cinderella being "too thin" was seen as ugly and undesirable and so she was to be shown in that light. She was food deprived, worked hard every day, and lived in deplorable conditions. She would look like a concentration camp prisoner, in this story it's showing seemingly unattractive people can have beautiful souls and in the end her outside matched her inside. Is it rather derivative? Yes, but these are fairy tales.
I completely agree however it's not much better if they're showing twig ppl so that ppl like me starve themselves desperate to be skinnier. Also it's not as easy as you think to lose weight, *especially* if you have slower metabolism and it's in genes to be overweight.
Dude most of these characters wouldn't have the food or the money to buy food to get fat. Save Jasmine, most Disney princesses have terrible backstorys of poverty abandonment and seclusion
That part
Yeah but this is showing that too skinny isnât good either
This comment has been deleted.
Some people just are "chubby" naturally (like chubby cheeks, they're so cute!!!), With slower metabolism and other genetics and they do try to maintain a "healthy" body weight but they struggle too. I think that should be normalized. And so should being skinny, I agree but with how things are presented how people are bullied if they don't have the perfect body (not too "fat", not too "skinny") it's hard living in our society yk.
Ok, Iâll admit, some of these do look a bit unrealistic depending on their situations, but ALL OF THE âBEFORESâ LOOK LIKE EATING DISORDERS
And eating disorder is not a look or a specific appearance. A lot of fat people have eating disorders or the onset of behaviors that could easily become eating disorders. And all of these characters were based on real women who were incredibly petite and would be considered outrageously skinny in comparison to the flashier average bodies in the US today. That's the problem- you need to quit stigmatizing thin people in order to uplift fat people.
THANK YOU Ebony Rose. Have an upvote :)
Okay, for a woman to be a chubby is the most normal thing! Woman are born with more fat than men so they can reproduce. And it is a heathy weight being chubby. Men can also be chubby and be healthy. Some people just carry more weight than others and thatâs a healthy weight. Your healthy weight is different to someone elseâs healthy weight. For me when I was 12, a healthy weight was about 40kg I believe and I weighed about 55kg and naturally I thought, oh I must be carrying a bit more fat. I was, because that was my body. Because that was my healthy weight, because that was my familyâs genes.
these drawings are not even fat or overweight, they are what women's bodies look like. it is rare for a real human girl to have wide hips and big breasts but no stomach weight. what should not be normalized is calling these body types fat. i have the same body type as most of these drawings and i used to tell myself that i was fat to the point where i stopped eating and self-harmed every time i felt the urge to eat, but i realized that saying i was fat just wasn't true. however, lots of girls and women with these body types still struggle, and you telling them the lie that they see in the mirror every day can't possibly help.
This. With the very small possible exception of Meg (and I think that might just be because she was always scary thin even w/o comparison, and her poses), I donât see anyone who looks overweight, maybe âbig bonedâ or stocky but not unhealthy.
Maybe the new cartoons should show their latest bloodwork too lol
I look like those newer cartoons and my blood work is great. Also swim 1-2 miles almost daily. Body type is not an Indicator of health. Ask my dad. He looks like a super hero and his cholesterol is through the roof.
Lol wanna check those triglycerides?