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Rouge (cosmetics)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Cosmetic for reddening the lips and cheeks
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Ancient Egyptian rouge compact

Rouge (/ˈrʒ/; meaning "red" in French), also calledblush orblusher, is acosmetic for coloring the cheeks in a variety of shades, or the lips red. It is applied as a powder, cream or liquid.

Each year, approximately US$25 billion is spent on buying rouge.[1]

History

[edit]

TheAncient Egyptians were known for their creation of cosmetics, particularly their use of rouge.[2] Ancient Egyptianpictographs show men and women wearing lip and cheek rouge. They blended fat with redochre to create a stain that was red in color.[3][4]

Greek men and women eventually mimicked the look, using crushed mulberries, red beet juice, crushed strawberries, or redamaranth to create a paste. Those who wore makeup were viewed as wealthy and it symbolized status because cosmetics were costly.[5]

In China, rouge was used as early as theShang Dynasty. It was made from the extracted juice of leaves from red and blue flowers. Some people added bovine pulp and pig pancreas to make the product denser. Women would wear the heavy rouge on their cheeks and lips. In Chinese culture, red symbolizes good luck and happiness to those who wear the color.[1]

In Ancient Rome, men and women would create rouge usinglead(II,IV) (red lead) andcinnabar. The mixture was found to have caused cancer, dementia, and eventually death.[6] Other sources for rouge (raw materials) includedmalachite andantimony.[7]

In the 16th century in Europe, women and men would use white powder to lighten their faces.[8] Commonly women would add heavy rouge to their cheeks in addition.

Studies have strived to research other reasons as to why individuals choose to color their faces in a red tint and what blushing may also signify to others. Blushing, the body's natural reaction to feelings of shame/embarrassment/guilt is often followed with a reddish coloring on one's cheeks on individuals whose bodies react as such. This reaction can be associated with different moral and human tendencies such as pro sociality and commitment to social relationships. Emotions are involuntary and instantaneous reactions, and because of this are pretty reliable. Knowing this researchers have used social emotions to understand how humans signal prosocial intentions. Embarrassment which is often accompanied by the reddening of the face can now be seen as an indicator of one's prosocial behavior.[9]

  • Wall painting form the House of the Ladies in Akrotiri on Thera (Santorini) from 1700-1600 BC showing rouge makeup
    Wall painting form the House of the Ladies inAkrotiri onThera (Santorini) from 1700-1600 BC showing rouge makeup
  • Illustration of woman wearing huadian on forehead and mianye, Five dynasties period, China (907-979)
    Illustration of woman wearinghuadian on forehead and mianye,Five dynasties period, China (907-979)
  • French illustration from 1768 showing rouge makeup
    French illustration from 1768 showing rouge makeup
  • Satirical etching of a woman applying rouge, 1823
    Satirical etching of a woman applying rouge, 1823

Contemporary

[edit]
A rougecompact with a mirror and brush

Modern rouge generally consists of a red-coloredtalcum-based powder that is applied with a brush to the cheeks to accentuate the bone structure. The coloring is usually either the petals ofsafflower, or a solution ofcarmine inammonium hydroxide androsewater perfumed withrose oil. A cream-based variant of rouge is schnouda, a colorless mixture ofAlloxan withcold cream, which also colors the skin red.[citation needed]

Today, rouge is a term used to primarily identify blush of any color, including: brown, pink, red, and orange. Modern blush is offered in both a pressed or loose powder, a cream consistency similar to lipstick, or a liquid form. It is not commonly used to identify lipstick; however, some may use the term to refer to the red color of the product.

When the fashion trend of matching lipsticks with nail polish took hold and the color range of lipstick increased, people no longer used the term to identify lip color. The shade range for blush generally remained limited, keeping the name rouge.[10]

Blush is made in the form of a cream, liquid, powder, or gel.[11]

  • Mary Pickford illustrated on a magazine 1916 wearing blush
    Mary Pickford illustrated on a magazine 1916 wearing blush
  • Contemporary blush compact and applicator brush
    Contemporary blush compact and applicator brush
  • Bengali bride wearing rouge
    Bengali bride wearing rouge
  • Applying rouge at São Paulo Fashion Week
    Applying rouge atSão Paulo Fashion Week
  • Powdered blush for sale in Oxford Street, London
    Powdered blush for sale in Oxford Street, London

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Face Blush Market Size & Share 2025-2030".360iResearch. 2025-05-23. Retrieved2025-07-09.
  2. ^"History of Rouge". Retrieved2021-07-22.
  3. ^Eldridge, Lisa (2018)."The Story of Make-up".BBC. Archived fromthe original on 2019-10-16. Retrieved2018-09-16.
  4. ^El-Kilany, Engy. "Facial Cosmetics in Ancient Egypt."Egyptian Journal of Tourism Studies, vol. 16, no. 1, 2017.
  5. ^"The gruesome and lengthy history of why we use blush".Business Insider. Retrieved2018-09-16.
  6. ^"Deadly Blush".Livingly. Retrieved2018-09-17.
  7. ^Словарь античности. Moscow =: Progress. 1989. p. 289.
  8. ^"A History Of Blush".Into The Gloss. 2016-02-24. Retrieved2021-07-22.
  9. ^Feinberg, Matthew; Willer, Robb; Keltner, Dacher (2012)."Flustered and faithful: Embarrassment as a signal of prosociality".Journal of Personality and Social Psychology.102 (1):81–97.doi:10.1037/a0025403.ISSN 1939-1315.PMID 21928915.
  10. ^"Cosmetics and Skin: Rouge".cosmeticsandskin.com. Retrieved2018-09-16.
  11. ^"Makeup of Makeup: Decoding Blush".WebMD. Retrieved2018-09-16.

External links

[edit]
Wikimedia Commons has media related toRouge.
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Major cosmetic brands
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