On the layout of the advertisement by Tom Ford appears a part of woman’s body. Cutting half of the head off from the top and everything beneath the breast from the bottom it is only possible to see her open mouth with red lipstick and her hands with red nail polish squeezing the breasts together to hold between them the iconic image of a perfume bottle, which is supposed to be the advertised product. The parts of a woman’s body and the fragrance bottle are all components of the advertisement’s signified concept. As Roland Barthes describes in his text “the signifieds of the advertising message are formed a priori by certain attributes of the product and these attributes have to be transmitted as clearly as possible”.
The linguistic message of an advertisement is present in every image. The only linguistic message that appeals to the viewer is the sign title Tom Ford ‘The first fragrance for men from Tom Ford. The sign gives the name of the brand of fragrance, but also underlines on the advertisement image that it is the first released fragrance of Tom Ford. There is no strong relationship between the signifier, in this case the image of the woman’s body and the linguistic message beneath the image. But as Barthes writes, that only a photograph can communicate the ‘literal information’ of the image without any signs and ‘rules of transformation’.
A number of signs are hidden behind the image. The fragrance bottle is placed in one of the most sensitive parts of the woman’s body – between her breasts, where a man’s hand or head would most probably be aimed during a sexual interaction. The perfume is usually applied either on the neck or on the wrist. This brings a conclusion that the bottle of fragrance might be imitating a man’s part of the body. The second two