Petals is about vulvas: The center of womanhood and mystery. It's where magic happens, and we enter into the physical world. Although it was considered to be sacred in the past, many have forgotten the sacredness of unique beauty of each woman's vulva. This book is comprised of 48 fine art photography of vulvas, each hand printed by a master photographer with respect and care. If you are not sure if your vulva looks normal, if you don't like how it looks, or you are just curious how other women's vulvas look like, this is a great book for you. It can be used in medical setting, sex education, women's studies and empowerment and more. You may also find the documentary film of this subject Petals: Journey into Self Discovery to be helpful and moving.
it's a good book for males to read so they don't think all vaginas look the same..sadly he didn't feature all races just white women. If you're going to have a book about different vaginas then find different vaginas.
This book significantly helped me with my dysmorphophobia. I had been considering a genital aesthetic procedure due to the belief that everyone looks the same or that there’s a ‘standard’ I didn’t meet. While researching, I came across several academic papers that cited this book, which led me to read it. The insights it offers, especially the interview at the end, truly opened my eyes and profoundly impacted how I view myself. It’s a powerful and transformative read that I highly recommend for anyone struggling with self-image and men who have similar belief as me. It would be great if there’s an update of the book with people from different demographic.
A powerful sex education tool, it challenges the myths of a one "normal" vagina. Unfortunately, Karras was very ethnocentric; all women illustrated are Caucasian. he was clearly scared of falling under erotica (he used Sepia tones and close-ups) which undermined the power of the illustrations.
When I first started this book, I thought of someone ranting of how women were conveyed in a negative way. However, that has always been the case in history. As I read more, I understood the deeper meaning of what Nick was trying to project to the audience. A great appreciation goes out to his work & his subjects.