Maybelline founder Tom Lyle Williams

Showing posts with label vintage Maybelline history. Hollywood. Show all posts
Showing posts with label vintage Maybelline history. Hollywood. Show all posts

When you think of Maybelline, images of bubblegum pink and lime green tubes of mascara probably flood your mind first. Great Lash Mascara, the brand's cult classic cosmetic, has developed a wide consumer base — from budget-conscious shoppers to the professionals — since it first hit the market.



"It's still a staple in my kit, all of these years later," makeup artist Neil Scibelli told The Oprah Magazine. "The brush grips and curls the lashes easily, and the formula dries really quick." Makeup artist Nick Barose told the publication that it's also great for adding "volume without the clumps or crunchy texture." It's no wonder, then, that over 20 million of these mascaras are sold annually — or one tube every 1.7 seconds, according to Yahoo! Lifestyle.

Maybelline sells more than just mascara, though. According to the brand itself, Maybelline New York offers "more than 200 products" and is "the number one global cosmetics brand." Are you surprised? There's a lot more about Maybelline that you haven't heard. Here's the truth.

When you think of Maybelline, images of bubblegum pink and lime green tubes of mascara probably flood your mind first. Great Lash Mascara, the brand's cult classic cosmetic, has developed a wide consumer base — from budget-conscious shoppers to the professionals — since it first hit the market.

"It's still a staple in my kit, all of these years later," makeup artist Neil Scibelli told The Oprah Magazine. "The brush grips and curls the lashes easily, and the formula dries really quick." Makeup artist Nick Barose told the publication that it's also great for adding "volume without the clumps or crunchy texture." It's no wonder, then, that over 20 million of these mascaras are sold annually — or one tube every 1.7 seconds, according to Yahoo! Lifestyle.

Maybelline sells more than just mascara, though. According to the brand itself, Maybelline New York offers "more than 200 products" and is "the number one global cosmetics brand." Are you surprised? There's a lot more about Maybelline that you haven't heard. Here's the truth.

Before there was Maybelline New York, there was Maybel Williams, who used petroleum jelly to enhance her natural lashes and eyebrows, but Thomas came up with an even better idea.

Although Thomas Williams came up with a mascara-like product spontaneously, it took a partnership with pharmaceutical company Parke, Davis & Co. to really get the ball rolling. According to the Made in Chicago Museum, the team's first product was called Lash-Brow-Ine before eventually becoming Maybelline.

In time, Williams secured an office — which he called "Maybell Laboratories" — near his home in Chicago. He started to market Lash-Brow-Ine in newspapers and sold the cosmetic exclusively through mail order. According to the cosmetic company, Williams next came up with Maybelline Cake Mascara — "the first modern eye cosmetic made for everyday use." It, too, was only available for purchase through mail order, but it became "so popular that women began to ask for it in drugstores." 

In the 1920s, Maybelline helped spearhead the "youthful, flapper, fashion trend of dramatic makeup," Maybelline New York explained. The brand soon created an eyebrow pencil in the color red, followed by other colorful eyeshadows and liners. Maybelline then took its advertising to the next level and became the first-ever cosmetic company to advertise on the radio.

Marketing makeup to women may not sound like a revolutionary idea today, but, back in the early 1900s, it was a challenge. Cosmetics were "left to the theater and the women outside the pale of good society," Williams said in an interview in 1934 (via Made in Chicago Museum). "Up to comparatively recent times very few women used rouges, lipsticks, eye beautifiers and other quite obvious improvers of facial appearance." He continued, saying, "Here the real job began, because my capital was very small, and while my product was good, I was faced with the job of selling women on the idea that it was perfectly moral to use eye beautifiers."

By utilizing silent film stars in his Maybelline advertisements, Williams was able to demonstrate to women what their lashes could look like and, thus, helped makeup extend beyond the cinema. "My job was to make women more conscious of their eyes and the possibilities of making them more alluring; to break down prejudice," the founder explained, "and of course, to sell my product." And that's exactly what he did.

"Tom Lyle [Williams] took Maybelline out of the classifieds and put it into dime stores so the average American girl could have easy access and it was affordable," Sharrie Williams, the founder's great-niece and author of The Maybelline Story: And the Spirited Family Dynasty Behind It, told the Made in Chicago Museum. Instead of selling their original 75-cent Cake Mascara in stores, Maybelline created a 10-cent version — which Sharrie called "the Depression size" — for retail purposes.

making products accessible to every woman was far from the only way Maybelline changed the makeup game, though. Although it is an industry standard today, Maybelline's mascaras were among the first to be presented in an upright display — aka "carded merchandising" — as opposed to piled on a shelf or counter. Maybelline also propelled "before and after" advertisements into the mainstream and was among the earliest to earn the Good Housekeeping Seal of Approval.

"Maybe she's born with it. Maybe it's Maybelline." It's the catchphrase we all know, but it wasn't the company's first one. In fact, Maybelline had several early slogans — and many of them didn't exactly roll off the tongue. A Maybelline advertisement from 1918 (via Made in Chicago Museum) read, "Beautiful eyelashes and eyebrows make beautiful eyes; beautiful eyes make a beautiful face." Yes, that's four beautifuls in one sentence. 

According to The Maybelline Story: And the Spirited Family Dynasty Behind It by Sharrie Williams, Maybelline would also go on to use the phrase "sensibly priced" for a good many years. Over time, the two-word slogan morphed into a slightly longer but very similar "quality, yet sensibly priced." It wasn't until the 1950s that Maybelline would release a slogan that had nothing at all to do with price: "Maybelline, preferred by really smart women the world over."

According to the Made in Chicago Museum, Williams long believed that quality makeup was as good as "being born with it." However, it wasn't until the '90s that Maybelline adopted its iconic slogan.

 By 1964, Maybelline was thriving. However, its founder was not. "Tom Lyle [Williams] was now 70, and was not well," Sharrie Williams, Thomas Williams' great-niece and author of The Maybelline Story: And the Spirited Family Dynasty Behind It, told the Made in Chicago Museum. "The loss of his partner [Emery Shaver] was devastating. He began looking for a buyer." Three years later, Plough Inc. bid $136 million for Maybelline and Williams accepted.

"Tom Lyle [Williams] had incorporated Maybelline in 1954, but the stock was only divided among the family and the employees who had been loyal to Maybelline since the beginning," Sharrie explained. "Even the stock boy received one million dollars. A large portion was given to The Goodwill and CARE."

The new company promised to keep Maybelline in Chicago, but that promise was quickly broken. Sharrie said her great-uncle was "heartbroken" upon seeing his former employees were being let go. "It was painful for Tom Lyle to see his baby now being run without him at the helm," she added. Maybelline's headquarters was quickly moved to Memphis, Tenn. and manufacturing later began in Arkansas.

1990, Maybelline was acquired by Wasserstein Perella & Company, which The New York Times described as "a New York merchant bank." But another company had its eye on the brand. "Maybelline is a brand we have liked very much and have watched for a number of years," Guy Peyrelongue, chief executive of the L'Oréal subsidiary Cosmair, told the publication. By the mid '90s, Cosmair had become one of the biggest cosmetics company in the United States and was responsible for brands like Giorgio Armani and Lancome. Soon enough, L'Oréal did indeed purchase Maybelline, and, by 1997, the label was, as AdAge put it, "ready for some serious global expansion."

 Sheri Baron, president of Maybelline's agency Gotham, told the publication at the time: "This is the first time L'Oréal has made an acquisition of an American company and will use the leadership of the brand, including the agency, outside the U.S." This decision has certainly paid off. As of this writing, Maybelline, which is still under the L'Oréal umbrella, is available in over 120 countries worldwide.

Since Maybelline was founded back in the 1910s, the company has utilized many forms of advertising. From newspapers to radio to television, the label has pretty much tried it all. Even in the digital age, Maybelline has found a way to inspire "offline conversations" about their brand, Brad Fay, chief commercial officer of analytics firm Engagement Labs, explained in an article for Marketing Dive. Such conversations "soared" in the first half of 2018, Engagement Labs found. But just how is Maybelline doing that?

"Maybelline may focus on social media, but it's doing so in a way that motivates consumers to talk about the brand offline too," Fay explained. "Its integrated marketing strategy is increasing brand sharing, which is the extent to which people are sharing or talking about a brand's marketing or advertising, influencer interest and conversation volume offline as well as online." Through their use of compelling images, free samples, and celebrity and influencer partnerships, Maybelline is able to not only get us to share products online, but bring them up in conversations with friends and family.

Advertising may help Maybelline's bottomline, but where would the beauty company be without consumer loyalty? Thankfully for Maybelline, the makeup company has some of the most loyal customers out there. After surveying shoppers, digital agency Corra Research found that Maybelline, as well as Neutrogena and L'Oréal, "earned high marks for both long-term users and loyalty." It may surprise you to learn that millennials are more loyal to Maybelline than they are to brands like MAC or Urban Decay. Baby boomers, too, stick with Maybelline over classic labels like Estee Lauder, Clinique, and Avon. In fact, when analyzing brand loyalty by generation, Maybelline was considered second only to CoverGirl by millennial's and baby boomers alike.

Even professional makeup artists swear by Maybelline staples. And that doesn't just mean mascaras, but also foundations, lip tints, and even eyeliners and eyebrow pencils. Clearly, Maybelline provides what makeup lovers want in their products.

Just as the pros like a wide variety of Maybelline products so, too, does the average consumer. According to digital agency Corra Research's comprehensive study, Maybelline's blushes, bronzers, concealers, and foundations were the second most-used cosmetic products of any brand. The study noted, "For eye products like eyeliner, eyeshadow, brow pencils, and mascara, Maybelline was the most used by women, followed by CoverGirl and Revlon."

 One of Maybelline's most-beloved products outside of their mascaras is the Instant Age Rewind Eraser Dark Circles Treatment Concealer. According to a Maybelline press release cited by Allure, this concealer was not only named the number one in the mass (budget-friendly) makeup category in 2018, but also the top of the prestige (luxury) market. Oh, and did we mention that you can it get for under $10? Well, you can.

Even supermodels wear the stuff. "I have used this many times on Gigi [Hadid] solely for the purpose of perfecting the skin without using foundation," Maybelline global makeup artist Erin Parsons revealed in a statement to the publication. "I am able to cover blemishes and under-eye darkness using two different tones." Sold.

In January 2017, Manny Gutierrez (aka YouTube's Manny MUA) cryptically tweeted, "Maybe HE'S born with it" along with a winking face emoji. By then, though, many of his fans had already heard the news. As Glamour reported a day earlier, Maybelline announced a partnership with the ever-popular beauty guru for its Colossal Big Shot mascara. This marked two big firsts for the label: partnering with an online beauty influencer and partnering with a male ambassador. In a statement provided to the publication, Gutierrez said he was "thrilled to be able to work with a global brand like Maybelline that is recognizing male influencer talent and is willing to shine a spotlight on it." 

In an interview with PopSugar, Gutierrez further revealed that it felt "amazing" to join the likes of other Latinx Maybelline ambassadors like Adriana Lima. He continued, saying, "I love feeling that culture is represented, especially as a male and a Latino in the beauty world — that is such an unheard-of thing. So I feel like it's a huge honor to be included in such a high-profile group of lovely ladies who are also Latina."

In 2019, Maybelline released its Color Sensational Made For All Lipstick. According to the product's description, the company crafted the cosmetic "using specially selected pigments" that were "tested on 50 diverse skin tones."

Maybelline went into more details about the process on Instagram. "Over a span of 2 days, 5 makeup artists conducted 2,500 evaluations and tested 50 different women to find their perfect shade of red," the brand revealed. For under $9, you can purchase any of the seven shades, which range from Spice For Me, a deep burnt orangey shade, to a brighter pink color called Fuchsia For Me. But are they actually as versatile as promised?

As of this writing, the product sits at 4.4 stars on Ulta's site and 91 percent of consumers say they'd recommend the product to a friend. Glamour staffers who tried out the shades shared their responses, which ranged mostly from likes to even a "l-o-o-o-ve." Maybelline is so sure consumers will love the lipsticks that they even come with a money-back guarantee, according to Business Insider.

Maybelline went into more details about the process on Instagram. "Over a span of 2 days, 5 makeup artists conducted 2,500 evaluations and tested 50 different women to find their perfect shade of red," the brand revealed. For under $9, you can purchase any of the seven shades, which range from Spice For Me, a deep burnt orangey shade, to a brighter pink color called Fuchsia For Me. But are they actually as versatile as promised?

"L'Oréal does not test any of its products or any of its ingredients on animals and has been at the forefront of alternative methods for over 30 years," L'Oréal Group states on its official site. This is true of Maybelline, too, as it is a L'Oréal-owned label. However, there's more to the story. PETA claims that Maybelline is still among the beauty brands that tests on animals and thus says you "don't need Maybelline's cruelly produced items to feel pretty."

Although L'Oréal itself does not test its products on animals in the United States or elsewhere, their products are sold in China, where, as L'Oréal Group states, "the health authorities still require and carry out animal testing for certain products." Brands that are not sold in China have maintained their "cruelty-free" status, but Maybelline is one of their labels that "cannot have a 'cruelty-free' logo due to the cosmetics regulation in China." According to the company, L'Oréal is "the most active company working with the Chinese authorities towards a total elimination of animal testing."

Let's be real. Buying makeup can be fun, sure, but it can also be a frustrating process. Concealers and foundations have a way of looking like the perfect shade in the bottle and then somehow magically transform into being two shades lighter or darker once it comes time for application. Thanks to all the wonderful technological advancements, though, you can now try on makeup without actually having to scour through shade after shade at the drugstore.

Maybelline's Virtual Makeovers promises to help you find the right products for you personally by enabling you to virtually try on everything from blush to lipstick. Their Foundation Finder can help you match a product to your actual skin tone. And, thanks to the Maybelline Brow Play Studio, you can even change the shape and thickness of your brows with the click of a button. What better way to figure out if the bushy brow trend will work for you or if, you know, you'll turn into a full-on werewolf.

The untold truth of Maybelline
The List 
BY BRITTANY BROLLEY/SEPT. 13, 2019 11:31 AM EDT

"Victorian Era Gibson Girls" home-cooked their mascara from ashes

They also used singed bottle corks and the blackish juice of elderberries. In 1872, French perfumer-entrepreneur Eugène Rimmel invented the world’s first commercially available mascara. His lash-plumping formula was simple: petroleum jelly and coal dust. (Rimmel, now owned by global cosmetics giant Coty Inc., still produces a variety of popular mascaras today.
Applying Rimmel’s messy mascara was nothing to blush at. Users first dampened a rigid brush that looked like a mini toothbrush, then rubbed it across a gumstick-sized rectangle of a pigmented “cake.” It was little more than a hunk of black soap. With running water often tough to come by at the time, women sometimes used saliva to wet the brush, earning mascara the nickname “spit black.”
By the turn of the 20th century, the concept of mascara as a beauty enhancer had lashed out and taken hold across the pond, here in the United States, only we were still making it on our own. That is until in 1915 in Chicago. There, a scrappy, 19-year-old entrepreneur and Kentucky farm boy named Thomas Lyle Williams watched with curiosity as his older sister Maybel, who’d burned her eyelashes and eyebrows in a kitchen accident, dabbed grime on her eyelashes. She concocted the homespun mascara from what everyone else did at the time -- coal-dust ashes, burnt cork and petroleum jelly. Seeing dollar signs in Maybel’s smoky eyes, Williams borrowed his buddy’s chemistry set and got busy tweaking her formula, which she dubbed “the secret of the harem.”
Williams’ first recipe flopped. When Maybel tried the oily blend of cottonseed oil, carbon black and Vaseline, it bled down into her eyes and stung like heck.
He went back to the drawing board, hopped on a train to Detroit and ordered a fresh round of supplies from Parke-Davis, a wholesale drug supplier. (Also on a historical note, America’s oldest and once largest drugmaker, Parke-Davis is now a subsidiary of the pharmaceutical giant Pfizer.) Determined to be successful, Williams hunkered down in a boarding house with a few family members and melted the supplies he scored down into black beauty gold. The second time was the charm.  
Next freshly bankrolled with a $500 loan from his older brother, Williams officially launched his finished product, Lash Brow Line. It was an overnight sensation with the locals. William changed the mascara’s name to Maybelline, a catchy combination of Maybel and Vaseline, put his sister’s face on the packaging and an iconic American brand was born. The company sold the mascara by mail order at first, then later in stores throughout the country and, eventually, the world. Hollywood was no exception, where ultra-glamorous silent film stars took to the lash darkener, pushing it further into the mainstream.
 The Maybelline brand, now owned by French beauty products conglomerate L'Oréal, has risen to become the world’s leading cosmetics brand. To this day, the multibillion dollar household brand sells one of its trademark green and pink packaged Great Lash mascara tubes every two seconds. Not too shabby for a business founded on a hope, a prayer and glorified gelatinous gunk.

All in all, the extraordinary rise and staying power of mascara through the ages is something to bat your lashes at indeed, tears, rain or shine.

https://www.entrepreneur.com/topic/maybelline

Maybelline vs. Max Factor. One devoted exclusively to EYES, the other known as Make up Artist to the Stars


When Maybelline was born in 1915 and until the late 1930's, women used the word Maybelline for mascara, saying,  "I need to order my Maybelline," not, "I need to buy mascara," and like Max Factors Face Make-up, Maybelline was consi

dered "the Provence of whores" and not used by respectable ladies.  

Maybe that's why Tom Lyle used the term  "Eye Beauty Aids" and marketed Maybelline as pure and healthy for lashes and brows.  Eventually Maybelline was referred to as Mascara and had no negative connotation.




Max Factor started out selling hand made wigs and theatrical make-up to the growing film industry and soon coined the word "make-up" based on the verb phrase "to make up" (one's face) in 1920.  Up until then the term ‘"cosmetics’’ had been used as the term for ‘"make-up" and was considered to be used only by people in the theater or of dubious reputation and not something to be used in polite society.



By the 1940's the Factor Brand expanded into a variety of cosmetics while Maybelline remained strictly Eye Beauty.


In this 1937 Maybelline Ad Tom Lyle used brilliant color, a Maybelline First!  As Technicolor film replaced Maybelline's black and white ads.  Notice the products are now attached to cards that were placed on display racks - another Maybelline First, and the 75 cent box of Maybelline was  scaled down to a small 10 cent size so all women could afford a box of Maybelline during the Great Depression. 

From 1915 to 1967 when Tom Lyle sold The Maybelline Company to Plough Inc, Maybelline controlled over 75% of the eye beauty market and never experienced competition from any other cosmetic company.

Read more about Maybelline's supreme control of the eye beauty market and Tom Lyle Williams genius as the King of Advertising in "The Maybelline Story."

My guest blogger, YouTube Personality Kathryn A. Fisher, tells The Maybelline Story and gives a great Tutorial


I am a 56 year old makeup junkie with a ton of ideas to help baby boomers look fabulous! I will be producing videos about skincare and makeup aimed at my fellow over 45 crowd with an eye for bargains...I will also do DIY beauty and pretty cool giveaways. : ) I've lately been doing what is known as a "Docutorial", a combination of a documentary of the cosmetic brand and a makeup tutorial.

I've got loads of experience from using makeup throughout the years. I am a true victim of five decades of fads and makeup mistakes. Experience comes in handy!
I should get credit for the sheer guts to appear on YouTube without makeup on for my tutorials! lol
: D
I look forward to meeting new virtual sisters (and brothers)here. We can all learn from each other in this wonderful beauty blogging community!




Kathy A's: MAYBELLINE History and Full Face Make Over !


Thank you Kathy for making this wonderful video of The Maybelline Story along with showing everyone how to apply Maybelline New York's products today.  I learned a couple new tricks myself and though I still love Maybelline's Great Lash, I will try Maybelline Rocket Mascara  asap.  Your YouTube Channel is great and I love your voice and camera persona.  Your voice is so calm and pleasant and your demonstration easy to follow.  Great  job!  I'm a subscriber now!!!
















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/

Maybelline Magic, was in the BOX..

1954, Maybelline ad, showing how to apply, eyeliner, eye shadow and mascara.




My cousin, Noel P. (Williams,) Huber, sent me this picture, of Maybelline eye shadow boxes, that would be stamped with the Maybelline logo and filled with cream shadows, during the 1950's.




In the 1950's, this gold metal Maybelline box, would arrive at De Luxe Mascara, (Maybelline's mascara company,) and be filled with a black cake of mascara, a little black brush, a mirror and directions on how to apply Maybelline mascara.


My cousin Chuck, aka, BB1, and my sister Donna, and I, will be visiting with Bill, and Steve Snyder of... VAULT CARS... to view Tom Lyle Williams, 1940 Packard Victoria, this Thursday, March, 22. 


Stay tuned for fun pictures and video's next weekend.


Thank you for following the Vintage Maybelline Docu-Blog, the most extensive, documentary blog on the Internet.   ONE BIG NAME...ONE BIG FAMILY...ONE BIG STORY. Be sure to pick up your copy of The Maybelline Story today!!!!

Maybelline's Vintage Packaging,- 1915 - 1960

Some of the most memorable vintage Maybelline products, from the 20th Century.  Now a piece of art.





















Tom Lyle Williams was one of the most innovative entrepreneurs and advertising wizards in the 20th Century.  People accused him of being a dreamer.  He proved the neysayer's wrong.  He never gave up on his dreams and he surrounding himself with like-minded, inspiring people, who helped him  shoot for the moon.
         
                           He made it!!!

Maybelline is still the number one Eye Cosmetic in the world, after nearly 100 years, and it all started with TL.



Tom Lyle Williams at 19 years of age.


Maybelline Kissing Sticks, 1977.

When Schering-Plough took over Maybelline in the 1970's, they expanded the Eye Beautifier line to include lip stick, face make up and nail polish, to compete with Revlon, Max Factor etc's, full line of cosmetics.  Compare this video with the one I posted yesterday and see the difference in style, fashion and beat.

Come see a full presentation of Maybelline's fascinating history as I show never before shown Maybelline vintage ad's and family pictures on screne.