Well, this was inevitable, right? After a few eventful years of pushing boundaries with their sexually-suggestive sleazy ads, American Apparel has finally let all of the clothing come off, again. The company’s latest ad campaign features what we assume, that they assume, are tastefully nude photos of girls who look not a day older than sixteen. The new, penciled portraits are courtesy of artist Boris Lopez, who has created similarly enticing artwork for illustrious publications such as Hustler’s Barely Legal (that’s porn, guys).

American Apparel’s previous near-porn infractions include a November 2007 Billboard on Manhattan’s Lower East Side which featured a topless model bent over provocatively (later scrawled with the text “I wonder why women get raped,”) a November 2008 web promo where the nipples came out, and a September 2009 scandal over a model who seemed to be under 16, but was actually, supposedly 23. Old habits die hard. But then again, nothing is permanent in pencil. Not even a tagline like, “Cotton. You can feel how good it looks.”