Last week a mom took to Twitter to share her outrage after taking her 12-year-old daughter shopping for bras and finding one that "smoothens imperfections."
"'Erase imperfections' and 'smooth out the shape', says a bra in 70A [the smallest bra size in France] in a kids section... #We’reReallyNotDoneWithThisShit"
On the label of the bra it reads, "Ideal as a first bra with removable filling!" and "hides small imperfections".
Florence Braud told BuzzFeed News she saw the bra for sale in a store in Bretagne, France.
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She said the word “imperfections” irritated her and that a girl in her daughter’s class had made fun of her for not wearing a bra, so they went to buy her one.
Braun said: “It saddened me to see that, so soon, she was already suffering the threats [of] femininity."
She described it as an "injunction of femininity".
Many people took to Twitter to criticize Dim, the lingerie brand responsible.
"Hello @DIMparis. So according to you, 12-year-old girls have “imperfections” that should be smoothed out?"
“Go erase your own imperfections elsewhere, @DIMparis. This tells everything about yourself and your body shaming, but nothing about us."
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“How awful! Bras for little girls, to make their chests bigger and “erase imperfections”! #WTF #DIM
"@Babeth_AS @Ticamomille I’m so upset by this. You don’t even have breasts YET but you ALREADY have problems/things to hide…"
A spokesperson from Dim told BuzzFeed News in a statement that by "imperfections" the company meant to "make the product smooth and harmonious under clothing."
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They said: “When we said imperfections, we meant clothing and non-physiological imperfections. This is to erase imperfections materials — folds, overlays, etc. — to make the product smooth and harmonious under clothing.”
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