Fig Leaf

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A Fig Leaf is a "modesty panel" or "modesty shield."

They are used in fandom to cover up parts of fan art.

One venue for fig leaves are in print zines where they are used by fans as humorous commentary.

Another use of self-imposed fig leaves on print zines is to disguise erotic content or nudity so that fans can feel more confident reading or viewing fanworks in public areas.

Sometimes people who sell print zines on eBay utilize fig leaves to cover up visual depictions of what they commonly refer to as "naughty bits."

What Items Are Covered by Fig Leaves

  • female breasts
  • male genitalia, portrayed as casual nudity, erotica, or simply male nudes
  • male butts (female butts tend to be exempt)
  • mild physical expressions of intimacy (usually between same sex couples) such as kissing or lips touching
  • explicit sexual acts

Self-Imposed Fig Leaves in Print Zines

Some print zines included fanart that parodied the very idea of a fig leaf, and was a humorous gesture, a bit of cheeky fun.

For Star Trek: TOS zines in the mid-seventies, these parodies were also commentary on nudity and erotic fanworks, something that sparked The SekWester*Con Porn Debate and the first creations of age statements.

Reading Zines in Public Spaces

Some fig leaves utilized in print zines were not parody, but a way to reduce embarrassment when fans read zines in public areas.

In 2002, a fan, Kathy Resch wrote:

In the early 80s I used to do what I called "fig leaf" covers - just a plain piece of paper over the cover, which could then be taken off once the buyer had taken the zine home from the con. Or left there, if they wanted to. I didn't try to do anything fancy; the object was making sure I didn't have to keep my entire stock of zines "under the table" as it were. [1]

See more at Reading and Viewing Print Fanworks in Public Areas.

On eBay

Fig leaves are sometimes used by fans and non-fans in public venues such as eBay to cover an area on visual fanworks that the seller feels may offend viewers, often referred to as "naughty bits."

The decision to use a fig leaf can be a political and/or personal statement that represents what the applicator considers shameful or embarrassing.

Fig leaves may also be used when the seller is worried the image may violate eBay's terms of service.

Fig leaves are usually physical pieces of paper. Sometimes sellers use a coin, or at least in one instance their own finger. Some sellers use a photomanip tool to white or black out images or parts of art they deem offensive.

Some eBay Examples

Beware the Female Breasts

A Fig Finger!

And for your viewing pleasure, a fig finger from an eBay seller:

Similar Topics and Related Reading

References

  1. ^ from a mailing list (Sep 16, 2002)
  2. ^ from a mailing list, quoted anonymously (November 2010)