You can read the complete results of the survey here—and they are fascinating. Bottom line: You're OK with a little retouching. But not a lot. Sixty percent of you say it's OK for a woman to retouch her own personal photos (now very common on dating sites and Facebook). But you're skeptical when the media does it, unless it's for minor stuff like getting rid of a pimple or "steaming" a wrinkled skirt. Three-quarters of women are fine with those kinds of changes ("you have to want to look like the people on the pages," notes Jessie Wohlgemuth, 27, of Belmont, Massachusetts), but only one in four approve of altering what Mother Nature gave you: curves, birthmarks and other distinguishing characteristics. "I want to look like me on my best day," said one typical respondent, "not change my body."

What you do with your own personal Facebook and Match.com pictures is up to you, of course. But how should a magazine like Glamour handle retouching? In the March issue, we published the pledge below. And we plan on sticking to it:

Yes, we DO do it—and so do most fashion publications in the age of digital photography, since retouching includes everything from darkening a sky so a headline reads better to keeping models' nipples from showing through a shirt (done in our March issue—twice!). But as your responses make clear, retouching has its limits—or should—and Glamour plans to take a stronger role in setting ours. You told us you don't want little things like freckles and scars removed, and we agree; those are the kinds of details that make each woman on the planet unique and beautiful. And while our policy has always been not to alter a woman's body shape, we'll also be asking photographers we hire not to manipulate body size in the photos we commission, even if a celebrity or model requests a digital diet (alas, it happens). "I believe Glamour should take an active role in encouraging unretouched photos," says Jessica Gordon, 29, of Los Angeles. "It has to start somewhere."So, what do you think? Where do you stand when it comes to retouching? Does this policy go far enough? Too far? Tweet me @cindi_leive or let me know in the comments below.

Plus, watch our video in which real women answer the question, "What do you love about your body?" Then upload a video to the comments section of Glamour's YouTube page of you answering the same question.

Photo: Mollie Maguire