I don't wear lipstick every day - but if I'm dressing up for something and wearing full make-up, then lips get included. Just occasionally I'll put on a slick of the red stuff, if I think my face looks particularly wan or tired [if only to stop concerned friends saying 'are you OK, Ang?...you look very pale today']
Lipstick has been around for years.
For many centuries, it was considered sinful to paint your lips, and implied you were a harlot, and no-better-than-you-ought-to-be.
Attitudes relaxed by the Georgian era.
Bizarrely, George Washington was known for wearing lipstick. I am not sure if this was to draw attention to his amazing wooden teeth, or to distract people who were staring at them.
I am not sure what the statistics are for women looking at men wearing red lipstick [presumably quite a while, if it is the President, see above...]
During WW2 the production of cosmetics was stopped in the UK - but Churchill believed lipstick was a 'morale booster' so that was allowed to continue. Note his wife Clemmie, wearing her signature 'tied headscarf' - she adopted this style in preference to hats, to show her support of the ordinary women of Britain.
Churchill even asked Elizabeth Aden to produce a colour which would go well with the uniforms of women in the forces- EA came up with "Victory Red"
After the War, Britain remained on ration, and people were still living in a time of austerity.
But 1953 brought the coronation of our beautiful young Queen Elizabeth.
She commissioned a special lipstick [shade 'Balmoral'] to go with her red Coronation robes - described as a 'soft red-blue hue'
For many women, their lipstick is something without which they cannot face the day. In the film Breakfast at Tiffany's, Holly Golightly [played by Audrey Hepburn, wearing a shade called Pink in the Afternoon] declares "A girl can't read without her lipstick"
The average woman wears around 4kg of lipstick in her lifetime. It is estimated that 30% of lipstick is 'eaten' and ends up in our stomachs. That's more than 2 of these bags of sugar!
I shall end this post with a favourite poem of mine, by the great American humorist, Ogden Nash]
The Perfect Husband
He tells you when you've got on too much lipstick
And helps you with your girdle when your hips stick
How interesting! I don't wear a lot of make up, but I will not go to the office without lipstick, which is usually all the make up I wear.
ReplyDeleteYou always state fascinating facts! I am on my way to a wedding and I couldn't find my make up bag so no make up whatsoever and I had to leave with my hair wet. Annoyingly, the wedding starts at 1but we had to be there for an 11:30rehearsal so we left the house at 8:15 to go VIA Public Transport, the train was cancelled and the whole thing is a waste of time, I've got a headache, we booked a really expensive taxi for the way home and I look a mess. Oh well!
ReplyDeleteOh Kezzie, what a catalogue of disasters! There are SOME positives in your day - you have Your Perfect Husband alongside you. You will make The Most Beautiful Music. People will be listening to that and looking at the bride - so they probably won't even notice your slightly less than perfect appearance. I'm hoping and praying that things improve for you very soon...
DeleteI love lipstick, and have several in different shades, from a pale apricot pink to deepest French red. Love them all, feel just a grey blob without that splash of colour. I use makeup every day, not a lot but sufficient to define my features which become less-well defined as we age, so the full works every morning but with a light hand, so to speak. I had no idea there was a national day for lipstick, but I rather like the idea of having a day for the morale boosting red stuff!
ReplyDeleteMargaret P
www.margaretpowling.com