Maybelline founder Tom Lyle Williams

Showing posts with label eye makeup. Show all posts
Showing posts with label eye makeup. Show all posts

Maybelline's place in the History of Makeup

 

History of Mascara




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Our Beauty P.I. series is where Makeup.com editor Alanna delves into the history of various makeup products — where they originated from and how they’ve evolved. Next up on the list is the conception of mascara.9

The human body has a knack for genius traits, and one of its best traits is its ability to protect itself from outside harm. Take hair, for example: It’s a natural defense system that coats the skin and is meant to keep bacteria at bay. Another similar protecting barrier? Eyelashes. Meant to divert, protect and defend the precious sclera and cornea, lashes are a lot more than just a charming feature.

Mascara: The OG Protector

This is why it’s actually no surprise that mascara was one of the first makeup products to exist — it was created as another layer and practical mean of protection around the eye. The precursor to what we know as mascara began way back when — around 4000 BC in Ancient Egypt. Beauty gurus would use mixtures of kohl and ointments to darken and accentuate the lashes, and this OG version even helped protect the eyes from bright sunlight, Marie Claire reports. Like many things in the ancient world, these early mascara practices also coincided with spiritual phenomena: Not only is the mascara a protectant of the physical eye, but also a shield to ward off any bad juju — and although archaic, that’s something we can stiill get behind.

But the origin of mascara doesn’t stop there. Ancient Romans also had a heavy hand in the practice of darkening lashes, and the first Persian-founded cosmetology school taught women how to formulate their own mascaras around 900 BCE, Popsugar Beauty reports. With the major rise in makeup (and Queen Liz-inspired red locks) centuries later during the Elizabethan Era, women began experimenting with dyeing their lashesusing berries and fireplace soot (pretty is as pretty does, I suppose).

The Rise of the Formula as We Know It

Although ambiguous, the term “mascara” is thought to have been derived from Spanish, Portuguese and Italian words, màscara and maschera, meaning mask or stain. The first modern predecessor to mascara as we know it came from a French chemist named Eugène Rimmel, yep — saying it louder for those in the back: that Rimmel — for Queen Victoria. What was finally different about Rimmel’s formula was that he used the newly invented petroleum jelly, which he mixed with coal to create the new mascara formula — and bingo, modern mascara was born.

As the 20th century rolled around, American businessman Thomas Lyle Williams created a similar mascara product for his sister Maybel, and by 1917 he had his first cosmetic mail order business selling Lash-Brow-Ine. This applicable mascara was the very first marketable mascara in the cosmetic industry, and soon its name changed to a familiar one we know and love:Maybelline — after Ms. Williams herself, *yep, mind blown.*

Without surprise, mascara became a household item in the cosmetics world, with bigger beauty giants jumping on the trend, like makeup maven Helena Rubinstein. Even more interesting, the original design of the first mascaras came in cake form where the product was packed into a palette and sold with a small brush (you can even buy one here!). And with the rise of Hollywood actresses, costume makeup and false lashes of the 30s, mascara transformed from practical to coveted, and it’s this versatility that has allowed it to be one of the most-sought after makeup products for just about everyone who wears makeup.

It wasn’t until the 1960s that mascara evolved into tube form, thanks to Rubinstein’s Mascara- Matic and Maybelline Ultra-Lash. The tube truly revolutionized mascara and forever changed the way in which we apply and use it. Mascara finally achieved the ultimate makeup goal: It became totally effortless.

Lashes on Fleek

Today, mascara still transforms its wearer, but even more so than ever before: Now it enhances, lengthens, thickens, curls and darkens (or even colors blue or purple or burgundy). Mascara is one of those astonishing makeup products that has come full circle, beginning as a fierce protector of the eyes against sunlight and terrain, and becoming a must-have for all kinds of makeup gurus out there.

There’s a reason why mascara is often one of the first makeup products beauty amateurs reach for. With the swipe of its wand, it makes you feel that little bit of magic that is makeup



HEDY LAMARR in H.M. Pulham ESQ flaunts makeup in public after WW l..





After World War 1, nice girls didn't paint and powder themselves.  However a new breed of women emerged in 1920 and that's the target market Maybelline captured.  


After the end of World War I, Harry (Robert Young,) gets a job in a New York City advertising company, where he falls in love with a vivacious,independent coworker, Marvin Miles (Hedy Lamarr)... However, she cannot bring herself to fit into his traditional idea of a wife's role. 



Lash-Brow-Ine, became Maybelline in 1917 and Hollywood Stars like Ethel Clayton endorsed the new eye beauty product...helping launch the idea that nice girls did make up their eyes!!  



Nice girls before World War 1, aspired to make a good marriage and not have a career.

By the 1920's Dime stores couldn't keep Maybelline stocked fast enough...Women were stepping out of the kitchen...into the workplace... painting and powdering their face's in public
and feeling quite comfortable pulling out their make up bag.



TCM was showing Hedy Lamarr and Robert Young in a classic 1941 film called, H.M.Pulham ESQ.  Check out this one minute scene and you'll see the point I've been trying to make.  Hedy Lamarr's character was a modern Maybelline girl in about 1918. 



My Vintage Maybelline Mini Make Up Bags have arrived and are ready for purchase.  Check them out at 
http://www.maybellinebook.com/p/make-up-bags.html
SOLD OUT

GUEST BLOGGER LOVELY EMILY ROSE LOVES Volum' Epresss MAYBELLINE Mascara..

Maybelline Volum’ Express Mascara Review: by Professional makeup artist, Photographer and Beauty Blogger...

                                             Lovely Emily Rose 
  @LovelyEmilyR...Beauty blogger for babes on a budget! 

I have truly never found a mascara that I adore this much. No clumping or sticking or flaking and my lashes look AMAZING. Here’s a few shots of it in action.

Mascara on both




Mascara only on the left 
Unflattering, but it does a good job of showing how drastic the difference between the lashes with Falsies and the lashes without any mascara. 
OVERALL RATING: 9.9/10 
While this coats my lashes beautifully, it doesn’t make them super super thick, but it does a great job of lengthening. I do love this mascara, but the lack of “false lash” volume leaves something to be desired.  Of course, this might not be possible, so I’m looking forward to trying actual false lashes. I want to give it a 10 because it’s a fantastic mascara for the price (about $7), but I see a tiny bit of room for improvement. That being said, this is probably as close to perfect as you’ll
 get for this price.
You can find Lovely Emily Rose at:


Side note from Sharrie Williams;, 
did you know that after nearly 100 years, Maybelline....
now Maybelline New York..... is still the most popular
mascara on the planet and yes it's because it's still the best quality and the most sensibly priced.


                    Maybelline was the first mascara sold in the United States in 1915.


              The first mascara to use a Black Model to represent Ultra Lash in 1964.


                        The first to advertise Natural Hair False Eye Lashes in 1967.



            The first to create the all time...and still most popular mascara in the world... 
                                              GREAT LASH MASCARA, in 1971. 


Thank you so much Lovely Emily Rose for being my guest blogger today and I hope you will order my book, The Maybelline Story and the Spirited Family Dynasty Behind It and write a review on the Maybelline Book Blog...  Sharrie Williams (Author)   

Stay tuned tomorrow for another fabulous Guest Blogger and more fun Vintage Maybelline updates.

Frances - the Bride who helped launch an Empire!

Frances... the Bride, who postponed her Wedding for a year, so her fiance's brother, might have a chance at starting a little company, called Maybelline.



Eva, Frances, (the Bride,) Tom Lyle,  Noel James, (the Groom, in the shadows,) Bennie and my grandfather, Preston - Chicago, 1917, soon after Maybelline was launched.

Try Frances', homemade, rich, decedent, dark-chocolate extravaganza!  So modestly called...


                  Chocolate Icebox Dessert!




3 – 8 oz packages of Bakers German sweet chocolate


3 eggs


1 pint whipping cream


1 ¼ Tbsp. Vanilla


3 Tbsp. Powdered sugar


2 boxes of Social Tea Biscuits


Melt chocolate in double boiler.


Separate eggs, beat yolks with sugar,


Beat egg whites and add-


Add vanilla.


Add ½ pint whipped cream, (save ½ pint for topping.)


Line loaf pan with cookies.


Add layer of chocolate mixture.


Continue layering cookies and chocolate mixture, ending with chocolate.


Store in refrigerator and slice and serve with whipped cream.


Today I made an, out of this world, deep dark chocolate, delightful dessert and my audience couldn't get enough.  I hope you make this recipe, as it will surely become a special-occasion, family favorite.


OH!  By the way, if you want to know about the Bride, who waited a year, for the sake of Maybelline, read The Maybelline Story soon.

Check in next week, and watch Sharrie make her auntie Frances', Chocolate Icebox Dessert on The Morning Scramble - AZTV. 

Maybelline Story brings Romance back to life.

Rudolph Valentino was every woman's Romantic Idol, in the 1920's and even more so after his untimely death in 1926.  Tom Lyle Williams, bought the Villa Valentino, around 1930 and like Valentino, loved beautiful automobiles, architecture and the exotic Hollywood stars, who represented Maybelline.
Tom Lyle, at the Villa, with his new 1940 Packard, 
Rudolph Valentino and Natacha Rambova, lived in the Villa Valentino, while their home, Falcon Lair, was being built. 

The Villa Valentino.






Maybelline model and Hollywood star,  Gloria Swanson, and Valentino.


"The Romance."

Tom Lyle and Emery Shaver, with Tom Lyle's new 1934, Packard, Victoria.
Tom Lyle and Emery Shaver, lived together at the Villa Valentino, and were together for over 50 years.

Read more about Tom Lyle and Emery's life together at the Villa Valentino, in The Maybelline Story.

Tom Lyle Williams Jr. dies in his 60's, two years after his father.

In 1978, just two years after his father's death, Tom Lyle Williams Jr. passed away, at only 66 years of age.

Tom Lyle Williams,     1896 - 1976       

Tom LyleWilliams Jr.  1912 - 1978


5 year old Cecil Anderson Williams, is shown in this picture, with his father, mother and aunts and uncles.  Tom Lyle's only child, Cecil, took his father name after high school. 





Tom Lyle, with his 14 year old son, Tom Lyle Williams Jr. in 1926.


Three generations of Williams men, Thomas Jefferson, Tom Lyle and Tom Lyle Jr. in 1934.

Read more about Tom Lyle and his son, in The Maybelline Story, order a signed copy from the author today at http://www.maybellinebook.com/.