Showing posts with label vintage -skin care. Show all posts
Showing posts with label vintage -skin care. Show all posts

Sunday, April 28, 2019

Living Beauty VIntage (Frugally) or Was Grandma on to Something (Part 2 - The Daytime Products)

Hello Everyone!
In part one of this series I explained my reasoning for trying a vintage beauty routine (my middle age acne that won't go away), my inspiration for the products chosen (my great-grandmother used them or could have used them when she was young), listed the night time products I planned on using, and gave a history of the product showing that I verified that it was a vintage beauty product that is still around today.
In part two of the series, I am going to give the products that I have chosen for a morning routine, and give my reasons for why I thought that they would work for a vintage beauty routine.

This is a beauty goal, I want to look like this.... with red hair.

Skin Care Morning Time


Morning Products Selected
Water - Cold or Warm (Pick your poison) and a terry cloth washcloth or a large cotton crochet make-up pad
Rose Water or Thayer's Witch Hazel Rose Petal (Non-Alcohol)
$10.99
Oil of Olay Beauty Lotion
$12.00

Okay, okay, I know compared to the first post there are not a lot of products for the morning skin care routine.  I also know this may horrify some of you.  But the truth is, I just don't have the time, nor the inclination to have a multi-step morning routine for cleaning my skin.  I would much rather spend that time getting my last few minutes of sleep.  So sue me.

History of the Products

Water






So, yeah.  Can't get much more basic than water, but this was one of the main steps in all of the vintage beauty routines that I researched.  It is also is one of the edicts that my great-grandmother lived by- you always washed your face with warm, not hot, water, first thing in the morning. No, she did not use soap.  But she would use a cloth that exfoliates.  A terrycloth washcloth or a cotton crocheted pad does quite nicely, and she would make certain to move the cloth/pad in upward circles being careful to never pull on the skin.
I have to admit, this is not something new that I am adding to my routine.  Washing my face with warm water and a cloth is something I do every morning already.  Sometimes, if it is hot outside I will use water that is so lukewarm it is practically cold, but that is the only change that I have made to great grandma's face morning face wash edict.

Rose Water or Thayer's Witch Hazel non-alcohol Rose Petal
Rose water may be the most frustrating product that I researched.  Why?  Its no secret that rose water existed back in the day, I mean its been around since the Greeks and Romans, but I have not been able to find any vintage brands that made rose water that still exist today.  I don't know why.  Maybe its because ladies of means distilled it themselves from roses in their green houses.  Or maybe its because it was a product that went out of favor for a while and is only now starting to become popular again.   If you try to purchase rose water today, or look it up on the internet, most rose water items are new brands, have claims that the product is from Morocco, and aren't just straight rose water but have other things added to them.  Gah!!!  This probably is fine if you are only using it for your face, but I also wanted a rose water that I could use in recipes.
So, I decided to make my own.

Rose Water Toner



This rose water recipe will also work in food recipes that call for rose water, as many Middle Eastern dishes do, and makes a very delicious warm tea.  It also smells amazing.

Ingredients
1-2 heaping tsp organic rose hip and rose petal "tea"*
2 cups water

*I get my rose hip and rose petal blend from a tea store. Just make certain, if you do this, there is no actual tea mixed in with the rose hip and rose petals.  I genuinely don't think that tea leaves will hurt anything, but it may change the flavor if you are using it in recipes.

Instructions
1.  Pour two cups water into a kettle and place on high heat.
2.  Bring water to just before a boil.  I know that my water has almost reached the boiling point when my kettle starts to make a creaking sort of noise as the water starts to agitate.
3.  Pour the water over the rose hips and rose petals.
4.  Let the petals steep in the leaves for at least five minutes.  If I am not drinking the tea, I like to let the mixture seep until all of the pink color as been soaked out of the rose bud mixture.  It looks gross, but it makes a stronger scented toner.
5.  Strain the tea into an airtight, sun proof container.

I do not know how long this mixture keeps.  I make it in small batches only.  I also usually drink one cup of the two cups of the rose water with honey and then use the remaining cup of rose water as a toner and it lasts me for about one to two weeks.  So I can tell you that it can last for at least two weeks.

So, if you do not want to make your own rose water, but you still want to use rose water and go vintage with the brand - the best product, for your face only, is Thayer's Witch Hazel Rose Petal non-alcohol.  But, if you don't care that the brand is vintage but that the product is what was available when great grandma was young, go for a rose water product that only has the two ingredients - rose and water.  Although, in my research I did see that some vintage rose water also contained glycerin, so that could be a third ingredient and would still fall under the "product my great grandmother could have used."




Oil of Olay Beauty Lotion
I thought about using another type of moisturizer - because the modern lady in me says that I can't possible use the same moisturizer for both day and night time.  But that is what my great grandmother did.  Umm, okay.  But I'm here to tell you right now, I don't trust it.  But I guess it wouldn't be a true experiment if I was 100% certain that it would work.
If you want a little history about Oil of Olay Beauty Lotion, you will have to look at the first post in this series as I covered the history of Oil of Olay in Part One of this series.
https://frugalfemmecarole.blogspot.com/2019/04/living-beauty-vintage-frugally-or-was.html

Not Going Anywhere without my Face on.

I know some people are just naturally beautiful and can look gorgeous without a speck of make-up on.  I am not one of those people.
Yeah, I warned you it wasn't pretty.  And this isn't even 100% make-up free, I have done my brows for this picture because, otherwise, I look like I have no eyebrows at all.
In fact, when I my grandmother decided I was old enough to wear make-up, and took me to Merle Norman to get my first make-up products, I was ecstatic.  Finally, I could make my face look better!  Imagine my disappointment when she told me that I wasn't old enough for a brow pencil or red lipstick.  What?!?!?!  But red lipstick was what all the ladies in the classic movies I loved so much wore!  And everyone but me seemed to have eye brows.  How could I be denied these essential beauty items?!?! My fourteen year old heart was broken.  I haven't worn Merle Norman since, I really couldn't tell you why, but I do use items for my brows and am obsessed with red lipstick. In fact, I am a little embarrassed to admit that red lipstick is my addiction, I currently own about twenty four different shades of red lipstick. And, you can ask my sister, I will find any excuse/reason to buy a red lipstick when I am feeling down.

Fifty shades of red?  Not quite, but you can see I love a red lip.  I agree with Dita von Teese, I do not strive to have the natural look, I want to be glamorous.  In my mind, if I liked the natural look I would like my face more, and I don't.

I was aware that my make-up could be what was causing me to break out just as much as my skincare routine.  So I decided that, if I was going to do great-grandma's beauty routine, I was really going to do her whole routine.  This included using make-up she could have worn and applying it the way she would have back when she was young.

There was just one small problem.  I honestly don't remember a lot about the specific products that she wore, as a child I did not care whether she wore Revlon or Maybelline,  but I do remember the colors.  Armed with this knowledge, a cup of tea, and my laptop, I hit the internet and researched.  (Yeah, not going to lie, this whole endeavor was ALOT of time spent researching.  Probably more time than I should have spent.)  I looked at vintage make-up guides, videos, magazine articles, and ads trying to figure out what brands they were using and the colors that they were wearing.  The following list of items is what I finally decided to use for my great experiment.

Make-Up

L'Oreal Infallible Concealer
Coty Air Spun Loose Face Powder
Cream Blush
Vaseline
Brow Pencil
Cake Mascara (Used as eyeliner)
L'Oreal Voluminous mascara
Revlon Lipstick

L'Oreal Infallible Concealer
My great grandmother, as far as I know, did not wear concealer.  I am trying to cover up acne, which I am hoping this skin regime will clear up and solve, so, until that happens, I most certainly will wear concealer.  As far as I can tell from my research, concealer was around in the forties, it just wasn't a very well known product.
Concealer was first invented in 1928 by Lydia O'Leary who wanted something to help cover the wine colored birth mark on her face.

I don't know how much old school Photo Shop this picture had done to it, but if it even worked half as well, this advertising would have worked for me.


She called the concealer Covermark and it was the first foundation to have a patent.  She did advertise the product, but it seemed to be seen, even by her, as an item that could help people hide burns and birth marks rather than as a simple make-up product.  Although, in the advertisement below, it does say that it works for acne and dark eye circles, but it also advocates being used on the face, arms, and back.
https://glamourdaze.com/2017/02/1930s-makeup-the-arrival-of-the-concealer.html


Although make-up artists and Hollywood stars knew the wonder that was concealer, it did not seem to reach the main stream population until 1954 when Max Factor produced the first commercially available concealer Max Factors Erace.


Both of these companies exist today and both of their concealers are available for purchase.  But I chose not to use either of them as my concealer.
Why? Covermark is not readily available where I live and costs $54.00.  This was more than I wanted to spend for a concealer.  Max Factor's Erace is $6.94 and is very available, but it comes in stick form.  I do not care for stick concealer because it does not blend well on my face, I have to tug at my skin to get it to blend. Also, I was trying to use products that my great grandmother would have used in the forties, so it felt a little like cheating to use Max Factor's Erace.  I decided that I had to go another route.
Although Hollywood elite seemed to know about concealer, the advice given in beauty guides in the thirties and forties was for women to use a lighter foundation and a different colored face powder to correct facial blemishes. I decided that a concealer that had the consistency of a thicker foundation was the modern day answer to my problem and would be the equivalent of what my great grandmother would have had available in her youth.  I chose L'Oreal Infallible concealer for three reasons: 1.  It was the consistency I was looking for; 2. L'Oreal has been around for forever so it was a brand that my great grandmother could have used; and 3.  It is the drugstore concealer recommended by drag queens.  And if a drag queen tells you that a concealer works, you can take that advice to the bank.  (I will give more a of a history of L'Oreal further down in this blog.)

Coty Air Spun Loose Powder


This product, along with Oil of Olay Beauty Fluid and Ponds Cold Cream has been around for so long that it has become iconic.  In spite of this, I had never used it.  My great-grandmother, however, most certainly did.  I remember the cardboard container and powder puff sitting on her bathroom vanity.  Thus this product was a no brainer for the new beauty regime.
Coty Air Spun Powder was created in 1934 and, as far as I can tell from my research, has changed their recipe/formula very little since its creation.   (If you are interested in a more in depth history of facial powder and Coty Air Spun in paticuliar, I have included a link below for an article that contains all that information.)
http://cosmeticsandskin.com/aba/coty-air-spun.php

In my opnion, Coty Air Spun Powder is the very epitome of a vintage beauty product that can be purchased today.

Coty Air Spun display from 1935.  Don't you love how beautiful and art deco it looks?


Cream Blush
Okay, so, I so totally cheated on the cream blush.  When doing my research it became very clear to me that though powder blush was available in the forties, the most popular type of blush, or rouge as it was know then was a cream rouge.


Cream rouge was available in a pot or in sticks and was applied with your fingers.  I usually use a powder blush, but this was my biggest breakout zone so I though that using a cream blush couldn't make it any worse.  (For those of you who were wondering, yes, I scrubbed my make-up brushes thinking that may have been part of the problem and I was still breaking out.)
The three rouge shades that were available in the forties were: red, coral, and vibrant pink. (With an emphasis on the vibrant.)
I already had a cream blush stick from Tarte that had been given to me as a gift, that was a coral color.    No, it does not fall under my category of frugal make-up items, as the cost is $30.  But I didn't purchase it, and you cannot beat free.  For the vibrant pink rouge I went with Revlon's Photo Ready Cream Blush in flushed for $7.00-$10.00.
Told you, that is a truly vibrant shade of pink - its almost scary.

The only red rouge blush that I have been able to locate so far is from NARS or Besame cosmetics, neither of which is inexpensive nor truly a vintage brand.  However, if you want to get vintage colored cream rouge and not have to do the research to see if it is a vintage color, you can't go wrong with Besame Cosmetics cream rouge.  Every product that they create has been diligently researched and is based off of a genuine color found from make-up in the past.
But enough about that, lets talk about rouge and Revlon.
Rouge has been around since the Ancient Egyptians and its popularity has peaked and wained throughout the centuries as, for a while, it was considered a product that was only worn by harlots and prostitutes.  The Egyptians could also to have been said to use the first, that we know of, cream blush as they would crush up red ocher and mix it fat to put on their cheeks and lips.  Despite its checkered past, by the 1920s makeup companies like Guerlain and L'Oreal made blush readily available to the masses.  And motion pictures, or more importantly its gorgeous, female stars, made wearing blush not only socially acceptable but desirable.



Bless you Hollywood.
I chose a Revlon blush because Revlon as been around since 1932.  The company started with making nail polishes and quickly branched out to other cosmetics.  During World War II Revlon was even creating make-up related products for the United States Army (a topic that I am further researching because I find it fascinating) and, by the end of the war, they were one of America's top five cosmetic companies.  So I was fairly certain that, at some point in her young life, my great grandmother wore Revlon cream blush.

Brow Pencil and Vaseline


This may be the product that was the most controversial when I researched it.  (Meaning the Vasoline not the eye brow pencil.)
I first looked into it as an option as a nighttime moisturizer because of the stories I remembered hearing of Marilyn Monroe using it as a moisturizer to help her achieve that dewy look that she was famous for.  According to stories from her make-up artist, Monroe used Vasoline under her foundation and on her cheek bones as a high lighter, she also used it on her lids and brows to add sheen.
https://www.marieclaire.com/beauty/news/a16013/marilyn-monroe-beauty-secrets/



I also remembered hearing that it was used on the lids of movie stars in the 30s and 40s before Marilyn.  Although I may try it on my lids - just to see what it is like- I am slightly terrified to use it as a moisturizer or highlighter, but I was deeply intrigued about using it on my brows. 
Vaseline, as we know it today, was patented in 1872.  Notice I don't say created or invented.  It seems to be a byproduct of oil rig pumps.  Vaseline is a purified version of this byproduct.  For this experiment, I am going to use Vaseline as a sort of brow pomade in combination with an eye brow pencil.
As for the brow pencil, yet again the ancient Egyptians were the first recorded people to use a cosmetic for their brows.  A more natural, yet contained brow, was all the rage in the forties, and with my invisible brows, doing nothing was not an option. 

These are my invisible brows.  No, I have not plucked them.  This is their natural shape and color, left to their own devices they are underwhelming and do nothing to frame my face.

I could not find when brow pencils began to become commercially available, but they were used in beauty tutorial films of the times, so I know they existed.  Thus, I added a brow pencil to the morning beauty routine.

Cake Mascara
Ummmm.  Yeah.  I don't have acne around my eyes and this is something that I already use, was vintage, and liked.  So it is not a new addition to my beauty routine.  But I don't use it as mascara very often.  I prefer to use it as an eyeliner, in place of liquid liner, to make my wings. 

The only make-up that I have on my eyes in this photo is cake mascara.  I used it as both the mascara and the liner.  Also, isn't the difference in the brows from this picture and the one before amazing?

Ironically, doing your eyes in this way is not, at least for the forties, a look they would have worn.  I I also don't ever remember my great- grandmother ever using eye liner.  However, I like how my eyes look with wings and I am not going to stop doing it.
Now that I have justified my reasoning for cake mascara, on with a bit of eyeliner history.
I will give you one guess for the first recorded people to apply eye liner.  Did you get it?


If you guessed the ancient Egyptians, than you are totally correct!
Using bone and ivory make-up applicators, which, I am not going to lie, sound terrifying as something that is going next to your eye, they applied eyeliner made out of kohl on a daily basis.  (In fact, eye liner was such an important part of the daily life of the ancient Egyptian, both male and female, it was used as part of the payment that pharoah made to his workers.  (Once, the pharoah Ramses III did not send his payment of eyeliner and grains and the Egyptian workers staged, possibly the first, workers strike in history.)
Cosmetic set of Kohl Tube and Applicator, Razor, Tweezers, Whetstone, and Mirror Dynasty 18, early ca. 1550–1458 B.C
Liner fell out of vogue until the Victorians. Victorian ladies most created their own eye liner out of things like ash, fat, and elderberries, but it wasn't until the invention/discovery of petroleum jelly in the 1870s, the main ingredient in vintage mascara that allowed cake mascara to be created.  The first commercially packaged mascara was produced by Eugene Rimmel in 1917.  It was a cake mascara that was made of petroleum jelly and coal dust.

1947 cake mascara by Rimmel.

Ironically, although Rimmel is still around and selling cosmetics, they no longer even produce cake mascara.  Cake mascara has become something of a novelty product and cannot, as far as I know, be found in drugstores.  The easiest, commercially available cake mascara, is created by Besame cosmetics.  I don't have any complaints about the product really, it does what I want it to do.
But you can pretty much only find it in black or brown. 

It is also more a little expensive, being $25 plus shipping.  Although, I will attest that cake liner lasts a lot longer than tube mascara and, fortunately, unlike other mascaras it is safe to use after six months.  Also, their packaging is soooooo pretty.
However, being a red head, I like to line my eyes with a sort of plum/burgundy liner.  A color that looks very close to Clinique's black honey color and looks less harsh with  my pale skin.  If you are not uncomfortable purchasing from an Etsy vendor, I highly recommend the shop KeepingItNatural, where I have been ordering my cake mascara for years and they make the plum/burgundy cake mascara that I have just described.
https://www.etsy.com/listing/82306520/black-creamy-cake-mascara-cake-mascara?ga_order=most_relevant&ga_search_type=all&ga_view_type=gallery&ga_search_query=keepingitnatural+cake+mascara&ref=sr_gallery-1-2&organic_search_click=1&frs=1

Unfortunately, their packaging is not as pretty, but they are vegan and cruelty free.

L'Oreal Voluminous Mascara
Didn't we just talk about mascara?  Ummmm.  Sort of.  We talked about cake mascara that I use as eye liner.  Although I do occasionally use it as mascara as well, I also use tube mascara, and I know that tube mascara is what my great-grandmother wore so I thought that I would include it as well.
If you haven't already guessed, ancient Egyptians were also the first recorded people to wear mascara.  Although, I am not certain that it is something that I would have wanted to wear.  Their mascara was made of kohl, honey, water, and (wait for it) crocodile dung.
As explained above, eye liner and mascara became popular again during the Victorian era and cake mascara was invented in 1917.  But one could, passably, argue that none of these items are mascara as we know it today.
Although Rimmel may have been the first cake mascara, Maybelline was, arguably, the cosmetic company that perfected it and made it popular in the United States. 
1934 Maybelline cake mascara ad.

They too introduced their cakes mascara in 1917, but theirs seemed to be a more reliable and consistent formula than Rimmel's.   Cake mascara was pretty much the only mascara that you could get until 1957 when Helena Rubenstein introduced her "automatic mascara". 


This was the first mascara that came in a tube with the applicator inserted in the cream mascara.  Basically the mascara application we know today. Other companies soon followed the trend.


I know what you are thinking.  If Maybelline was one of the first to make mascara, and they are still around, and they make Great Lash, which is arguably one of the best mascaras ever made, why did you not choose them for your mascara instead of L'Oreal?
Two reasons: 1. Great Lash causes me to have an allergic reaction where I have swelling and itching around the base of my eye lashes.  I do not know why this is so, but it is.  And 2.  L'Oreal Voluminous carries my burgundy color, which is very important to me since Clinique Chubby Lash stopped carrying their Black Honey color at Sephora.  Oh!  And it is also recommended by drag queens.


L'Oreal is another cosmetic company that has been around for, seemingly, forever.  L'Oreal was created in 1909 and started as a company that carried hair color and bleach.

This ad is so pretty I would use it as art in my home.

Very quickly however they branched out into other cosmetics.  For this reason, I felt that I could, justifiably, put it down as a "vintage product" to use for my great grandmother's beauty routine experiment.

Revlon Lipstick and Lip Liner
Last, but not least, we come to the my favorite cosmetic: lipstick!

I chose Revlon simply because I could easily find two of the colors that my great grandmother wore, although not necessarily in the forties.  However, I distinctly remember them in her make-up drawer so I felt they had to be included. 
Everyone knows that they had lipstick in the forties.  A red lip has become one of the iconic images of the decade, so I didn't really have to research this.  But I did!
Contrary to popular belief, Cleopatra did not invent lipstick.  Nor, surprisingly, did the ancient Egyptians. No, as far as we know, the first people to create and wear lipstick were the ancient Sumerians.
But probably not these Sumerians, these Sumerians don't look like inventing lipstick would have been important to them.  Although I could be wrong.
And using lipstick was a pretty popular thing until Queen Victoria. 

Queen Bess said yes to red lipstick.
And here is Marie Antoinette rockin' the red lip.
But not Queen Victoria.  How Rude!


She deemed red lipstick to be rude and unseemly.  Oh Victoria why?!?!?!
It wasn't until the 1920s that lipstick started to make a comeback, even though suffragettes were wearing it as early as 1912 as a statement of feminine independence. (Maybe because Victoria had been dead for a decade and her disapproval no longer mattered?)  Although the first commercial lipstick was invented, while the queen was still around, in 1884 by Guerlain.  But, they were French, so maybe what the queen thought didn't matter as much. 
Thankfully, due to movies and changes in attitude about what was glamorous and appropriate lipstick caught on.  And by the forties, red lips were all the rage!
https://glamourdaze.com/2012/07/1940s-make-up-the-lipstick-decade.html


So there was not a doubt in my mind that I was going to wear lipstick as part of my great grandmother's beauty routine. 

Wooh!

That was longer than I expected it to be.
In the next installment of the series, I am going to let you know how I applied the products and whether the experiment was successful or a total failure.  Wish me luck and I will be posting again soon!  (For those who don't give a hoot about vintage style and beauty products, I promise that I will try to have a Frugal Femme craft or recipe up soon.  Maybe, since it has been so pretty outside lately, I will include one of my favorite recipes that my husband does on the grill.

























Sunday, April 14, 2019

Living Beauty Vintage (Frugally) OR Was Grandma on to Something? (Part 1 - The Night Time Products)

Hello Everyone!
As those of you who know me are aware, and those of you who have read my blog may have guessed, and my Instagram followers know - I am a vintage fanatic.  I love vintage fashion and design and strive to have these items in my life and wardrobe.  Just so we can clarify, vintage for me is the thirties, forties, fifties, and early sixties. I do like the twenties, but the clothing style is not flattering for my body type.  I also know that vintage now includes the seventies, eighties, and nineties, but those are not the decades that I am drawn to and are not what I am referencing when I say vintage.  (Wooh, now that we have that cleared up, lets get back on with the post.)
This is from Tom and Jerry.  I loved the ones where Tom would try to woo a lady cat because it was one of the few times that we would see girl characters in cartoons.  Can I just say, her manicure is amazing.

Since turning forty, which was not as recently ago as I would like, I have been plagued by teeny, tiny, white, acne bumps.  A problem that I have never had before, not even when I was a teenager.  I was horrified.  So I researched the problem, went online, talked to my dermatologist, talked to my sister-in-law who is an aesthetician, and bought a boatload of products to try to fix the problem and nothing seemed to be working. (Reducing stress in my life - the one thing that everyone said would work - was not an option.)  Did I ask my mother?  No.  My mother is a true disciple of the less is more philosophy of life.  And I must say, it truly works for her.  She just washes her face in the shower with Olay soap and only wears makeup on special occasions and she has very clear skin.  But I like a more artificial look than that - always have- so I didn't think that her beauty routine of a clean face and no make-up would work for me.

Despite her face regime sounding very natural and hippie-esque, my mother was more into mod - as this picture shows.  The woman on the left is my grandmother who I am named after.  The lady on the right is my mother.  She told me the dress is called a "sizzler" and was so short that there were white with navy blue polka panties/shorts that matched the dress underneath.  I'm lovin' this look - even though I would never be brave enough to wear either of these outfits.

This amazing picture of my mom, and embarrassing picture of myself, shows my mother at least 15 years later . (Sorry if that is wrong Mom!)  I think she is around 28-29 years old in this picture.  I am thinking this because my brother, who you can only see the top of his head in this photo, looks like he is one or two in the non-cropped picture.  Which would make me 10 or 11 years old- and a style icon to be emulated.  

So I had to go further back in the family.  My grandmother liked to wear make-up every day, and used a variety of products.  Instead of a make-up drawer, she had a makeup cabinet and it was an Aladin's treasure cave of cosmetics.  When I was very good, as a reward, she would let me look at all the products and marvel at all the pretty cases and colors.  She was the one that took me to Merle Norman to get my first make-up at the age of 14.  Ah, memories.......
My grandmother.  I don't know how old she is in this picture, but I want her dress and her glasses.  This is a  look I want to achieve.  Don't believe me?  Check this out.
These are the vintage frames I found that I am going to try to turn into my prescription eye glasses.  I should know in a couple of weeks if this is going to be a possible thing.

She was a true lover of Avon products.  Whether this was because she genuinely liked the products, or she bought them to support my mother who was an Avon lady, I do not know.  There are three products that readily come to my mind that were always in her beauty arsenal.  Avon cuticle creme remove and cuticle creme moisturizer.  I remember being fascinated by these as a child - maybe because they were some of the few beauty products that she would let me use even as a child.  One came in a white tube and one came in a pink tube.  The neat thing about the tubes was that Avon shaped the tops of the tubes so that the tips were shaped like orange sticks to push back the cuticles and could be used in that manner.  I don't know why Avon doesn't still do that.  To me, that is brilliant packaging.  And, of course the staple that was in all of our showers and cabinets - Skin So Soft bathing oil and Skin So Soft Lotion.  (Skin So Soft Lotion and Bath Oil were items found in ALL of the women in my family's bathrooms and cabinets.  At least that was the case in the eighties.)

This may be my favorite Skin So Soft collectible bottle.  My great grandmother had one of these and I was obsessed with it.  I think the top is missing from this picture-in fact, I'm certain it is.  I may have to find one of these and purchase it.  I still love it.

I'm not opposed to trying Avon, but I didn't feel like ordering Avon online - you can do that now- and they no longer carry the Dew Kissed moisturizer I remembered from grandma. 

I think the name of this moisturizer is charming.  Dew Kiss.  Who doesn't want their skin to look like it has been kissed by dew?


So I decided, in a move that seems oddly oxymoronic, to go another generation back and into the vanity of my great -grandmother. 
Look at those perfect waves!!!  Can we say hair goals?

Still looking good!  And still wanting her hairdo!

My Ama and Bapa.  Isn't he handsome?  I think they are both in their eighties in this photo.  Look at her skin!!!!
It only seemed fair that I add a young picture of my Bapa since I have of everyone else.  He is proof that when you find a look, you stick with it.  These are the same hairstyle and glasses that he had in the picture above.

And, believe it or not, here is where I hit pay dirt. 
Until the day she died my great grandmother used Pond's Cold Cream and Oil of Olay, the original formula. And, she had super soft skin.  I also don't remember a zit daring to grace her face - EVER.  She did wear make-up - but was very light with it.  She wore Coty Airspun Loose powder, red lipstick in a gold tube - I have no idea what color or brand it was - and mascara.  Again, couldn't tell you what.  I'm also pretty certain that she wore blush, but I don't remember ever seeing it when I was naughty and went through her make-up drawer in the bathroom.
Another picture of my great grandmother, looking good in casual, lounging clothes.  I have actually worn an outfit just like this- great grandma just may be my style icon.  Who knew?  Maybe she is, partly, where I get my love of vintage.  I did spend a lot of my childhood visiting her. and most of her home was vintage as she wasn't fond of 70s/80 interior design.

Using my great-grandmother as inspiration, and scouring the internet for beauty products that existed when she was a young woman but are still available today, I decided to see if maybe a vintage beauty routine could fix my face problems.  I mean, generations of women couldn't be wrong right?  Or, at least it couldn't hurt to try.  Right!!!  So to research!  For Science!  For Beauty!
Here is one thing I learned.  If you are interested in history, fashion, and make-up, one can quickly go into an information hole that it could take you weeks to dig out of when researching this topic.  There really is ALOT of information available on the internet concerning vintage beauty products.  But after much searching and reading of what dermatologists say about old beauty tricks and skin care (Spoiler Alert - they don't agree on some - oh the debate on Vasoline!). I decided on a beauty routine that included both skin maintenance and a make-up.  I also found that most of the products are, surprisingly, inexpensive and, therefore, definitely fell under the title of Frugal making me want to do a post.  Perfect!  Even more amazing, though not as minimal as my mother's routine, the less is more still philosophy still applies for this routine.   At least it does when you consider that most women's skin care regime involves at least a dozen products for skin care alone -- not including cosmetics.  This entire vintage beauty routine, including make-up but not including manicure supplies or different colors in lipsticks- uses approximately 20 products.  (To put that in perspective - the modern woman averages over 40 products.)
I was going to try to list all of the products and the whole routine in this one post.  But I soon found out that would be a very long post.  So, instead, I am going to do a series of posts on this.  For those of you who follow my blog for the recipes and crafts - do not fear - I am not going to stop posting those.  In fact I will have a Frugal Femme recipe/menu  post out for Easter very soon.   But I also wanted to do some posts about vintage beauty because, well, that's my thing and I thought it would help me get into the swing of posting again.


Skin Care Night Time 


First, a quick disclaimer, I am not being paid to endorse any of these products. 

Second, I am still in the process of testing many of these products and will let you know my opinions on them in a later post- complete with pictures. This post is more a recap of why I chose these products.

Last but not least - I do not like washing my face in the bathroom before I go to bed.  Even when using warm water I find that it wakes me up and it makes it hard for me to go to sleep.  Because of this, I do not include any beauty products in this post that would involve washing my face at the sink.  I will say this though,  if I did use a soap cleanser to clean my face, then Pears Transparent Soap is the vintage soap that I would try.

Alright, so having said this, let me reiterate that I am not going to let you know how I applied these products and how well they worked until another post.  

Night Time Products Selected

Pond's Cold Creme                                                                                                                        $  7.99
Thayer's non-alcohol Witch Hazel ( I like Rose or Coconut depending on the season)                 $10.99
Oil of Olay Beauty Lotion                                                                                                             $12.00 Weleda Skin Food ( Optional - Used once or twice a week as deep moisturizing mask                $10.29
Frownies (with rose water as moistener - but could use witch hazel - Optional)                            $19.95
Smith's Rosebud Salve Balm (Optional)                                                                                        $  6.00
Bourbon French Kus Kus Body Butter (Optional and, technically not a face product)                 $24.00

History of the Products

Pond's Cold Creme

This one is straight from great-grandma's cabinet - no research about vintage authenticity needed to be provided.  Yet I did anyway.  Pond's cream was created in 1846, but, from what I can gather, wasn't known as Pond's Cold Cream until about 1910.  Advertisements from the time show that Pond's focused more on selling their vanishing cream and the cold cream was sort of an afterthought.

I purchased a jar on eBay that looks alot like this jar for my cold cream.  I just thought that it would look pretty on my vanity.


This time the cold cream is getting equal representation.

I could not see where vanishing cream still exists today- it seemed to be the moisturizer to use during the day in your morning routine and helped to bond loose powder to the face, but cold creme still exists.
If you would like more information on the difference in cold creams and vanishing creams, please see this article I have linked below.
https://cosmeticsandskin.com/aba/vanishing-cream.php

Before researching a vintage beauty regime, the only time that I had heard of vanishing cream was on Tom and Jerry.  Do you remember how Jerry used to use vanishing cream to become invisible?

Here is a picture of the duck and Jerry using the cream to hide from Tom.

Thayer's Witch Hazel - Non Alcohol (Rose Petal or Coconut)

So, if you believe the advertising on the bottle, this witch hazel, in its original form, has been around since 1847.  I have not been able to find anything disputing this, so I am going with it as a genuinely vintage product.  I do believe that the bottles that have lavender, aloe vera, rose petals, and coconut are all relatively new developments.  But, it is still the same basic recipe with a few bells and whistles added. 
This was not a product that anyone in my family used.  But I am trying to get rid of acne and I am from the generation that says that you have to use an astringent or toner.  This seemed like the best vintage and skin health way to go as it does not contain alcohol and is supposed to help with acne.

Oil of Olay Beauty Fluid
The glass bottle on the right with the slightly pink lotion is the one that I remember from my great grandmother's bathroom.

This one is also one that I took from my great-grandmother's cabinet of goodies.  It should also be known to almost everyone as it's, basically, become iconic.
Compared to the other products I have mentioned so far, this one is far younger than the others, having only been created in 1952.  This original beauty lotion was a real trend setter in its time because it was a fluid lotion rather than a heavy cream.  I was trying to stick with items that were available when my grandmother was a young woman, but if she switched and used it for decades, who am I to nay say and question her wisdom?

Optional Items
The following items on the list I have labeled as optional items because they, technically, do not need to be a part of the skincare routine unless you share some of the same beauty problems that I do.  These problems are:
 *  A forehead that, due to years of wearing glasses and having poor eyesight, has those two lines above the nose that the beauty biz has dubbed "elevensies".
 *  Dry, scabby skin on the face, especially around the area where the stupid little pimples are - thus making me want to do a deep moisturizing treatment about twice a week.
 *  You want moisturized lips so that your red lipstick doesn't look like it has been applied to a lizard.
 * A love of slathering oneself with perfumed lotion/body butter before they go to bed so that they wake up with their skin smelling gorgeous and feeling soft.

If you have any of these issues then, by all means, use the next products that I mention.

Weleda Skin Food

This is one of those products that, at least here in America, is one of the beauty industry's best kept secrets.  And it is amazing!!!  I had been using this cream already before I started researching vintage beauty items.  But I had only been using it for manicures as a hand cream and on dry areas when they needed extra special love and attention such as dry elbows and heels.  Imagine my surprise when I starting researching vintage beauty products still available today and found that it was a genuinely vintage product. 
Weleda started in 1921 and, as best I can tell, their skin food was created in 1925.


So it definitely falls under the category of products that my young great-grandmother could have possibly used-although I am fairly certain she never even heard of it.  I love that their packaging is very no-nonsense coming in a metal tube that, once used completely, has a tendency to look like it was mauled by bears as you try to squeeze every amazing drop out of the tube.  I also love the fact that they haven't changed their name and still call themselves skin food.  This used to be a popular way to describe products and went out of popularity sometime after the forties - but they still use it and I find it charming.
But, I haven't even told you the best part.  As I was researching, more and more articles started to come up telling me that many people in the industry consider this to be as good as La Mer for your face.  Um......... What?
As I researched, I kept finding articles like this:

What if there were a cream that smelled like almond extract, went on thicker than artisanal cream cheese, absorbed quickly into skin (leaving a sheen just where you want it), and was all-natural? You'd probably be sold immediately. On those words alone, I’d be prepared to start shelling out...and keep shelling—a “tell-me-when-to-stop' kind of shelling. But we've all lucked out, because this review is of a product where there's no need for heavy shelling. It’s only $12.
Weleda Skin Food is an “I’ll save up for this” product at a “Hey, maybe I’ll try this stuff” price. The label suggests putting it on desperate spots—hands, feet, elbows—but on the face, it’s like a natural La Mer.
—Trace Barnhill

And, as far as I was able to ascertain, dermatologists agree with Trace Barnhill- it as good as La Mer for your skin and works as well.  This information blew my mind.  In case you haven't heard about the La Mer craze, let me give you a little update.  It is the miracle cream that has been sweeping the beauty business and Hollywood elite for over a decade.  It is like manna for the skin and several celebrities and beautiful people swear by it.  It is also $200 for an ounce.  No, you didn't read that wrong. 
So to hear that Weleda Skin Food can be used like La Mer had me very intrigued.  I will get into more detail about how Weleda Skin food performed in the "How did these products work?" part of the series, but I will admit that I have already tried using it as a deep moisturizing mask-before starting my vintage face care regime- as soon as I read these articles.  I was terrified that it would make my already not happy skin break out even more.  It didn't.  So I am curious to how this will work for more than one application.   However, if it does work like La Mer, it may be one of the best frugal tips that I have ever given.

Frownies

This might be the most embarrassing of the beauty products for, at least, a couple of reasons. But it is also one that seems to have genuine support behind it - both with dermatologists and people that use them.  This was NOT used by my great grandmother - I don't think she squinted as much as me, but I need it, so there ya go.
Okay, so here's the history of Frownies - they were invented in 1889 by Margaret Kroesen.  Why were they invented you may ask?  Well because her daughter, Alice, who was a concert pianist, had developed "unsightly" wrinkles and frown lines.  Well!  For a Victorian lady this would never do!  And Margaret created Frownies.  The truly amazing thing is that they genuinely seem to work - when used correctly.

Here is the science behind it - wrinkles are not just caused by your skin aging.  Often, wrinkles are because of expressions we make day after day, year after year.  These repetitive motions that we make all the time, every day, form creases in the skin and wrinkles are born.  And these tend to be the deep wrinkles that we find so embarrassing.  (Even if you call them expression lines rather than wrinkles.)  Frownies work on the premise that you are training the muscles under your skin to go back to being smooth and also prevent new lines from forming.
Which makes me wonder why these things aren't more popular and expensive.  They were a secret beauty weapon for the Hollywood elite for decades - Olivia de Havilland was a user.

A young Olivia.  And no elevensies in sight.

Middle aged and still looking pretty good.

Here she is at 102 years old.  There are elevensies but - still she looks good for being over a century old, and that skin looks pretty darn good.

Gloria Swanson literally wore them in a scene in the movie Sunset Boulevard.


I couldn't find a close up pictures, but you can see them on her forehead.  I know they wanted to make her attempts to remain youthful in appearance look desperate and sad, and they used these as a visual tool to promote that image of age grasping for the youth of beauty, but it doesn't mean that they didn't work.
Which brings us to the embarrassing parts.
1.  They were invented to upkeep antiquated ideas about beauty and how young women should not express emotions - creating creases and wrinkles on their faces.  Ummmmmm.......Okay.
2.  You have to wear them for at least three hours or, preferably, overnight, until the muscles under your skin get trained and then you only have to wear them a few times a week rather than every day.  This is fine if you are living alone, but if you have a husband or boyfriend or lover that sleeps over with you.... this is not a look that you want to promote.
It actually makes me appreciate the ridiculous lengths that Mrs. Maisel went through so that her husband would not know the hoops she jumped through to be "naturally" beautiful.  If you haven't seen the show, first things first, watch it, its hilarious and heart warming, secondly she would go to bed with her make-up and hair done and wait til her husband fell asleep and only then would she do her night time beauty regime.  She would also position the curtain so that the sun shone in her eyes in the morning, before his alarm clock went off, so that she could remove all the evidence and appear "naturally refreshed" when he woke up and saw her.  (You find out in later episodes that her mother does the same thing and has been for decades.)



I'm not gonna sugar coat it here folks -vintage beauty looks great when it is the final product, but getting there is, well, not glamorous  - and could effect your love life.  So, although I oppose this ridiculous routine of hers in theory (her husband should love all of her and she shouldn't hide herself from him), and could never actually do it myself - because I am not a morning person and my husband wakes up before me, another part of me understands.  Its bad enough that my husband sees me at least once a week in pillow curlers - to add Frownies is just......  I have no words.  But if it works........
We shall see.  But it is a conundrum.

Even cartoon vixens don't want their romantic interest to see them in their nightly beauty maintenance.


Smith's Rosebud Salve



This is another one that could be found in my great grandmother's cabinet AND in my grandmother's.  So I think I can safely say that both of them used this product as young women. 

My grandmothers used the larger size - the one that was the "New Product".  I distinctly remember that being in the medicine cabinet - although I couldn't tell you what they used it for.

And this item has pedigree y'all.
Don't believe me?  How many other beauty products can be found in the Smithsonian's National Museum of American History? 
This a picture of the actual tin found in the Smithsonian.

The tin looks virtually the same as the ones on sale today- except for the price (darn).
This product has gained a cult status in the beauty industry - if you see a make-up artist, they probably have this in their bag or list it as one of their must have items.
And it is pretty wonderful.
Created in 1892 it can, arguably, be called one of the first media start-up companies.  Using mail orders to get information about their product out to the people this product started as a little at-home business and is still around today.

One of their early advertisements.  Look at the Frenchie and weep at his cuteness!!!!

Although this balm has been a part of my life since birth, I can only remember ever using the small tin as a lip balm.  It smells wonderful, works well, and doesn't taste horrible, so I have used it off and on since childhood.  So imagine my surprise when I found out it can also be used for "chapped face and hands, minor burns, bites and stings of non-poisonous insects and all other conditions for which a soothing salve is useful."
Huh.  Maybe that's why the grandmas had the big tin and it wasn't in the make-up drawer but was in the first aid cabinet.  I also found out, in my research, that this balm can be used to moisturize your cuticles, so I will add one more duty to its evening responsibilities.  (I love a product that can multi-task.)

Bourbon French Kus Kus Body Butter


First the disclaimer:
Okay, so this one is not a national or international product.  You probably have never heard of it if you have never been to New Orleans.  And, even if you have been, you may still not have heard it.  But this product, and the place that it comes from, is one of my favorite things in the world.
It also can be argued, quite rightly, that this is not a frugal product and you can buy more cost effective body lotions that have been around for quite some time.  Skin So Soft Body Lotion by Avon comes to mind (and the more I think about it, the more I want to purchase some bath oil).  But this is one of my luxury "treat" purchases and - as it lasts for a very long time, - even when slathering it nightly over the body- I wanted to include it on this list because I am already using it and it is vintage.......  Or at least the scent is vintage, I can't vouch for the base of the lotion/butter.
Now that that unpleasantness is passed, lets get on to the information.
Kus Kus perfume was created in 1843 by August Doussan, New Orlean's first full-time parfumeur. 

Picture of August Doussan copied from French Bourbon's website.

The store can be found on Royal Street in New Orleans and has been around for over 170 years.  That is true vintage!  The store is delightful and, along with carrying perfume and decorative perfume bottles, you can also get a genuine wool powder puff there.   (Oh the decadence!  How 30s Hollywood glam is that?!?!?!)
And, I am certain, if my grandmothers had known about it they would have worn one of their fantastic smelling perfumes, from which there are several to choose.  Although I do, on occasion, wear Kus Kus perfume, I prefer to use it as a body lotion/butter.  The reason for this?  Kus Kus is a soft, powdery (the web site also says spicy) scent that helps sooth me to sleep while it softens my skin overnight.  I also find that it works as a great "base" with my perfumes when I put them on in the morning - adding to their scents rather than detracting  or distracting from them. I guess that's called layering your scents.
I won't lie, the packaging can be a little plain, but that can easily be fixed by transferring the body butter to a pretty vintage jar.  (Which is what I do and is much prettier on a vanity or night stand.)
If you can't make it to New Orleans, you can order their products online.
https://www.neworleansperfume.com
They are worth checking out if you haven't already experienced them.

Gif from Tex Avery's Little Tinker.  I don't remember this cartoon, but now I want to find it.



The Application

Nope.  Not for this blog, that will come in another  future post.

 I hope you found this post interesting and enjoyed seeing pictures of the beautiful ladies in my immediate family.
In the next post, I will let y'all know the items I selected for the daytime part of the beauty regime including their history and why I selected them.  Following that I will tell you whether it was a successful experiment or a total nightmare.  Sometime between that (or after that) I will show you how to do a vintage manicure.
And along with all that, I will be doing my usual Frugal Femme craft and recipe posts.  (Wooh! Wipes forehead of imaginary sweat) .  So stay posted I have alot of ideas coming your way.
Bye!