Victorian ladies weren't supposed to be seen wearing makeup, but they could indeed find rouge recipes in ladies journals and get them from the local pharmacy/apothecary. One rouge that was in the Victorian era--and popular--was known as Pear's Liquid Bloom. It was also popular in the Regency. It's run was from the 1700s to the 1950s. It was basically Benetint. Powders were also common. A woman could tint her lashes with a mixture of ash, wax, and oil that she would make herself. but you couldn't make anything very obvious or you'd clearly be a tart. They also used blue powder or some kind of blue tint to draw fake veins on their skin to make it more translucent looking.
avrilfantasyrin oh yeah. there's been salves for ages to keep lips moisturized as well as tinted salves to give a tint. One common colorant was alkanet, which produces a nice reddish color, but carmine was also a common colorant, too. Carmine produces a very red-pink, rosy tint.
fatalrob0t ahah, I knew somehow they had to cheat :D, some people can't have rosy lips no matter how many water they drink, thank you so much for this information :D
avrilfantasyrin Not a problem. I'm one of those that just don't really have much color to my lips. If it was me back then, I'd be secretly making my rouge from those old recipes and hiding that stuff away where no one would see it.
fatalrob0t yeah like me too, my lips somehow ends up looking pale if I pack on lip balm but it's not for some and many girls, some fruits actually give your lips a tint of colour if you ate them, I think I would've done that XD
Now this is a true makeup artist. Admiration and respect for where women started, going back to the source of why we wear makeup. Yes it's fun to do a dramatic look for going out but it comes back to doing a bit of makeup to look a little prettier, like ourselves. Something so charming about wearing only a bit of powder and a red lipstick and having these little clever compacts to keep with us for touch ups. I wish cosmetics companies would sort of look back on this and do clever packaging like that. Thank you Lisa for your passion for this industry and for that great historian for sharing!!
Respond to this video... Thank you to everyone who has left such amazing comments here today. I have been out on a shoot all day and am just catching up with them all now. I'm so overwhelmed and happy! Its lovely to know that its not just me who is crazy about all this stuff. I had a truly inspiring day with Madeleine and her collection and its just fantastic to be able to share it with so many interested people. I think you are going to LOVE whats coming next! X
This was actually extremely interesting. I just can't believe she has the original Rimmel Mascara block I've only ever seen images.Cant wait for the next one 😄
This is fascinating! I would love to go into her room and look at every little thing. Thank you for doing this! I grew up in the 50's and 60's so I remember makeup from my grandmother and great aunts. I remember buying lipstick for 10 cents at WoolWorth and Kress and using the Mabelline mascara in the red box. In high school it was dark eyeliner and Tangee orange lipstick (but we had to take it to school to apply it because dad said no makeup!!) and about that time the mascara started coming in the tubes. Much better than the box and brush. Grandmother wore Coty loose powder, no foundation, and red lipstick with a bit of blush that was the creamy type you put on with your finger. No eye makeup or mascara and brows were natural. I don't ever remember my mother wearing eye shadow or eyeliner. She wore powder and lipstick and used a #2 pencil for her eyebrows! I kept telling her she was going to get lead poisoning but she lived until she was 85 no lead poisoning. ;)
Product designers TODAY could greatly benefit from studying cosmetics packaging during the roaring twenties and noir thirties. Those packages and containers were ingenious!
Watched this over 5 times. I want more makeup history videos from you. Or more iconic ones like the Audrey Hepburn and Marilyn Monroe ones!! I love the little tidbits of history you sneak in there. Thanks so much! Love yah Lisa.
What a breathtaking look into our past. I'm so thankful you ladies have shared your knowledge with all of us. It's so intriguing to learn about women's life though the ages. Incredibly lovely!
this was absolutely BRILLIANT!!! if only they teach history like this... I feel like if she made a doco I would not only buy it but watching everyday for a bit of pick me up. i love it!!!! :D great video series lisa i'm really loving all of it!!
@kja1103 thank you for taking the time to comment here, it means a lot to me. I'm so happy you are enjoying my videos as much as I'm enjoying making them X
I really enjoyed watching this video. I start to admire make-up and the inventions by Victorian women. Also, this smart lady who owns the shop, really lovely collection of hers, she is absolutely the inspiration for all women who love make-up.
I just saw both videos and I absolutely love this! Unlike most people my age, I collect vintage as well as antique items to decorate my home. I just love having these things around. Especially when you start to think of the stories behind them. I've seen a few different makeup products through my searches, and there are quite a few compacts that I would love to have! May have to invest in order to display in my bath & spare rooms! This is awesome!
This is fabulous. I could listen to you two forever. My grandmother was a flapper in the twenties. I have several photos of her in her single days. I have a few items of hers from those days I treasure. She graduated from college in 1923 and never lost that flapper spirit of discovery and empowerment. Thanks for sharing.
I keep coming back to this little series of videos because, I absolutely Love Madeleine! The antiques and love/knowledge of history... Her personality too! Omg, I feel like I could just sit with her for days, talking about different pieces, learning about antiques and talking about how or why it was manufactured. My house is decorated with antiques. It's a "hobby" I enjoy because, I feel like the pieces themselves hold the history and hold the stories. I swear, if I could do it all over again.. I would totally get into something like this a LOT more than I do now! lol
I honestly cannot thank you enough for making this video and for filming and bringing to light your interest in the history of makeup. This is beyond fascinating and amazing for me. I studied history and I'm also a makeup artist so you just mashed up the best of both worlds for me. Love it! and I hope there's more soon!
madelein marsh is amazing.. the way she says the story and carries us thru ages, its as tho she has witnessed it all.. amazing! n i actually wana see each piece n listen to her story :)
Oh my goodness, a museum of sorts in Madeleine Marsh's home! Also, a brilliant moment of truth: 7:10, followed up with Ms. Lisa's "and they're still doing it."
I've seen Victorian gloves at antique fairs and wondered about how narrow they were. So women then did not necessarily have narrow hands. They just squeezed their hands into them.
This video made my day. It combines two of my passions; historical documentaries and makeup! You can't lose. Thanks so much Lisa, I know SO many of us apprecaite your videos!!
I love listening to people like Madeleina. she has knowledge to share and a great way to explain things! I enjoyed this video very very much and I am looking forward to the next videos! Thanks Lisa for that!
Well obviously. You wouldn't think there was anything wrong with you if you weren't constantly told there is. Women grow hair cause it's supposed to be there. But there's money to be made if they tell you you're gross the way you were created.
I adore this series of videos for your passionate approach to the subject matter. You can really see your eyes light up when you speak about the history of makeup and it is such a joy to watch.
Thank You, Lisa, with all my heart. As a collector of very vintage perfumes, I could say - all those are so treasure! And so sad that nowadays even rich companies ended up with cheap plastic and simplest packagings with no idea and value.... We live in the era of simplification.
None of the utube gurus can compare to You. You are the best. The passion You've got, this different look for some things... OMG, I'm so amazed, I don't know how else can I express my admiration.
Madeleine is such a colourful character! i could just sit and listen to her go on all day! i wish we had a course like this at university! thank you for this video. in a world where we are obsessed with getting the latest collection of make up (newest technology and what not), you put things in perspective and show us that make up is so much more than just enhancement of physical features. it has a history of its own that comes alive when passionate people explore it further!
Because of you I was inspired to actually care about my outer looks which eventually caused me to enhance my inner beauty and self confidence. Thank you for giving the feeling of female empowerment and I am so happy that I am wear both Victorian and 40's and 50's looks and thank you so much to enhance my historical knowledge but now I feel a lot more confident with the new knowledge I know. Just thank you so much!!! You are absolutely amazing! You have brought so much purpose in my life. Thanks!!!!
O gosh!!! I can seriously listen to her for days ! It's great to hear what women of the now came from! To see how smart packageing was! Lipstick hidden in a brush.
Lisa, thank you, thank you, thank you! This lady is absolutely amazing, so fond of all the things she is telling about and giving these funny details, she is a wonderful lecturer. And you look fantastic, too, so in tune with the topic!
After what I heard and saw I am definitely purchasing this book. Knowing how, when, under what circumstances things which we have now and concider as normal or even granted were created and developed just gives you a totally new and enhanced view of makeup and beauty. Thank you, Lisa for sharing this wonderful experience with us!!!
I loved this video! Thanks Lisa and Madeleine! You can really tell Madeleine is just incredibly passionate about her work, she's so exuberant talking about it!
This is absolutely amazing. Thank you so much, Lisa, for bringing this to true makeup lovers across the globe. Makeup is so much more than color. I am looking forward to seeing the rest of this series. Thank you again and hello from the USA.
How about more Vintage clips... wouldnt we all want to see make up from the 30s.. or even Marlen's or Greta's make up routine... especially Vintage Movie Stars or the pioneers among them (surely some of them wore smth for the first time, smth bold at the time...).. this is Gorgeous material
Ms Marsh is infectious. She's like an historical Betsey Johnson! I will be reading this book this weekend and I cannot wait for the 2nd half of the video. Thank you Lisa!
I love it! Makeup and History with a lady who, not only obviously knows her stuff but is also very fun to watch. She is so informative. Thanks for sharing!
I'm a boy and actually use makeup daily. I'm not trans or a drag queen. But I've worn it sense highschool and I do it just to enhance certain features and to make my skin look good. I don't wear liner or shadow or lipstick. I'll just wear a BB cream by Mac and always set with the "Coty Airspun powder". Then ill wear a bronzer/highlight but very light. A lot of people don't even notice. Sometimes at night I'll wear a brown mascara but I'll just do one swipe on my lashes and go over it with a clean mascara wand just to get the bulk of the mascara off. And ill just wear a lip balm on my lips. Anyway I know it's not the "normal" but I think guys could wear a light face if they want and if they use the right products and put it on right then it can really benefit a mans face without looking feminine or like Boy George. I'm 27 and still pass for 22. I don't think there should be a issue with guys wearing makeup. To be honest some men want to look fresh faced and flawless just as much as women and I wish it was more universal for guys to do so. I really liked your video and found it very informative!! :)
i never really thought at all about makeup through the ages. I think youtube and beauty blogs created a makeup monster in me that NEEDS to know about the newest collections and future one's. Thank you Lisa for opening my eyes to vintage makeup!!
Wow. More. More. More. Two things I love combined makeup and history, I could listen to this info all day. I really want her book. Can't wait for part two.
Thank you so much for filming this Lisa. Such amazing information and the actual products...WOW. And a special thanks to Madeleine for allowing you and all of us into her world! Can't wait for part two.
Loved watching this, so interesting and lovely to listen to someone who understands and can speak to all eras. I could listen to this all day. Amazing!
Argh! Perpetuating the myth that corsets were terribly constricting and painful. Nope! A properly fitted corset was close, but not painfully constricting. Really, think about all of the middle-class women and the housework and childcare- can't be done if you're completely bound up! The extreme corsets were for advertisements, actresses, and the very highest of high society women.
all women wore constricting corsets to get and maintain a "proper" waistline, and how women worked in tight corsets? they were expected to so they just did, no matter how painful it was or how hard it made things, because sadly, women were expected to torture themselves for beuty so men would like them.
A proper waistline and constricting are not the same thing. I've worn real corsets, and worked in them. As I said, if they are fitted correctly, they are not uncomfortable- on the contrary, I've found them to be supportive, and they encourage better posture. You need to look at some photos of real women from the era- not fashion plates, but ordinary women. You'll see that they did not have 16" waists like many say. And not all of them wore corsets, either. As to women torturing themselves, women today do much more of that- there's workplaces where women are required to wear heels and hose every day, heavy makeup, heavily styled hair. The idea that women in and before the Victorian era were abused by their clothing doesn't hold up.
I agree, I am a 40G and wear my corset for back issues and they are very comfortable..properly seasoned and fits snug ..like a long hug, lol..if its painful than they are doing it wrong
There are plenty of examples where organs have been preserved where you can literally see indentations from the ribs into kidneys and liver. The working woman would not have worn corsets quite as constricting as the upper-class woman, this is also natural because the upper-class woman will have a maid to help her tie the corset whereas the working woman at the best has her mother, sister or daughter to help. You'll for obvious reasons also find difference in quality and thus firmness depending on the class of the woman you're looking at. Furthermore it's impossible to compare modern day corsets to the victorian ones as we today are aware of ergonomics.
Could you provide us with references or links to such preserved organs? I've never heard of such a thing. And the corsets I'm referring to are extant pieces or replicas. Not fetish wear or modern waist-trainers.
I love watching these videos . they're actually super interesting to me because I used to live in a small town that had somewhat of a vintage market, and there was this booth with all sorts of vintage makeup, and I remember thinking "why would someone want old makeup like that?". I never really knew people collect vintage makeup until I started watching your historical videos and now ... I wish I was interested in it back then I would have bought some of the makeup I saw and started collecting because I have yet to find such a thing near me. But its incredible the different trends and ingredients of makeup back then compared to now. I love it .
Wow i'm realy impressed,i could listen to Madeleine for hours and hours.Thanks Lisa and Madeleine for this very special video.You both are great ladies. xx
Awesome! Lisa shows us that make up is not just about new lipstick or catching last trend or even daily routine. I admire Lisa as an artist and I feel a rare professional in her.
Cannot THANK YOU enough for doing this video! I'm fascinated with historical make-up and it's very difficult to find information online, this 10 min video had more valuable information in it than 100 hours of internet research!
WOW! Just... WOW! Watching this I did NOT want it to end! I am so glad there's a part 2 coming up next.. learned so much. I feel honored to have seen this.. thank you so much for sharing!
i loved this, finally something educational and insightful, not just endless tutorials but some history and lessons we can learn from. its so exciting, cant wait for part 2!!! great job lisa and what a fantastic idea to share with us!
depends how rare the item is. Most of it isnt expensive at all. The most expensive single item I ever bought was £600 but it was extremely rare (only one or two left in the world) and very beautiful X
I love this video!! Brings to life what my great-grandmother, grandmother and mother had as far as makeup. Can hardly wait for the next installments. Sue
I want to go live with that woman for a week and have her tell me everything she knows. She's awesome.
same.
Wouldn't that be so much fun? Yesss!
Yes! I agree! 💘
Yes me too,
I love the way she speaks. So graceful.
Ayela Waseer she sounds like a female Alan Rickman :faints:
Yes! I agree. 💝
Victorian ladies weren't supposed to be seen wearing makeup, but they could indeed find rouge recipes in ladies journals and get them from the local pharmacy/apothecary. One rouge that was in the Victorian era--and popular--was known as Pear's Liquid Bloom. It was also popular in the Regency. It's run was from the 1700s to the 1950s. It was basically Benetint. Powders were also common. A woman could tint her lashes with a mixture of ash, wax, and oil that she would make herself. but you couldn't make anything very obvious or you'd clearly be a tart. They also used blue powder or some kind of blue tint to draw fake veins on their skin to make it more translucent looking.
That's so clever :D, do they have balm though? Like for lips and stuff
avrilfantasyrin oh yeah. there's been salves for ages to keep lips moisturized as well as tinted salves to give a tint. One common colorant was alkanet, which produces a nice reddish color, but carmine was also a common colorant, too. Carmine produces a very red-pink, rosy tint.
fatalrob0t ahah, I knew somehow they had to cheat :D, some people can't have rosy lips no matter how many water they drink, thank you so much for this information :D
avrilfantasyrin Not a problem. I'm one of those that just don't really have much color to my lips. If it was me back then, I'd be secretly making my rouge from those old recipes and hiding that stuff away where no one would see it.
fatalrob0t yeah like me too, my lips somehow ends up looking pale if I pack on lip balm but it's not for some and many girls, some fruits actually give your lips a tint of colour if you ate them, I think I would've done that XD
Now this is a true makeup artist. Admiration and respect for where women started, going back to the source of why we wear makeup. Yes it's fun to do a dramatic look for going out but it comes back to doing a bit of makeup to look a little prettier, like ourselves. Something so charming about wearing only a bit of powder and a red lipstick and having these little clever compacts to keep with us for touch ups. I wish cosmetics companies would sort of look back on this and do clever packaging like that. Thank you Lisa for your passion for this industry and for that great historian for sharing!!
Respond to this video...
Thank you to everyone who has left such amazing comments here today. I have been out on a shoot all day and am just catching up with them all now. I'm so overwhelmed and happy! Its lovely to know that its not just me who is crazy about all this stuff. I had a truly inspiring day with Madeleine and her collection and its just fantastic to be able to share it with so many interested people. I think you are going to LOVE whats coming next! X
She was really knowledgable and fun to listen to, what a treat!
This is so interesting! I love how she talks about the history with such passion.
Right, isn't it? Nothing more inspiring then a person who speaks about their passion with such knowledge and grace.
Me too! 💟
This was actually extremely interesting. I just can't believe she has the original Rimmel Mascara block I've only ever seen images.Cant wait for the next one 😄
My two favorite things: Makeup and History.
Me too😍😍😍😍
Same girl!!!!! 💯💯💯💯💯
I didn't want this to end!
Same!!! 💯💯💯
how come they aint that creative anymore with accessories? the lipstick in the brush and the mirror in the bangle is cool
So many of the artifacts in Madeleine Marsh's collection are works of art. So much detail in packaging, compacts, tools, etc.
This is fascinating! I would love to go into her room and look at every little thing. Thank you for doing this! I grew up in the 50's and 60's so I remember makeup from my grandmother and great aunts. I remember buying lipstick for 10 cents at WoolWorth and Kress and using the Mabelline mascara in the red box. In high school it was dark eyeliner and Tangee orange lipstick (but we had to take it to school to apply it because dad said no makeup!!) and about that time the mascara started coming in the tubes. Much better than the box and brush. Grandmother wore Coty loose powder, no foundation, and red lipstick with a bit of blush that was the creamy type you put on with your finger. No eye makeup or mascara and brows were natural. I don't ever remember my mother wearing eye shadow or eyeliner. She wore powder and lipstick and used a #2 pencil for her eyebrows! I kept telling her she was going to get lead poisoning but she lived until she was 85 no lead poisoning. ;)
ElizabethAnn625 I very much doubt people's eyebrows were natural.
that’s incredible !!!
This video is so interesting, I could listen to her for hours! Can't wait to get this book, sounds amazing.
Product designers TODAY could greatly benefit from studying cosmetics packaging during the roaring twenties and noir thirties. Those packages and containers were ingenious!
Watched this over 5 times. I want more makeup history videos from you. Or more iconic ones like the Audrey Hepburn and Marilyn Monroe ones!! I love the little tidbits of history you sneak in there. Thanks so much! Love yah Lisa.
What a breathtaking look into our past. I'm so thankful you ladies have shared your knowledge with all of us. It's so intriguing to learn about women's life though the ages. Incredibly lovely!
Watching in 2020 and I’m so grateful for this, Lisa... I would love to see if she’s expanded her collection and see more in this category!
this was absolutely BRILLIANT!!! if only they teach history like this... I feel like if she made a doco I would not only buy it but watching everyday for a bit of pick me up. i love it!!!! :D great video series lisa i'm really loving all of it!!
@kja1103 thank you for taking the time to comment here, it means a lot to me. I'm so happy you are enjoying my videos as much as I'm enjoying making them X
I really enjoyed watching this video. I start to admire make-up and the inventions by Victorian women. Also, this smart lady who owns the shop, really lovely collection of hers, she is absolutely the inspiration for all women who love make-up.
I just saw both videos and I absolutely love this! Unlike most people my age, I collect vintage as well as antique items to decorate my home. I just love having these things around. Especially when you start to think of the stories behind them. I've seen a few different makeup products through my searches, and there are quite a few compacts that I would love to have! May have to invest in order to display in my bath & spare rooms! This is awesome!
she reminds me of River Song/Melody Pond from Doctor Who!
This is fabulous. I could listen to you two forever. My grandmother was a flapper in the twenties. I have several photos of her in her single days. I have a few items of hers from those days I treasure. She graduated from college in 1923 and never lost that flapper spirit of discovery and empowerment. Thanks for sharing.
Madeleine sounds like Riversong!
hello fellow whovian
Omg you're right.
we found her
I keep coming back to this little series of videos because, I absolutely Love Madeleine! The antiques and love/knowledge of history... Her personality too! Omg, I feel like I could just sit with her for days, talking about different pieces, learning about antiques and talking about how or why it was manufactured. My house is decorated with antiques. It's a "hobby" I enjoy because, I feel like the pieces themselves hold the history and hold the stories. I swear, if I could do it all over again.. I would totally get into something like this a LOT more than I do now! lol
I LOVE your makeup in this video. It's my all time fave.
why are there voices so relaxing 😍 i could listen to both of them talking all day
woah I love her fashion style! so bright and fun!!
I honestly cannot thank you enough for making this video and for filming and bringing to light your interest in the history of makeup. This is beyond fascinating and amazing for me. I studied history and I'm also a makeup artist so you just mashed up the best of both worlds for me. Love it! and I hope there's more soon!
madelein marsh is amazing.. the way she says the story and carries us thru ages, its as tho she has witnessed it all.. amazing! n i actually wana see each piece n listen to her story :)
Oh my goodness, a museum of sorts in Madeleine Marsh's home! Also, a brilliant moment of truth: 7:10, followed up with Ms. Lisa's "and they're still doing it."
I've seen Victorian gloves at antique fairs and wondered about how narrow they were. So women then did not necessarily have narrow hands. They just squeezed their hands into them.
This woman needs to start a museum, or at least a permanent collection in an archive somewhere.
This video is amazingly interesting !!!
Thank you so much for sharing this with us, Lisa !!
This video made my day. It combines two of my passions; historical documentaries and makeup! You can't lose. Thanks so much Lisa, I know SO many of us apprecaite your videos!!
Thank you Lisa, this video is amazing, all this vintage beauty products were so stylish, so beautiful! This mascara with brush..ah!:)
I love listening to Madeline talk about all this - Such passion! She seems amazing. I can't wait for the next installment. Thank you for posting!
I love these videos, I've watched these at least 3 times xD sooo very interesting, I love history and these just give you such an awesome insight
I love listening to people like Madeleina. she has knowledge to share and a great way to explain things! I enjoyed this video very very much and I am looking forward to the next videos! Thanks Lisa for that!
So all the insecurities, and anxiety we have about our looks today were brought upon us because companies wanted to sell makeup and deodorant.
Well obviously. You wouldn't think there was anything wrong with you if you weren't constantly told there is. Women grow hair cause it's supposed to be there. But there's money to be made if they tell you you're gross the way you were created.
I adore this series of videos for your passionate approach to the subject matter. You can really see your eyes light up when you speak about the history of makeup and it is such a joy to watch.
this was soooooooo interesting to watch. I enjoyed every minute of it!!!
Oh my God! I could listento this lady and her makeup talks forever. So fascinating.
Thank you Lisa for sharing this
We´de LOVE to see a tutorial for a flapper girl´s make up with those smokey eyes and pucker mouths!
I could have gone on watching her for ages, she was so interesting and her items were fantastic! Thank you for sharing!
I really enjoyed watching this video. Thank you.
Thank You, Lisa, with all my heart. As a collector of very vintage perfumes, I could say - all those are so treasure! And so sad that nowadays even rich companies ended up with cheap plastic and simplest packagings with no idea and value.... We live in the era of simplification.
Very insightful!
I greatly enjoyed this.
None of the utube gurus can compare to You. You are the best. The passion You've got, this different look for some things... OMG, I'm so amazed, I don't know how else can I express my admiration.
I'd be sitting on the on the floor Indian style and starry eyed 🙀🙀🙀🙀🙀
Me tOo Katie.......:)
Same
+MissSusieQue1 I love the history of anything
Madeleine is such a colourful character! i could just sit and listen to her go on all day! i wish we had a course like this at university! thank you for this video. in a world where we are obsessed with getting the latest collection of make up (newest technology and what not), you put things in perspective and show us that make up is so much more than just enhancement of physical features. it has a history of its own that comes alive when passionate people explore it further!
It must have taken forever to shave in the 20s omg that shaver was TINY.
People were also tinier
Lisa I could listen to her for hours! Her knowledge is endless and its so interesting !
Cant wait until the next video..
Because of you I was inspired to actually care about my outer looks which eventually caused me to enhance my inner beauty and self confidence. Thank you for giving the feeling of female empowerment and I am so happy that I am wear both Victorian and 40's and 50's looks and thank you so much to enhance my historical knowledge but now I feel a lot more confident with the new knowledge I know. Just thank you so much!!! You are absolutely amazing! You have brought so much purpose in my life. Thanks!!!!
Thank you, Lisa for this history lesson on what we love!
Such an interesting video, thanks for sharing it. Im fascinated by this :)
O gosh!!! I can seriously listen to her for days ! It's great to hear what women of the now came from! To see how smart packageing was! Lipstick hidden in a brush.
omg I want her to keep talking and keep learning from her
Lisa, thank you, thank you, thank you!
This lady is absolutely amazing, so fond of all the things she is telling about and giving these funny details, she is a wonderful lecturer.
And you look fantastic, too, so in tune with the topic!
this is soo amazing!
After what I heard and saw I am definitely purchasing this book. Knowing how, when, under what circumstances things which we have now and concider as normal or even granted were created and developed just gives you a totally new and enhanced view of makeup and beauty. Thank you, Lisa for sharing this wonderful experience with us!!!
What lipstick is she wearing here? it is gorgeous
I loved this video! Thanks Lisa and Madeleine! You can really tell Madeleine is just incredibly passionate about her work, she's so exuberant talking about it!
This is so interesting!!
This is absolutely amazing. Thank you so much, Lisa, for bringing this to true makeup lovers across the globe. Makeup is so much more than color. I am looking forward to seeing the rest of this series. Thank you again and hello from the USA.
Lisa, what lipstick did Ms. Marsh comment on?
I'm impressed - wish I could be there listening to you and Madleine all day! Please keep on suggesting books on vintage make-up!
How about more Vintage clips... wouldnt we all want to see make up from the 30s.. or even Marlen's or Greta's make up routine... especially Vintage Movie Stars or the pioneers among them (surely some of them wore smth for the first time, smth bold at the time...).. this is Gorgeous material
Ms Marsh is infectious. She's like an historical Betsey Johnson! I will be reading this book this weekend and I cannot wait for the 2nd half of the video. Thank you Lisa!
"And the manufacturers realized there was a fortune to be made from female insecurities," LOL I love makeup, but that is a brilliant statement.
I love it! Makeup and History with a lady who, not only obviously knows her stuff but is also very fun to watch. She is so informative. Thanks for sharing!
I'm a boy and actually use makeup daily. I'm not trans or a drag queen. But I've worn it sense highschool and I do it just to enhance certain features and to make my skin look good. I don't wear liner or shadow or lipstick. I'll just wear a BB cream by Mac and always set with the "Coty Airspun powder". Then ill wear a bronzer/highlight but very light. A lot of people don't even notice. Sometimes at night I'll wear a brown mascara but I'll just do one swipe on my lashes and go over it with a clean mascara wand just to get the bulk of the mascara off. And ill just wear a lip balm on my lips. Anyway I know it's not the "normal" but I think guys could wear a light face if they want and if they use the right products and put it on right then it can really benefit a mans face without looking feminine or like Boy George. I'm 27 and still pass for 22. I don't think there should be a issue with guys wearing makeup. To be honest some men want to look fresh faced and flawless just as much as women and I wish it was more universal for guys to do so.
I really liked your video and found it very informative!! :)
i never really thought at all about makeup through the ages. I think youtube and beauty blogs created a makeup monster in me that NEEDS to know about the newest collections and future one's. Thank you Lisa for opening my eyes to vintage makeup!!
the way she says deodorant is so cute
As a historian myself, I adore these videos! What a wonderful way to combine my passion for history and my make up hobby! Thanks, Lisa!
I don't think that meeting was a coincident. The universe lined that up. ( :
Wow. More. More. More. Two things I love combined makeup and history, I could listen to this info all day. I really want her book. Can't wait for part two.
Greeting from Tokyo, Japan. Lisa Eldridge U are soooo beautiful !!
Thank you so much for filming this Lisa. Such amazing information and the actual products...WOW. And a special thanks to Madeleine for allowing you and all of us into her world! Can't wait for part two.
you remind me of Rachel Weisz :)
Loved watching this, so interesting and lovely to listen to someone who understands and can speak to all eras. I could listen to this all day. Amazing!
Argh! Perpetuating the myth that corsets were terribly constricting and painful. Nope! A properly fitted corset was close, but not painfully constricting. Really, think about all of the middle-class women and the housework and childcare- can't be done if you're completely bound up! The extreme corsets were for advertisements, actresses, and the very highest of high society women.
all women wore constricting corsets to get and maintain a "proper" waistline, and how women worked in tight corsets? they were expected to so they just did, no matter how painful it was or how hard it made things, because sadly, women were expected to torture themselves for beuty so men would like them.
A proper waistline and constricting are not the same thing. I've worn real corsets, and worked in them. As I said, if they are fitted correctly, they are not uncomfortable- on the contrary, I've found them to be supportive, and they encourage better posture.
You need to look at some photos of real women from the era- not fashion plates, but ordinary women. You'll see that they did not have 16" waists like many say. And not all of them wore corsets, either. As to women torturing themselves, women today do much more of that- there's workplaces where women are required to wear heels and hose every day, heavy makeup, heavily styled hair. The idea that women in and before the Victorian era were abused by their clothing doesn't hold up.
I agree, I am a 40G and wear my corset for back issues and they are very comfortable..properly seasoned and fits snug ..like a long hug, lol..if its painful than they are doing it wrong
There are plenty of examples where organs have been preserved where you can literally see indentations from the ribs into kidneys and liver.
The working woman would not have worn corsets quite as constricting as the upper-class woman, this is also natural because the upper-class woman will have a maid to help her tie the corset whereas the working woman at the best has her mother, sister or daughter to help. You'll for obvious reasons also find difference in quality and thus firmness depending on the class of the woman you're looking at.
Furthermore it's impossible to compare modern day corsets to the victorian ones as we today are aware of ergonomics.
Could you provide us with references or links to such preserved organs? I've never heard of such a thing.
And the corsets I'm referring to are extant pieces or replicas. Not fetish wear or modern waist-trainers.
I love watching these videos . they're actually super interesting to me because I used to live in a small town that had somewhat of a vintage market, and there was this booth with all sorts of vintage makeup, and I remember thinking "why would someone want old makeup like that?". I never really knew people collect vintage makeup until I started watching your historical videos and now ... I wish I was interested in it back then I would have bought some of the makeup I saw and started collecting because I have yet to find such a thing near me. But its incredible the different trends and ingredients of makeup back then compared to now. I love it .
Victorian women COULD get dressed without a maid, and corsets did not cause fainting. Those are both urban legends.
Wow i'm realy impressed,i could listen to Madeleine for hours and hours.Thanks Lisa and Madeleine for this very special video.You both are great ladies. xx
That woman looks like Skittles puked a rainbow all over her outfit.
Awesome! Lisa shows us that make up is not just about new lipstick or catching last trend or even daily routine. I admire Lisa as an artist and I feel a rare professional in her.
Very tired and having a day off (which I don't always get even on Saturdays) and Lisa, I am binge-watching you! Heavenly!
Almost 5 years late on watching this video - truly, truly wonderful to watch. Madeleine is just brilliant!!
OMG I love this video...love to hear the history behind shaving, hair, corsets, lipsticks and so on! And Ms. Marsh knows her stuff! Very nice!!
I have ALWAYS been fascinated by historical makeup. I LOVE this video.
Cannot THANK YOU enough for doing this video! I'm fascinated with historical make-up and it's very difficult to find information online, this 10 min video had more valuable information in it than 100 hours of internet research!
WOW! Just... WOW! Watching this I did NOT want it to end! I am so glad there's a part 2 coming up next.. learned so much. I feel honored to have seen this.. thank you so much for sharing!
i loved this, finally something educational and insightful, not just endless tutorials but some history and lessons we can learn from. its so exciting, cant wait for part 2!!!
great job lisa and what a fantastic idea to share with us!
Lisa, I'm absolutely loving this as a professional and just as a woman - what a pretty combination of beauty & brains in this series!
Crystal
depends how rare the item is. Most of it isnt expensive at all. The most expensive single item I ever bought was £600 but it was extremely rare (only one or two left in the world) and very beautiful X
This was Amazing! I could listen her talk for hours! Such a lovely video
I love this video!! Brings to life what my great-grandmother, grandmother and mother had as far as makeup. Can hardly wait for the next installments.
Sue
Your passion for makeup always shines through in your videos. I love you so much!