Jezebel's tagline is "Celebrity, Sex, Fashion For Women. Without Airbrushing" so it shouldn't come as much of a surprise that the site felt a need to track down the un-retouched images from Lena Dunham's controversial new Annie Leibovitz Vogue shoot.
What is surprising is that Jezebel offered a whopping $10,000 reward for whoever could produce said images — and someone came forward within two hours of the initial request.
Turns out, the images aren't even that manipulated. But like all Vogue cover girls before her, certain liberties have been taken with Dunham's waistline, jawline, neckline, and other tweaks.
But, as Jezebel points out, "this is what Vogue does, and it's interesting to see what Leibovitz and editor-in-chief Anna Wintour felt that they needed to 'fix' before pictures of Lena could be presented to readers."
Take a look at the below before-and-after GIF and judge for yourselves:
To see the rest of the GIFs on Jezebel, click here.
Dunham is not the first, nor will she be the last, Vogue cover girl to be Photoshopped.
For her part, Dunham seems happy with the photo spread.
When the images first hit the Internet, the 27-year-old Tweeted "Dear @voguemagazine: Thank you. Love, Lena"
Since the Photoshopping controversy, she has only tweeted:
Some shit is just too ridiculous to engage. Let's use our energy wisely, 2014.
— Lena Dunham (@lenadunham) January 17, 2014
SEE ALSO: Lena Dunham's Arm Is Missing In Vogue Photoshop Fail