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Walmart Breastfeeding Photo: Kayla Andre Gets Apology After Company Refused To Print Picture (PHOTO)

Walmart Apologizes After Refusing To Print This Photo
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Walmart has apologized to an Edmonton-area mother after staff refused to print a photo of her breastfeeding her child, deeming it inappropriate

Kayla Andre's husband just wanted to print and frame a photo of his wife nursing their son as a Mother's Day gift, but staff working in the Spruce Grove Walmart photo department deemed it a violation of the company's policy against printing photos with nudity, reports CTV Edmonton.

“When he went to go pick it up, they brought the photo out and said unfortunately, although this means a lot to you, we can’t print it for you and we cannot sell it to you,” Andre told CTV.

“He said, well why not, and they said because it’s nudity and Walmart has very strict no nudity policy.”

The photo Walmart refused to print. (Story continues below)

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Andre's husband took to Facebook about the situation and Walmart responded soon after, said Canadian corporate affairs director Alex Roberton, who called Andre to apologize.

“We made a mistake. That photo should have been printed,” Roberton told CTV.

The problem, Roberton told CBC Edmonton, is that many of the employees in the photo centre are young and new to the job, and perhaps the policy wasn't explained well enough.

"In this particular case, we hadn't done a very good job of making sure that procedure was crystal clear," he said, adding that the company has added an addendum to their photo policy to clarify what is considered appropriate.

Andre was surprised, but grateful, to receive the apology. A planned breastfeeding sit-in at the store was still a go for Thursday.

According to the Facebook invitation, 29 people planned to attend the protest.

“I’m actually really, really pleased and shocked and surprised that someone from head office … contacted me and remedied the situation,” Andre told CBC.

“Lots of people were saying, 'You can’t do anything, it’s Wal-Mart. Nothing’s going to change.'”

Story continues after the slideshow

Memorable Breastfeeding Moments In Hollywood
Gwen Stefani(01 of21)
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Stefani was still breastfeeding son, Kingston, when she went on tour in 2007. She told The Guardian, "I don't know when I'm going to stop breastfeeding... I'll just keep going while I can -- like, he's getting his teeth so it is a little bit scary. He's bitten me a few times!"In 2014, she posted a beautiful Instagram photo of herself feeding her son Apollo in Switzerland. (credit:Getty)
Alanis Morissette(02 of21)
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The singer recently expressed her pro-attachement parenting beliefs and said, "I breastfeed and I'll be breastfeeding until my son is finished and he weans," on "The Billy Bush Show." (credit:Getty)
Beyonce(03 of21)
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Beyonce was spotted breastfeeding Blue Ivy in New York City while dining out with husband, Jay-Z. (credit:Getty)
Alicia Silverstone(04 of21)
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Alicia Silverstone -- whose pre-mastication video thrust her baby-feeding philosophy into the public spotlight -- was once photographed breastfeeding Bear Blu while walking. (credit:Getty)
Mayim Bialik(05 of21)
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Actress, Mayim Bialik blogged in September about starting to wean her 3-year-old. In her new book, "Beyond The Sling," Bialik writes that he still nurses about five times a day, and recently told CNN "it is still a tremendous source of discipline, and of bonding, that occurs between a mother and a child." (credit:Getty)
Alyssa Milano(06 of21)
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Milano told Best for Babes that she has had no trouble breastfeeding her son, Milo. "I was lucky to have a baby who from the moment he came into the world, was a pro at latching on," she said. (credit:Getty)
Tori Spelling(07 of21)
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In November 2011, Spelling's husband, Dean McDermott accidentally tweeted a photo of his son, Liam, who was 4 at the time, which showed Spelling's breasts in the background."I am a mom, I was nursing my baby... [Dean] was so devasted about it that I couldn't be mad. I mean it was genuinely an accident," Spelling told CNN about the incident. (credit:Getty)
Gisele Bundchen(08 of21)
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In 2010, Bundchen declared there should be a "worldwide law" requiring new mothers to breastfeed for six months after they give birth. Many critics were unhappy with her statement, and she eventually clarified by writing on her blog: "My intention in making a comment about the importance of breastfeeding has nothing to do with the law. It comes from my passion and beliefs about children."In 2013, the model Instagrammed a "multitasking" photo of herself breastfeeding her daughter while having her hair, makeup, and nails done. (credit:Getty)
Miranda Kerr(09 of21)
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Shortly after giving birth to her son, Flynn, Kerr posted a photo on her blog that husband Orlando took of her nursing. (credit:Getty)
Kourtney Kardashian(10 of21)
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Kourtney K. quit breastfeeding son, Mason, when he was 14 months old. "I think I stopped early because my sisters were like 'OK, it's time, it's time,'" she said on the "Today" show. "I miss it, I loved it." (credit:Getty)
Kendra Wilkinson(11 of21)
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Wilkinson once told Baby Zone an outrageous story about the first party she went to after giving birth to baby Hank:"I went to Eve nightclub in Vegas and my boobs started leaking. I couldn't do anything so I breastfed myself [laughs]. And it tasted sweet, too!" (credit:Getty)
Salma Hayek(12 of21)
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Salma Hayek breastfed a newborn baby boy in Africa whose mother had no milk in 2009. Hayek was weaning her own daughter, Valentina, at the time, but still had milk to donate. (credit:Getty)
Naomi Watts(13 of21)
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Watts told PEOPLE magazine in 2009 that breastfeeding was how she lost weight. "He's sucking it all out of me, it seems," she said. (credit:Getty)
Rebecca Romijn(14 of21)
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In 2009, Romijn told Extra!, "Breastfeeding is the very best diet I've been on. It's amazing." (credit:Getty)
Angelina Jolie(15 of21)
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The November 2008 cover of W magazinefeatured Jolie nursing. (credit:Getty)
Elisabeth Hasselbeck(16 of21)
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In 2008, Hasselback demonstrated how to use a breast pump on "The View" -- she was nursing her son, Taylor, at the time. (credit:Getty)
Christina Aguilera(17 of21)
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Five weeks after giving birth to son, Max, Aguilera went on The Ellen Show wearing a low cut, revealing dress that prompted the talk show host to ask, "Are you nursing?" (credit:Getty)
Jennifer Garner(18 of21)
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In the the April 2007 issue Garner told Allure Magazine: "All I ever heard was everyone bitch about [nursing] -- nobody ever said, 'You are not going to believe how emotional this is.' It's like, I'll say I'm going to stop, and then I'm in there, feeding her." (credit:Getty)
Maggie Gyllenhaal(19 of21)
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Gyllenhaal was photographed by the paparazzi in 2007 nursing her daughter, Ramona, during a walk by the Hudson River. (credit:Getty)
Kate Beckinsale(20 of21)
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Kate Beckinsale told Jay Leno in 2006 that she missed breastfeeding her daughter and that "she was very good at it." (credit:Getty)
Mary-Louise Parker(21 of21)
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In 2004, when Mary-Louise Parker won a Golden Globe for "Angels in America" she said, "Janel Moloney just told me she would pay me $1,000 if I thanked my newborn son for making my boobs look so good in this dress." (credit:Getty)

This is not the first time Walmart has faced controversy over breastfeeding in Alberta.

Last December an online firestorm erupted after a nursing mother was asked to leave a Calgary Walmart while breastfeeding her three-week old son.

“New moms need all the support they can get, not just with breastfeeding but with adjusting to life with a new baby,” Dr. Cynthia Landry, who runs a breastfeeding clinic, told Global Calgary at the time.

Kirsten Goa, president of the Breastfeeding Action Committee of Edmonton, told CTV she believes mothers still face a lot of negativity when they breastfeed in public, and has seen little change in attitude over the years.

“Censorship of breastfeeding both in terms of personal harassment, women covering up, women hiding in their houses, and their Facebook photos being deleted, all of that is happening all the time. That really intimidates a lot of people when they’re nursing their babies,” she told CTV.

Kimberly Williams, a women's studies professor at Mount Royal University in Calgary, told the Calgary Journal that breasts are seen as taboo because of their association with sex.

"Breasts are erogenous zones. If a woman is going to enjoy sex, the erogenous zones are going to be the breast and nipples so there's an association in popular culture. If we get into pornography, titillation and breasts are sort of everywhere.

"Since most pornography, not all, is meant for a male audience, that inherently sexualizes breasts."

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