Sponsored Links

Featured Links

Other Topics
Sponsored Links





Quote of the Day

"Music is well said to be the speech of angels."

Thomas Carlyle






Click here for eBay Motors!


 






 
Featured Wrinkles Articles

Frankincense in Aromatherapy - Trees, Tears and Essential Oils
The Mysterious FrankincenseUsed for many thousands of years, the Frankincense tree has perhaps the greatest association with spiritual practice of any plant on earth. In most of the great ancient cultures, including the Egyptian, Babylonian, Persian, ...

Natural Human Growth Hormone: Hope or Hoax?
Anti-Aging Research: HGH TherapyYou may feel 30, but your body keeps reminding you you're not. You fatigue easily. Your bones and joints hurt more often. The only part of your body that's thinning is your hair. Aging occurs due to the growth of the ...

11 Simple Ways to Save Time
Does your housework seem to take up all your spare time? Here are a few simple, easy tips to save you time. And this way you can relax a little! Grocery Shopping Try to go grocery shopping on Wednesday. Statistics show that this is the least busy day ...




Seeking Ideal Beauty
 
Seeking Ideal Beauty

There seems to me to be definite parallels between this era, and the Elizabethan Age, when it comes to women, and their desperate struggle to either halt the natural aging of their appearance, or, to discover a miracle age-reversal method. During the sixteenth century, well-born women were obsessed with achieving, and maintaining, 'ideal' beauty, as they perceived it, to the point of what we would call 'madness'. What was this ideal they so longed to possess? Youthful unlined alabaster skin, overly bright eyes, red cheeks and lips, and the fairest of hair colors. Add to these attributes, a high, arched, pale eyebrow, and high brow line. To achieve the 'look' of perfection, these women made use of the period’s highly respected skin care techniques, and the finest cosmetics available to them, at the time.

First, the hairline was plucked back, an inch or more. Next, the eyebrows had to be plucked and arched, and the hair of the head and eyebrows was then bleached out using a variety of the most up-to-date bleaching agents, including urine, and sulfuric acid. Women, who could afford the high cost, purchased the top of the line skin whitener, 'ceruse', a mixture of white lead, and vinegar. This was used on the face, neck, bosom, and often the hands and arms as well. This concoction was used in conjunction with the 'skin firmer' of choice, uncooked egg white. This noxious mess was then spread on the face, neck and bosom, and allowed to dry, to tighten, and hide wrinkles, and give the face a white, unlined, mask-like finish. To imitate a blush and pout of youthful beauty, vermilion (mercuric sulfide) was THE choice for lips and cheeks. Faintly traced veins were then added to the skin surface of the bosom, for that 'natural' look. Drops of belladonna were then administered to the eyes, to achieve that desired 'sparkle', and the eyes were outlined in kohl. To care for their complexions, the ladies made use of what was highly touted as the best cleanser. Mercury mixed with alum, and honey. Of course, a common practice was the 'facial peel', and the most widely used, and highly regarded peel

agent, was mercury.

These were the commonly accepted 'beauty' practices, of women over four hundred years ago, and yet, how 'in the moment', it all seems! We may not use mercury for chemical peels, but glycolic acid, salicylic acid, or lactic acid; trichloroacetic acid (TCA), or carbolic acid (phenol) - are used. We don't spread raw egg white on our complexions as a temporary skin firmer, but modern women may be surprised to learn, they could very well have used 'skin firmers' containing formaldehyde. We may gasp in horror over sixteenth century women applying poison to their faces; yet, Botox injections seem perfectly mundane, and safe, to us.
What were the long-term results of the use of their miracle beauty and facial products, for the classy Elizabethan lady? Complexions more rapidly aged, gray, shriveled, and mummified.

When I read of young women still in their twenties, opting for ‘beauty treatments’ that require they have their complexions chemically treated, or otherwise ravaged, I am appalled. I can only wonder at the long-term effects of such drastic measures. Mature women, obsessed with seeking some elusive anti-aging/age-reversal miracle, become nothing more than willing test-subjects for any new facial product/procedure that hits the market. Often, they have no idea as to the ingredients in the products they are smearing on their faces. Nor, do they take into consideration future effects of certain procedures. Perhaps, we modern women should consider the lessons of the past, and proceed with caution, and common sense, when choosing our ‘beauty’ regimens.

Author-Jeannine Schenewerk
http://www.intouchwithjeannine.com



About the Author

Jeannine Schenewerk is a freelance writer residing in Atlanta, Georgia. Her recent article, 'Self Image and the Mature Woman', has been published on numerous sites. She maintains an informative, inspirational, website, 'In Touch With Jeannine', for mature women.
http://www.intouchwithjeannine.com
intouchwithjeannine@yahoo.com
Written By: Jeannine Schenewerk




Google


Wrinkles News


Newest wrinkles for aging 'American Idol'
San Jose Mercury News,  USA - 13 hours ago
By Richard Rushfield With the debut of the eighth season of "American Idol" a few days away, producers are offering hints of what looks to be the biggest ...

Washington Post

Brad Pitt Wears His Wrinkles Well In W Magazine
Entertainmentwise, UK - 10 hours ago
The heartthrob is shown wrinkles and all in an untouched close-up image of his face. Brad has refrained from getting the lines on his forehead smoothed out ...
Video: Brad Comes To Jen's Rescue CBS
Making Brad Pitt Into Benjamin: How They Did It CBS News
MOVIE REVIEW - 'Benjamin Button': A fantasy story that tells the truth Northeast Mississippi Daily Journal
Brick Weekly - MoviesOnline
all 838 news articles

Dry cleaners spot economic wrinkles
San Francisco Chronicle,  USA - Jan 6, 2009
Three months ago, Arthur C. Anton Jr., chief operating officer of one of the largest dry-cleaning firms in Massachusetts, Anton's Cleaners, began noticing a ...

New York Magazine

Wrinkle-Cream Ads Pulled; Carolina Herrera Likes Short Hair on 40 ...
New York Magazine,  USA - 23 hours ago
Ads for Estée Lauder's Tri-Aktiline Instant Deep Wrinkle Filler, which promised to make wrinkles "disappear instantly," have been ruled misleading and must ...
Estee Lauder Smacked in UK for False Wrinkle Reduction Claims RealSelf.com
Estee Lauder Ad Banned for Making False Claims Anti-wrinkle Tri ... Softpedia
Skin Cream Ad Banned Over Misleading Claims MedIndia
all 4 news articles

Wrinkle fillers need better label warnings: FDA panel
KXVO CW 15, NE - Jan 7, 2009
18 (HealthDay News) -- American women who turn to cosmetic treatments called dermal fillers to ease wrinkles must be better informed about the health risks ...

Telegraph.co.uk

Estee Lauder wrinkle treatment advert banned over misleading claims
Telegraph.co.uk, United Kingdom - Jan 6, 2009
A wonder cream from Estee Lauder which claimed to make wrinkles ‘disappear instantly’ will no longer be advertised after watchdogs ruled commericals were ...
Estee Lauder wrinkle advert breached rules The Herald
Banned: Estee Lauder ordered to pull advert for wrinkle cream ... Daily Mail
Advert for 'Polyfilla' beauty treatment inaccurate Scotsman
Trading Markets (press release) - Product Reviews
all 15 news articles

New York Times

Orbiter, Finishing a Mission, Offers a Peek at Mars’ Wrinkles
New York Times, United States - Jan 5, 2009
RIPPLES A crater between the southern highlands and northern lowlands, intersected by what may have been a shoreline of an ocean. ...

Drinking water won’t cure wrinkles, but loving care might
Northwest Herald, IL - Jan 5, 2009
By GateHouse News Service Busted: Unfortunately, the cure for wrinkles is not right in your kitchen, flowing freely from the sink or chilling in the fridge. ...

Fancy a wrinkle free New Year?
Easier (press release), UK - Jan 7, 2009
Credit crunch stress may have added a few wrinkles to the most youthful of complexions this Christmas, but think twice before you include a course of Botox ...
Why Valley residents turn to Botox during tough economy ABC15.com (KNXV-TV)
all 3 news articles

Single Dad A First For “The Bachelor”
San Jose Mercury News,  USA - Jan 6, 2009
“The Bachelor” may be showing its age as a reality franchise, but give it credit for adding a few interesting wrinkles as it matures. ...