Dove 'Real Beauty' Campaign: Artist Sketches Women As They See Themselves (VIDEO/PICTURES)

WATCH: Artist Sketches Women As They See Themselves

Famous for its use of real women posing confidently, wearing nothing but white underwear and big toothy grins, Dove's 'Real Beauty' campaign has continued to reinvent female-focused marketing since its launch over a decade ago.

Now, Real Beauty Sketches, the campaign's latest instalment, is taking the internet by storm by revealing that women really are their own harshest critics.

In the video above, forensic artist Gil Zamora (who sketches a handful of women from description alone) notes the disparity between the way women describe their own appearance and the way they are described by others.

The artist creates two sketches per woman -- one based on her impression of her own appearance and the other created from a complete stranger's description.

Revealingly, the women tend to describe their features in a negative manner: "I kind of have a fat, rounder face", "My mum told me I had a big jaw", "I would say I have a pretty big forehead..."

But when described by others, the descriptions are much more positive: "She had blue eyes, very nice blue eyes", "She was thin, so you could see her cheekbones", "Cute nose..."

The resulting pairs of sketches are completely different to each other. Those created when the women described themselves are not as flattering as those created with the help of others.

These are sketches of the same woman -- the left is how she described herself, the right is how she was described by a complete stranger

When presented with the sketches, some of the women became emotional.

One participant confesses: "I should be more grateful of my natural beauty. It impacts the friends that we make, the jobs we apply for, how we treat our children. It impacts everything."

The campaign hopes to address the negative way that women see their own appearance. Its message says: "You are more beautiful than you think."

Take a look at some examples...

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