Leni Klum shares candid makeup-free selfie.Photo:Leni Klum/Instagram; Tommaso Boddi/Variety via GettyLeni Klumis learning how to embrace her skin one day at a time — and in front of 1.9 million Instagram followers.The rising model and daughter ofHeidi Klumtook to the social media app on Monday with a candid makeup-free photo of her skin going through a flare-up.The 19-year-old, who is also an interior design student in N.Y.C., didn’t caption the image. However, in the past, she has been vocal about accepting her skin, no matter what stage it’s in.While chatting with PEOPLE in October, Leni admitted that she once succumbed to the negative stigmas around acne.Leni Klum.Leni Klum/Instagram“I feel like there is a thought behind having acne that you’re not beautiful with it or it makes you look not as good as you could look,” she explained. “Then I realized, ‘Oh my God, this is normal.’ Everyone goes through it … It’s not bad if you have it. It’s something that anyone can get and it’s not your fault and it’s hormonal.”The teen, who has frontedmajor campaignsalongside her mom for lingerie brand Intismissi, added that she used to face days when shedidn’t want to leave the houseuntil her “acne cleared up.”Leni Klum and Heidi Klum attend 2022 Harper’s Bazaar ICONS and Bloomingdale’s 150th Anniversary event in N.Y.C. on Sept. 9, 2022.Theo Wargo/GettyThen, she realized she couldn’t let her skin control her life. That’s when she decided to post a photo of her acne on social media in the hopes of normalizing breakouts.Since then, she’s posted multiple close-up photos of her blemishes. Last summer, she uploaded abare-faced selfiefresh out of the shower, and in January 2021, she got real about the“bad day”her skin was having with a zoomed-in picture captioned with the hashtags#nomakeup#nofilter#sowhat.Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE’s free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories.Leni is also an open book when it comes to the topic of breaking stereotypes in the modeling industry. As a petite model standing a little over 5 feet, she told PEOPLE that she’s learned to love her height, which hasn’t stopped her from taking on somehuge runway gigs.“At the beginning, I didn’t even think of doing runway — and now I love it. I want to do more. I don’t think, and I never thought this, that you need to be a certain height or you need to look a certain way. I don’t think there should be a certain standard, especially when it comes to height,” she said.

Leni Klum shares candid makeup-free selfie.Photo:Leni Klum/Instagram; Tommaso Boddi/Variety via Getty

Leni Klum shares makeup-free photo

Leni Klum/Instagram; Tommaso Boddi/Variety via Getty

Leni Klumis learning how to embrace her skin one day at a time — and in front of 1.9 million Instagram followers.The rising model and daughter ofHeidi Klumtook to the social media app on Monday with a candid makeup-free photo of her skin going through a flare-up.The 19-year-old, who is also an interior design student in N.Y.C., didn’t caption the image. However, in the past, she has been vocal about accepting her skin, no matter what stage it’s in.While chatting with PEOPLE in October, Leni admitted that she once succumbed to the negative stigmas around acne.Leni Klum.Leni Klum/Instagram“I feel like there is a thought behind having acne that you’re not beautiful with it or it makes you look not as good as you could look,” she explained. “Then I realized, ‘Oh my God, this is normal.’ Everyone goes through it … It’s not bad if you have it. It’s something that anyone can get and it’s not your fault and it’s hormonal.”The teen, who has frontedmajor campaignsalongside her mom for lingerie brand Intismissi, added that she used to face days when shedidn’t want to leave the houseuntil her “acne cleared up.”Leni Klum and Heidi Klum attend 2022 Harper’s Bazaar ICONS and Bloomingdale’s 150th Anniversary event in N.Y.C. on Sept. 9, 2022.Theo Wargo/GettyThen, she realized she couldn’t let her skin control her life. That’s when she decided to post a photo of her acne on social media in the hopes of normalizing breakouts.Since then, she’s posted multiple close-up photos of her blemishes. Last summer, she uploaded abare-faced selfiefresh out of the shower, and in January 2021, she got real about the“bad day”her skin was having with a zoomed-in picture captioned with the hashtags#nomakeup#nofilter#sowhat.Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE’s free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories.Leni is also an open book when it comes to the topic of breaking stereotypes in the modeling industry. As a petite model standing a little over 5 feet, she told PEOPLE that she’s learned to love her height, which hasn’t stopped her from taking on somehuge runway gigs.“At the beginning, I didn’t even think of doing runway — and now I love it. I want to do more. I don’t think, and I never thought this, that you need to be a certain height or you need to look a certain way. I don’t think there should be a certain standard, especially when it comes to height,” she said.

Leni Klumis learning how to embrace her skin one day at a time — and in front of 1.9 million Instagram followers.

The rising model and daughter ofHeidi Klumtook to the social media app on Monday with a candid makeup-free photo of her skin going through a flare-up.

The 19-year-old, who is also an interior design student in N.Y.C., didn’t caption the image. However, in the past, she has been vocal about accepting her skin, no matter what stage it’s in.

While chatting with PEOPLE in October, Leni admitted that she once succumbed to the negative stigmas around acne.

Leni Klum.Leni Klum/Instagram

Leni Klum shares makeup-free photo

Leni Klum/Instagram

“I feel like there is a thought behind having acne that you’re not beautiful with it or it makes you look not as good as you could look,” she explained. “Then I realized, ‘Oh my God, this is normal.’ Everyone goes through it … It’s not bad if you have it. It’s something that anyone can get and it’s not your fault and it’s hormonal.”

The teen, who has frontedmajor campaignsalongside her mom for lingerie brand Intismissi, added that she used to face days when shedidn’t want to leave the houseuntil her “acne cleared up.”

Leni Klum and Heidi Klum attend 2022 Harper’s Bazaar ICONS and Bloomingdale’s 150th Anniversary event in N.Y.C. on Sept. 9, 2022.Theo Wargo/Getty

Leni Klum and Heidi Klum attend 2022 Harper’s Bazaar ICONS & Bloomingdale’s 150th Anniversary

Theo Wargo/Getty

Then, she realized she couldn’t let her skin control her life. That’s when she decided to post a photo of her acne on social media in the hopes of normalizing breakouts.

Since then, she’s posted multiple close-up photos of her blemishes. Last summer, she uploaded abare-faced selfiefresh out of the shower, and in January 2021, she got real about the“bad day”her skin was having with a zoomed-in picture captioned with the hashtags#nomakeup#nofilter#sowhat.

Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE’s free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories.

Leni is also an open book when it comes to the topic of breaking stereotypes in the modeling industry. As a petite model standing a little over 5 feet, she told PEOPLE that she’s learned to love her height, which hasn’t stopped her from taking on somehuge runway gigs.

“At the beginning, I didn’t even think of doing runway — and now I love it. I want to do more. I don’t think, and I never thought this, that you need to be a certain height or you need to look a certain way. I don’t think there should be a certain standard, especially when it comes to height,” she said.

source: people.com