American model and television presenter Ashley Graham says she's keeping her “spirits (and boobs) lifted” on July 10, 2022. (Photo by ashleygraham/Instagram)
A model presents a creation from the collection by Amato Couture, of the United Arab Emirates, during the Arab Fashion Week in Gulf emirate of Dubai, United Arab Emirates, 28 March 2022. (Photo by Ali Haider/EPA/EFE)
The UK Love Island alum Georgia Steel posed on the beach in Mexico last decade of January 2022. The reality star, 24, was spotted going topless which just a pair of coconuts to cover her boobs. (Photo by The Mega Agency)
A man wearing a face mask amid the COVID-19 pandemic passes a mural of Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro in Caracas, Venezuela, Wednesday, July 22, 2020. Analysts say that in recent months the pandemic has helped suck away the opposition’s scanty momentum and bolster Maduro’s already strong hand. (Photo by Ariana Cubillos/AP Photo)
British-American fashion model and designer Georgia May Jagger put on a busty display as she barely covered her boobs for a for CR Fashion Book in the second decade of March 2024. (Photo by Matt Jones for CR Fashion Book)
Lady Gaga left her hotel to party in the east end of london for the night on September 10, 2016. She was wearing shiny hot pants and a little crop top showing off some under boob. But had sticky tape covering her nipples. Lady Gaga and Mark Ronson performed her new single “Perfect Illusion” at the General Browning Club in Hackney. Afterwards she went with a few friends to Metropolis strip club in Hackney. Lady Gaga left at 4am and returned to her Hotel. (Photo by Splash News and Pictures)
A member of the United Arab Emirates armed forces gestures as the first batch of UAE military personnel returns from Yemen in Abu Dhabi, November 7, 2015. (Photo by Reuters/United Arab Emirates News Agency WAM)
People leave a giant air purifier, which its inventor calls a “super tree”, in Lima's district of Jesus Maria November 24, 2014. In Peru's notoriously polluted capital Lima, local inventor Jorge Gutierrez, a retired naval engineer, is deploying the giant air purifiers that double as billboards to suck up carbon dioxide and dangerous levels of smog. (Photo by Mariana Bazo/Reuters)