Cosmetics
Cosmetics
Pagcaliwagan
ChE 3301
Cosmetic Industry
Cosmetics
Any substance intended to be rubbed, poured, sprinkled, sprayed or applied to any part
of human body for purpose of
Cleansing
Beautifying
Promoting attractiveness
History
"A woman without paint is like food without salt."- Roman philosopher, Plautus
10,000 BC:
4000 BC:
Men and women in Egypt use scented oils and ointments to clean and soften
their skin and mask body odor. Cosmetics are an integral part of Egyptian
hygiene and health. Oils and creams are used for protection against the hot
Egyptian sun and dry winds. Myrrh, thyme, marjoram, chamomile, lavender, lily,
peppermint, rosemary, cedar, rose, aloe, olive oil, sesame oil, and almond oil
provide the basic ingredients of most perfumes that Egyptians use in religious
ritual.
Egyptian women apply galena mesdemet (made of copper and lead ore) and
malachite (bright green paste of copper minerals) to their faces for color and
definition. They employ a combination of burnt almonds, oxidized copper,
different-colored coppers ores, lead, ash, and ochre -- together called kohl -- to
adorn the eyes in an almond shape. Women carry cosmetics to parties in
makeup boxes and keep them under their chairs.
3000 BC:
Chinese people began to stain their fingernails with gum arabic, gelatin,
beeswax, and egg. The colors used represent social class: Chou dynasty royals
wear gold and silver, with subsequent royals wearing black or red. Lower classes
are forbidden to wear bright colors on their nails.
1500 BC:
Grecians whiten their complexion with chalk or lead face powder and fashion
crude lipstick out of ochre clays laced with red iron.
1500 BC:
Chinese and Japanese citizens commonly use rice powder to make their faces
white. Eyebrows are shaved off, teeth painted gold or black and henna dyes
applied to stain hair and faces.
1000 BC:
Grecian women paint their faces with white lead and apply crushed mulberries as
rouge. The application of fake eyebrows, often made of oxen hair, is also
fashionable.
Chinese and Japanese citizens commonly use rice powder to make their faces
white. Eyebrows are shaved off, teeth painted gold or black and henna dyes
applied to stain hair and faces.
1000 BC:
Grecians whiten their complexion with chalk or lead face powder and fashion
crude lipstick out of ochre clays laced with red iron.
Early cosmetics
100 AD:
In Rome, people put barley flour and butter on their pimples and sheep fat and
blood on their fingernails for polish. In addition, mud baths come into vogue, and
some Roman men dye their hair blond.
300-400 AD:
Henna is used in India as a hair dye and in mehndi, an art form in which complex
designs are painted on to the hands and feet, especially before a Hindu wedding.
Henna is also used in some North African cultures.
1200 AD:
As a result of the Crusades, perfumes are first imported to Europe from the
Middle East.
1300 AD:
In Elizabethan England, dyed red hair comes into fashion. Society women wear
egg whites over their faces to create the appearance of a paler complexion. Yet,
some thought cosmetics blocked proper circulation and therefore posed a health
threat.
Renaissance cosmetics
In Europe, only the aristocracy use cosmetics, with Italy and France emerging as
the main centers of cosmetics manufacturing. Arsenic is sometimes used in face
powder instead of lead.
1500-1600 AD:
European women often attempt to lighten their skin using a variety of products,
including white lead paint. Queen Elizabeth I of England was one well-known
user of white lead, with which she created a look known as "the Mask of Youth."
Blonde hair rises in popularity as it is considered angelic. Mixtures of black
sulphur, alum, and honey were painted onto the hair and left to work in the sun.
1800 AD:
Zinc oxide becomes widely used as a facial powder, replacing the previously
used deadly mixtures of lead and copper. One such mixture, Ceruse, made from
white lead, is later discovered to be toxic and blamed for physical problems
including facial tremors, muscle paralysis, and even death.
1900 AD:
needed assistance to look young, they often entered salons through the back
door.
Classification of Cosmetics
Sunbathing products
Skin-whitening products
Anti-wrinkle products.
Shaving products
Products for making-up and removing make-up from the face and the eyes
Face masks
Tinted bases
Depilatories
Deodorants
Cosmetic Products
Lipstick
A cosmetic product containing pigments, oils, waxes, and emollients that applies
color, texture, and protection to the lips
Symbol of feminity
Formulation of Lipstick
Waxes : provide structure and strength to the lips, also responsible for gloss
Lip gloss
Formulation
Mineral oil
Castor oil
BHT
Vitamin E (acetate)
Jojoba oil
Eye Shadows
The raw materials are principally pearlescent agents dispersed in a powder base
composed of talc (which give softness and easy glide), kaolin, titanium dioxide or
calcium carbonate. Volatile silicones help to avoid the chalky effect owed to
powders
Eye Liner
Modify and correct the appearance of the shape of the eye and are applied with a
small brush
Eye Mascara
Used to enhance the eye beauty. It may darken, thicken, lengthen or define the
eye lashes
Formulation
Pigments
Oils
Waxes
Preservatives
Foundation
Formulation
Palsticizers: camphor
Rouges
Formulation
Preservative
Perfume
Cetyl alcohol
White petrolatum
Eyebrow pencils
High wax containing hard crayons for darkening the eyebrow and to impart
pseudo growth of eyebrows when one is evident
Formulation
Yellow wax
Paraffin wax
Cocoa butter
Petrolatum
Carbon black
Compacts
Compact powder is a face a powder compacted into cake, applied on face with a
powder puff.
Talc
Zinc oxide
Rice starch
Magnesium carbonate
Colloidal clay
Color pigment
perfume
Shampoos
Remove sebum, skin particles, dirt without excessively degreasing the hair
Formulation
Surfactants
Conditioning agents
Opacifiers
Chelating agents
pH adjusting agents
Face powder
Formulation
Covering powders
Adherents
Depilators
Formulation
Chemicals
Carrier
Binding agent
Perfumes
Dentrifices
Used to clean oral cavity and teeth using fingers of hand or toothbrush
Formulation
Humectants
Binders
Sweetening agents
Flavoring agents
Preservatives
Anticaries agents
Deodorants
Correct bad body odor by deodorizing perspiration without restriction its flow and
also by preventing decomposition through bacteria inhibiting action
Formulation
perfume
makeup - 38%
In recent years, consumers have been spending higher levels of disposable income on
cosmetics than they had in the past. Unfortunately, the global financial crisis has put a damper
on the market and during those years, more affordably priced merchandise and do it yourself at
home products were key in the beauty market. Although there are some exceptions, generally
speaking, for all products the higher the household income, the higher the spending
percentages. However, in recent years as Generation Y has really entered the job market, they
have become a big driver of the cosmetics market in the United States. There also seems to be
an increased interest in natural and organic beauty products particularly in the United States
and Europe and worldwide sales were $9 billion and projected to bet $14 billion by 2015
according to Organic Monitor.
Some manufacturers like Aveda, The Body Shop, and M A C have their own stores but most
products are sold in drug stores or department stores. Drug stores sell typical consumer brands
like Boots, Botanics, L'Oreal, MAX Factor, Cover Girl, Maybelline, etc. Sometimes stores sell
their own or an exclusive brand, such as Sonia Kashuk, sold by Target. For more "upscale"
products, department stores sell from manufacturers like Clinique, Prescriptives, Lancme, etc.
Some manufacturers like Aveda, The Body Shop, and M A C have their own stores but most
products are sold in drug stores or department stores. Drug stores sell typical consumer brands
like Boots, Botanics, L'Oreal, MAX Factor, Cover Girl, Maybelline, etc. Sometimes stores sell
their own or an exclusive brand, such as Sonia Kashuk, sold by Target. For more "upscale"
products, department stores sell from manufacturers like Clinique, Prescriptives, Lancme, etc.
Quiz
1. Grecian women paint their faces with white lead and apply crushed mulberries as
______.
2. Remove sebum, skin particles, dirt without excessively degreasing the hair.
3.
4. There also seems to be an increased interest in natural and organic beauty products
particularly in the _______ _____and ______ and worldwide sales were $9 billion and
projected to bet $14 billion by 2015 according to Organic Monitor.
5. Lip gloss give lips a glossy ______.
6. It is made of copper and lead ore.
a. Mendhi
b. Amalgams
c. Henna
d. Galena mendesmet
7. Today in cosmetic industry, lipstick / lip gloss has a percentage of?
a. 28% - 33%
b. 29% - 34%
c. 28% - 34%
d. 29% - 33%
8. It Improves personal attractiveness.
a. Foundation
b. Face powder
c. Rouges
d. Deodorant
9. Eye mascara is made up of the following except?
a. Perfume
b. Oils
c. Pigments`
d. Waxes
10. It is used in India as a hair dye.
a. Shampoo
b. Conditioner
c.
Henna
d. Mendhi
11-13. Give at least three ingredients of eyebrow pencils.
14-16. Give at least three classification of cosmetics.
17. Where is dyed red hair comes into fashion?
18. It whitens the Grecians complexion
19. Inventor of lipstick
20. Any substance intended to be rubbed, poured, sprinkled, sprayed or applied to any part of
human body for purpose of cleansing, beautifying, promoting attractiveness, altering the
appearance and includes any article intended for use as a component of cosmetics.
Answers
1. rouge
2. Shampoo
3. Plautus
4. United State and Europe
5. lustre
6. d
7. b
8. b
9. a
10. c
11-13. Yellow wax, Paraffin wax, Cocoa butter, Petrolatum, Carbon Black
14-16. Toilet soaps, deodorant soaps, Perfumes, toilet waters and eau de Cologne, Bath and
shower preparations, Depilatories, deodorants etc.
17. Elizabethan England
18. chalk or lead face powder
19. Abual-Qasim al-Zahrawi
20. Cosmetics