Maybelline founder Tom Lyle Williams

Showing posts with label beauty. Show all posts
Showing posts with label beauty. Show all posts

Maybelline's 1947 Queen of the Tournament of Roses, Norma Christopher, a real California Girl.

  Post War America ushered in a new image for the girl next door and Maybelline as always, lead the parade! The All American face of California's sun kissed college co-ed was now in the spotlight, while the glitz and glamour of War-Time, Pin-Up Girls, tore away to a more natural, simple "life's getting back to normal" beauty.



Norma Christopher Queen of the 1947 Tournament of Roses.

Tom Lyle Williams chose the "California Girl," with her laid back casual yet elegant style, to represent the face of Maybelline in 1947.  A new target market was created as young women busy planning weddings, having babies and moving into their GI loan homes in the suburbs, didn't have time to look like a Movie Star.  The 50's were right around the corner as the Boomer generation was being born.


Tournament of Roses Rose Queen History

A place of honor is reserved in each Rose Parade for the float carrying the Royal Court. Every September more than 1,000 young women vie for the honor of riding that float - participating in a month-long interview process designed to find those participants with the right combination of poise, personality, public speaking ability and scholastic achievement.

When it's all over, a Rose Queen and six Rose Princesses will reign over the Rose Parade and Rose Bowl Game. They will attend nearly 150 public and media functions during their year in the spotlight, spreading the word about the Tournament and Pasadena wherever they go.



Orange County Register 2013 did an article about Norma 


Her life's been rosy ever since click to read

My Guest Blogger Gwen Eve Lewis shares Vintage Makeup Tips and Tricks To Use Now


Contact Gwen by email, gwenevelewis@gmail.com, or jux, gwenevelewis.jux.com.

With modern technology, ingredients, trends and sensibilities, sometimes the beauty tips handed down to us from our mothers and grandmothers seem dated and useless. Why follow the old methods of skincare and makeup application when modern tips seem so much more in sync with what’s currently accepted as “correct” and “true.” However, remember that at one point in the past, those same tips were considered cutting-edge and absolutely on-trend. So, don’t be so quick to ignore beauty secrets from the past. There are plenty of gems amongst those old-fashioned tips that still work now. In fact, many of these tips are less expensive ways to achieve the same look with more expensive products and instruments. Incorporate them into your modern beauty routine for the best of both worlds.


Makeup
  • Classic Red Lipstick -If you’re bored with your current style, shake things up with a bold red lip (unless that is already your go-to look). Seen on so many Old Hollywood stars, the eye-catching look is bound to instantly make you feel more glamorous. To pick out the perfect shade for your skin, first find out if you have cool, neutral or warm undertones. Hint: Red lipstick with a bluish undertone will make your teeth look whiter and your smile more dazzling.
  • Keep Your Lashes Curled -
    To keep the curl in your lashes longer, heat up your eyelash curler with a quick blast from your hair dryer. The heated metal will help curl your lashes more effectively (in the same way curling irons work). Just make sure you check it against your finger before applying it to your eyelashes—you don’t want to accidentally burn your eye! Then swipe on a layer of your favorite mascara, like Maybelline Great Lash, which has been the favorite of makeup artists for years.
  • Keep Eyeshadow Inplace -
    Run out of eyeshadow primer? Swipe on a very thin layer of petroleum jelly instead to help hold the powder in place. Make sure it’s a very thin layer—you don’t want it to be lumpy and gloppy.
  • Combat Shine-
    We’re all dependent on blotting paper to fresh up our makeup throughout the day. An old-fashioned stand-in for modern blotting papers is tissue paper! Blot away excess oil with a tissue paper the next time you find yourself without powder or blotters.
Skin
If you don’t want to invest in fancy eye makeup removers, and regular cleansers aren’t getting rid of the mascara, liner, and eyeshadow, try baby oil. Your mother and your grandmother used it for good reason: gentle, inexpensive, and easy-to-find, baby oil is a very effective eye makeup remover.
Here’s an oldie-but-goodie: 
if you have puffy eyes from a late night out with the girls, or a late one in with your favorite tearjerker, put slices of cucumber, drained tea bags, or chilled teaspoons on your eyes to help bring down the swelling.
While you can’t close up your pores (they don’t open and close), you can help make your skin look tighter with a quick splash of cold water after you finish washing your face. The cold water improves circulation to the skin, which can also help bring about a slight glow.
Nails
Whether you’re playing the role of a secretary in a private dick film noir moment, or just giving yourself a manicure, make sure you file your nails all in one direction. The back-and-forth sawing motion will cause the nail to split more easily.
If your nails are yellowed from prolong nail polish wear, soak them in lemon juice and water in between manicures to clear them right up.
When all else fails, don a pair of enormous sunglasses to hide tired eyes and add a bit of mystery and glamour to your look. There’s a reason celebrities still use this trick!
These tips, while old-fashioned, are still effective and often less expensive than a pile of beauty products and tools. Shake up your look and inject a little bit of old-school glamour into your daily routine with these retro beauty tricks.
Gwen Eve Lewis is a freelance writer from Southern California who has contributed to beauty blogs such as Bellezza Spa’s blog. She loves finding out old beauty secrets that she can incorporate in her everyday beauty routine.

Thank you Gwen for these wonderful retro-beauty tricks. Maybelline started out as a beauty-trick in 1915, when Mabel Williams, mixed ash and Vaseline together and applied it to her lashes and brows. Her brother, Tom Lyle Williams ran wih the idea and formed the first cake mascara, called Maybelline in her honor. Hope you read all about it in my book, The Maybelline Story.


NICHE Fashion and Beauty Magazine features Helen Mirren, Coco Chanel, Versace and an excerpt from The Maybelline Story


Click on page 67 to view my Maybelline Memories column.
I

Film Legend Helen Mirren, Still Hot in her 60's



Fashion Legen, Coco Chanel, celebrates her 100 year Anniversary in 2014.



Versace, a Major Fashion Statement.....Read, Hell on Heels in NICHE's Fall Issue. 


My Maybelline Memories Column features founder, Tom Lyle Williams and excerpts from The Maybelline Story and the Spirited Family Dynasty Behind It. 

Be sure to visit my new blog called Saffrons Rule, taken directly from my 1964 High School Diary.  It's hilarious. http://saffronsrule.com/2013/09/20/802/

Sharrie Williams Summer Fashion Picks - Understated Glamour, my Favorite Look. What's yours, tell me about it.



LOVE LOVE LOVE THIS SUMMER LOOK.

A Chambray Shirt over white tank and skinny jeans is understated chic in any language.  I'd add an over-sized bag, movie star big-sunglasses and 1970's platform sandals to finish my perfect look.  Also a messy haircut and Maybelline blue nails adds to my quirky glamour.   

Here are 6 of my favorite can't live without beauty products...

1     A brush for wet hair is priceless - The Wet Brush.

2     Blotting Papers keeps me looking mat perfect click here.
3     On the go, quick fix Benefit beauty kit.(Rich is Back.)
4     Maybelline Great Lash is the love of my life. click here.
5     Sally Hanson's Salon Insta-Gel Strips gotta have it. click
6     Maybelline blue polish French Manicure just do it. click

So that's my Summer Hot Picks.  What's yours ?  If you'd like to be a quest blogger and rave about your favorite products just email me at www.maybellinebook.com.  I love hearing from you and would love to post your story.

ULTRA BIG ULTRA LASH UPDATE FOR ALL THOSE WISHING TO HAVE IT BACK..

I finally found the Ultra Big Ultra Lash Mascara on Ebay and paid $29.99 for it. It is the ONLY mascara that keeps my lashes curled and soft. Maybelline Great Lash is awful, I makes lashes hard and brittle and does not keep the curl! I called Maybelline after receiving my Ultra Big Ultra Lash because my lashes now look like they did when I was 25 because of this mascara. WHY did Maybelline discontinue??? WHY?? PLEASE bring it back! It's selling for $50.00 to $75.00 per tube on the Internet! PLEASE! Pamela. MAYBELLINE ULTRA BIG ULTRA LASH MASCARA


Helen Tanguay February 19, 2013 6:20 pm I agree with all lovers of this mascara. I have used it as well, since my teen years and never had need to give it up till it was sadly discontinued. It was the best ever mascara of all time for me. Went on perfectly with no globs or clumps...smoothly, evenly, naturally and it kept the curl. It lengthened beautifully as well. I received so many compliments way back when, on my eyelashes. The brush was the best design ever. I HATE those big fat brushes out there that don't allow any control whatsoever. I have never been happy with any mascara since, (and I have been searching for over 20 years. PLEASE bring it back! on MAYBELLINE ULTRA BIG ULTRA LASH MASCARA


I was more than disappointed when I was unable to find this mascara. I was just telling my 3 daughters this morning, on the way to school and they were apply mascara, talking about their new mascaras. Yes, they all use something different and have their favorites. Well be the stay at home mom with no makeup on, yet, I had to chime in on the fact that there's not a mascara in the world that could touch UBUL! I have used it since I started wearing makeup and when they stopped making it, I went to every store buying up all they had. For over 10 years now I have tried every brand and every brands type! Still to this day 1/20/2013 NO SUCCESS! Now the girls are like "mom, try to see if they have repackaged it under a different name, you know Google it". So I did and came across this site. PLEASE tell me they will bring this back or sell the recipe for it to a brand that will! Robin Pierce, Atlanta GA onMAYBELLINE ULTRA BIG ULTRA LASH MASCARA


I truly feel as if your email today was heaven sent! Unfortunately, they are out of stock at the moment and I am anxiously waiting their reply. Thank you so much for taking the time to refer their website to me. PS - just came home from shopping and the fresh peaches were on sail. I am going to try your Aunt Mabel's recipe for peach cobbler. I saw a video link for you actually making it and it looked delish! You made my day twice today, thank you.





I'm thinking of doing a poll here on the Maybelline Book Blog to see if enough people would like me to petition Maybelline New York to bring back "Ultra Big Ultra Lash Mascara"  leave me a comment below if you want it back.

Viva Glam Magazine Featuring Author Sharrie Williams





 VIVA GLAM Article By  

Sharrie WilliamsSharrie Williams
Walking into Sharrie Williams lavish Laguna Beach home and seeing the blonde beauty for the first time, I couldn’t help but think the scene I walked into was exactly what one would expect from an heiress of a beauty empire. The dramatic ocean views, expensive décor, and immaculate furnishings showed vast wealth and class. And Sharrie, who is now a grandmother, sparkled with youthful glamour and an energetic passion for life – which was most evident when she began talking about her remarkable family and their creation of one of the world’s most prominent cosmetics brands: Maybelline.

It all started out in 1915 when Sharrie’s great uncle Tom Lyle Williams witnessed his sister Mabel experiment with a trick called “the Harem’s Secret,” something she had read about in a women’s magazine. She mixed a little bit of burnt cork with some petroleum jelly and coal dust and used the concoction to fill in her eyebrows and eyelashes. Tom Lyle watched in amazement as Mabel made herself look as beautiful as the Hollywood film actresses he idolized as a kid working in a local Nickelodeon. The next day Tom Lyle set out to do research on eye beauty products and realized the market was wide open and that eyes were the last feature neglected by the beauty industry. After hiring a chemist to create a solution, the family business named after his sister Mabel, was started.

Tom Lyle Williams, 1915

Tom Lyle Williams, 1940

The rest is history. A fascinating and dramatic tale with so many twists and turns and ups and downs over the span of a century that it would make an excellent book. And that is exactly what Sharrie did – she made it her life’s work to preserve her family legacy in a book she wrote titled, The Maybelline Story and the Spirited Family Dynasty Behind It.

Mabel

“It was very important for me to write this book,” Sharrie said. “My personal story may be inspiring and encourage other people to write their family's story, if only for future generations. It is a gift to leave a legacy, a road map for your children and grandchildren. The Maybelline Story is a thread in the fabric of America's Story and would have been lost forever if I didn't tell it.”

And listening to Sharrie’s story was like a history lesson itself. Each decade had its own customs and beliefs when it came to women, fashion, beauty, and what was considered acceptable at the time. Maybelline played a huge part in setting new trends and standards for women at a time when Victorian ideals were considered what was proper.

“Women back in 1917 didn’t wear makeup on the street. Prostitutes did and actresses did. But really it was difficult to try and convince regular women to make up their eyes in public. And it happened because of the movie stars just like it happens today,” Sharrie said.

Maybelline ad with Hedy Lamarr, 1943

Maybelline ad with Joan Crawford, 1945

And indeed it was Tom Lyle’s brilliant marketing strategies that capitalized on the love triangle between products, movies, and celebrities that is still in tact today. Some of Maybelline’s first models were actresses Gloria Swanson, Clara Bow, and Viola Dana. The ads featured photos of them heavily made up in Maybeline, with print that said things like, “You too can have eyes that charm.”

 
Maybelline ad WWII

Maybelline Ad with Betty Grable, 1940

“Young girls were starting to want to be beautiful like their favorite movie stars, and were learning how to do it from the magazines since their mothers didn’t wear a stitch of makeup,” Sharrie explained. “The 1920’s girls were the first to drive in cars with boys, have sex out of marriage, smoke cigarettes, wear skirts above their knees, go out dancing and wear makeup. It was a cultural transition that started with my Great Uncle Tom Lyle and has turned into what we have today.”

Maybelline mascara, 1916

Tom Lyle’s business and marketing skills were way ahead of his time – especially for a young man who grew up on a farm in rural Kentucky. But it was those early days that helped prepare him for his remarkable future.

“Ever since he was a little child on the farm, he was so curious and inquisitive. He lived by the Sears Catalog. Even as an eight-year-old child he would take himself out of the farm and into the world by studying that catalog. With that, he taught himself advertising and marketing because there was nothing else to do,” Sharrie said.

His self-taught marketing skills combined with several other factors to become the driving force Tom Lyle needed to fulfill his destiny. After getting his girlfriend pregnant when he was just 16-years-old, it seemed as if he had something to prove.

“He wanted to do the right thing so they had run off and gotten married, and her parents forced her to annul the marriage because he was a dreamer and was never going to make anything of himself. They thought he was a loser,” Sharrie said. “He became hell bent on making a success of himself for his child.”

Tom Lyle then moved around a bit and dabbled in several business before starting Maybelline with the help of his older brother Noel James Williams who postponed his wedding for one year and loaned Tom Lyle $500 to start his business in Chicago. Together Tom Lyle, Mabel, and Noel J founded what would someday become an empire and make the entire Williams family multi-millionaires when the company sold in December 1967. But the journey was not an easy one for the Williams Clan or the Maybelline Company.

 
Noel James Williams 

The business challenges documented in the book ranged from surviving the great depression, almost going out of business, and dealing with lawsuits while some of the more personal problems within the family included alcoholism, extramarital affairs, and homosexuality when it was far less acceptable in society. But it was these trials and triumphs that made the book remarkable and one that many people can gain inspiration from. And Sharrie’s descriptions of each family member’s character really draws you into their world. And like the other Williams, Sharrie herself ran into challenges while making her own mark.  

Tom Lyle Williams, 1965

“The biggest challenge was dealing with my fear. Fear of what my family would say, how they would feel about what I wrote about them,” Sharrie said. “Also since it took over 20 years to write the book and find a publisher, I had to constantly overcome feelings of wanting to give up and destroy my work. It isn't easy facing all the insecurities that come up for artist's of any kind. Some drink, do drugs or kill themselves. The process isn't for light weights that's for sure.”

In the end Sharrie’s hard work paid off. Even her house burning down in the midst of writing her book, during an infamous Laguna Beach fire, didn’t stop her. Her book and her blog became immensely popular, and she gained an incredible sense of accomplishment from telling her family’s story. “I now realize I was chosen to be a channel for those who have passed on - to live again through my words,” said Sharrie.

Sharrie Williams, 2013

And Sharrie’s words really do bring them back to life, from the first page up until the shocking and mysterious ending. To really understand the legacy of this glamorous family and their part in the history of American beauty, you can purchase the book The Maybeline Story at www.maybellinebook.com. or bettieyoungsbooks.com.  Follow Sharrie on Twitter @sharriewilliams and Facebook, Sharrie Williams.





Rare Egyptian 1934 Maybelline ad claims Ancient Proverb is still viable today...or not.

“A woman’s most powerful possession is a man’s imagination.”

A woman can inspire or deplete her man's spirit by the image she projects.   Men are naturally inspired by beauty of any kind... a beautiful car, a beautiful home and a beautiful woman.  Create an image of yourself that empowers yourself as well as your man.


These words of wisdom were passed down to me by my grandmother, Evelyn Williams, but may not work for today's modern woman...Yet, her beauty secrets are as enduring as the ancient Egyptian Pyramids.


Read more about Nana's Beauty Secrets at http://www.maybellinebook.com/p/beauty-secrets.html 

Listen to my interview on Lette's Chat, where I delve further into Nana's unusual vintage beauty rituals.                                                                                  

http://www.blogtalkradio.com/letteschat/2012/12/13/maybelline-queensharrie-williamsreturns-with-holiday-ideas.


Maybelline ad promotes 1934 film, Cleopatra.

Cleopatra in 1934 directed by Cecil b. Demille and distributed by Paramount pictures. Legendary for its costumes and specially its set depicting Cleopatra (Claudette Colbert) seducing Mark Antony. The film won Academy awards for best Cinematography and was nominated for best Picture, Best Asst. Director among many others.







Old Hollywood's sexy, power-couple, Viola Dana and Lefty Flynn, featured in The Maybelline Story..


Viola Dana was one the the first beautiful Photoplay stars to appear in a Maybelline ad.  She endorsed Lash-Brow-Ine as well as Maybelline in 1920.


Maurice "Lefty" Flynn and Viola Dana, during the height of the Silent Film era, between 1925 - 1929.




Maybelline model and Silent Film actress, Viola Dana with her husband, actor, Lefty Flynn.



Maybelline model, Viola Dana appeared in film magazines throughout the 1920's.


 Maurice Flynn became "Lefty" Flynn because he kicked the ball with his left foot, while attending Yale University  in 1910. He was expelled from Yale in 1913 after he marrying Irene Leary, a chorus girl.  They divorced 11 days later.  "Lefty,"  kept his wild-man reputation and made 40 films between 1919 and 1927. 



Often as the lead actor, and sometimes as a sports hero or daring adventurer, "Lefty's" athletic appearance and abilities made him one of Hollywood's first "Hunks."



Read more about sexy Viola Dana and "Lefty" Flynn in The Maybelline Story, and how Preston Williams, played into the mix. 



Women clamor, for the promise of Provocative, Alluring Maybelline Eyes!

 America sinks deeper into hopelessness, during the 1930's, yet, Maybelline expands as the demand for beautiful eyes, continues to grow.
 
Top picture, Billy, Preston and Evelyn, with Tom Lyle. Bottom picture, Tom Lyle and his son Tom Jr. Right, Tom Lyle, President and sole owner of The Maybelline Company, with his 1934 Packard.

Tom Lyle, brilliantly used top actresses, to advertise Maybelline in film magazines, during the golden age of the 1930's.

One of Maybelline's most popular stars, Betty Grable, highlights the joys of beautifully made-up eyes.  Grable was part of the Hollywood Star System Tom Lyle helped create.

Read more about Tom Lyle Williams, sensational advertising techniques, that helped make some of the biggest Hollywood stars, and Maybelline, a household word, in...... 

               The Maybelline Story.

  Get a signed copy today at www.maybellinestory.com.