A Dutch clothing company been accused of 'selling misogyny' after releasing images from its latest adverts featuring fully clothed men and giant scantily clad female models.

Suitsupply's latest campaign called 'Toy Boys' sees miniature men treating women's bodies like a playground, zipping down a model's breasts as though they're a slide in one image and spraying water over another's face from a hose in another.

The pictures sparked outrage on Twitter where users branded them 'sexist' however the CEO Fokke de Jong defended them by claiming they showed women with the 'upper hand.'

Suitsupply released their latest campaign called 'Toy boys' which saw miniature men pictured on scantily-clad giant women

A man in a suit poses next to a woman in just a bikini in the controversial adverts for the Dutch brand

In all the photos the men are seen fully dressed, showcasing the brand's fashions.

In the most controversial shot, two men appear to use a topless woman's breasts as a slide to promote the brand, which has stores in London and New York as well as across Europe.

Ikire Jones posted on Twitter: 'Yo Suitsupply, are you selling suits or misogyny this season? Just wanted to know so I can accessorize accordingly.'

@Pepperonina questioned the campaign's name, he wrote: 'Clearly it's still the woman who's the toy here, exploited by some micro-jerks.'

@WvSchaik posted: 'Hey Suitsupply, if you want me to buy some suits, please ditch the sexist adverts, OK?'

Twitter users were outraged by the 'sexist ads' which the CEO Fokke de Jong claimed showed the women with the 'upper hand'

The ad campaign is called 'Toy Boys' and shows the men supposedly being 'playthings' for the women

In a press release to explain the images, the company wrote: 'Sometimes it seems like it's a woman's world these days, and we just live in it. The modern woman is a confident tower of power, who knows exactly what she wants.

'She's beautiful. She's brilliant. She's a bona fide titan. It's hard not to feel well, dwarfed.

'So what's a guy to do? You're a modern gentleman, but the tables have turned. You have a certain way with the ladies, that is, until they have their way with you.

'You're a playboy, but what happens when the playboy becomes the plaything?'

In response to the negative reaction, CEO Fokke de Jong told FEMAIL: 'The reaction from some people is that this campaign is sexist. The men in our toy boy campaign are depicted as play dolls for the women, we don’t see the men having the upper hand here.'

The campaign was photographed by Dutch photographer Carli Hermes and it's not the first time the company has caused outrage with its advertising.

CEO Fokke de Jong told FEMAIL: 'The men in our toy boy campaign are depicted as play dolls for the women, we don’t see the men having the upper hand here.'

But Twitter users argued the images showed half-dressed women and were 'sexist' in their portrayal

The campaign was photographed by Dutch photographer Carli Hermes and it's not the first time the company has caused outrage with its advertising

In 2014, Suitsupply used scantily clad women in their campaign which were then pictured topless on its website

In 2014, the company's ad campaign showed suited men surrounded by scantily clad or topless women.

Visitors to their website had the option to choose the 'uncensored' version which then saw the women with their tops removed.

When employees from SuitSupply’s flagship New York store recently conducted an 'Ask Me Anything' online chat for a men’s fashion fashion forum, the response they got to the campaign was far from positive in April 2014.