New York state legislators are on track to pass a law before Fashion Week in September regulating work conditions for under-age models.
The new rules would ban nudity on sets, and require models be allowed to eat, according to Women's E-News:
If it passes, all New York Fashion Week shows and local magazine shoots there would require such things as chaperones on set, tutors on set, consent forms for nudity, no 16-plus-hour days and access to food.
The new law will be a culture shock in the fashion world, which has a long troubling history of using underage girls in nude or inappropriately sexual photo shoots.
Vogue, for instance, has repeatedly used the 15-year-old Ondria Hardin in shoots despite promising not use girls under 16 as models. Prada used Hardin in a "sexy" ad when she was just 13.
The fashion business has voluntary guidelines banning the use of under-16s on runways, but models and agents have been known to lie about girls' ages to get work. And 87% of models have been subjected to a surprise request for nudity during a photo session.
The law's sponsors have proposed a fine of $1,000 per violation.
SEE ALSO: TOO SEXY, TOO YOUNG: How The Fashion World Flouts Its Own Ban On Underage Models