Health and wellness routines in the 21st century are all about cleanliness, but people from ancient time periods relied on some rather disturbing beauty trends. Styles constantly change, though. And the things that are really popular right now (think dewy skin and thick eyebrows) could become faux pas in just a few years. For example, back in the early ’90s, everyone liked super thin brows that were over-plucked and tweezed like crazy. Today, that’s a major no-no.
In fact, people from the past knowingly hurt themselves just to “look good.” Sometimes, they even risked death to adhere to their respective eras’ beauty standards. Beauty lovers did what was considered normal, just as modern individuals do today. But let’s hope the disturbing beauty trends below are truly remnants of the past.
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Many people from historical civilizations used lead to make their skin look paler. In ancient Greece, for example, men and women slathered their faces with lotions made of white lead. The mixture allegedly cleared blemishes and improved the color and texture of their skin.
Ancient Romans also used white lead to lighten their skin color.
Moreover, in the 15th, 16th, 17th, and 18th centuries, both men and women painted their faces with a mixture of white lead and vinegar. Some individuals even peeled their skin with white lead. As a result, many people got lead poisoning and eventually died.
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The ancient Egyptians are known for their heavy eye makeup, but they didn’t use liquid eyeliners to achieve the signature look. Instead, a mixture of malachite (green ore of copper), galena (lead sulfide), and lead-based kohl helped create their smoky cosmetics. All of those components were very dangerous.
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In ancient Greece, Hippocrates created a mixture of cumin, pigeon droppings, horseradish, and nettles in an attempt to cure baldness. And before that, in ancient Egypt, men blended iron-oxide, lead, onions, honey, alabaster, and fat from various animals into a paste and applied it to their hairless heads. Neither mixture worked.
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They wanted to look like Queen Elizabeth I, and the monarch had super thin, almost non-existent brows and a large forehead. Consequently, some women got rid of their eyebrows and much of their hairline. Apparently, they used walnut oil or bandages soaked in ammonia and vinegar as hair removal agents. Yikes! Moreover, women in the 15th century reportedly preferred higher hairlines because larger foreheads were thought to signify great intelligence.
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Up until the late 1800s, people in Japan considered black teeth incredibly trendy. The practice, called ohaguro, helped indicate wealth and sexual maturity, especially for women.
Beauty scholar Victoria Sherrow explained the ohaguro “was primarily a means to hide a woman’s mouth expressions, something that was also achieved by graceful movements of the hand or a fan.”
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In the 19th century, trends dictated that women should have tiny waists. Corsets shaped with metal helped women achieve the look, but the cost was great.
According to old X-rays, women who wore the corsets daily suffered from squashed rib cages and displaced organs. Unfortunately, waist training corsets are in style again, but at least modern ones aren’t made of metal!
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In the Victorian era, women strove to achieve what Brooklyn-based artist and researcher Alexis Karl called the “dying of tuberculosis” look.
To achieve that particular look, they put deadly nightshade into their eyes in the evenings. Allegedly, they knew the compound could cause blindness, but they were willing to risk it. Now that’s terrifying!
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Also during Victorian times, Bavarian women submerged themselves in arsenic to achieve milky white skin. Apparently, the toxic bath made them look ethereal. Unfortunately, the women were also poisoned, so it wasn’t really worth it.
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From the 10th century to the 20th century, women in China participated in foot-binding, “one of the most dangerous fashion trends in history.”
To get them, women underwent an incredibly painful process. They broke the bones in their feet, bound them, and then walked on them for two years, creating a whole new shape using tiny lotus shoes. Foot-binding wasn’t just painful; it caused a lot of medical problems and some fatalities.
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They also wanted towering piles of hair, like Marie Antoinette’s. So, they fashioned elaborate wigs using, among other things, animal lard. The hair pieces had frames of wood and wire and were stuffed with cotton, wool, and straw. Hair draped over the frames, and beef lard or bear grease held everything in place. A layer of powder covered the entire construction. Incredibly hazardous, the wigs gave people scalp scars. Some individuals even acquired lice. Additionally, the animal fat was highly combustible.
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Today, mud baths are the luxurious beauty treatments that restore and rejuvenate the skin. But back in ancient Greece and Rome, people preferred crocodile dung.
The smell must have been awful.
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Many women from the Renaissance era wanted to look as pale as possible. At the time, wealthier people didn’t work outdoors and acquire tans, so anyone with paler skin was presumed to be privileged. Accordingly, women found leeches in the forest and let the insects suck their blood. The blood loss made them paler, so they endured the pain.
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In 1936, Isabelle Gilbert invented a machine that allegedly created dimples. Marketed to women, the machine had two knobs that pressed into the wearer’s cheeks.
Plus, the American Medical Association said it could potentially cause cancer. Luckily, this trend didn’t last long.
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This one sounds painful and uncomfortable; women used dangerous tooth powders to whiten their teeth.
The powders worked, but they also completely stripped teeth of their enamel, leading to pain and infections.
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Obsessed with their figures, Victorian women purposefully ingested tapeworms.
Consequently, the women lost weight quickly. To get rid of the tapeworms, they took pills or used special devices. In fact, Dr. Meyers of Sheffield created a cylindrical, food-stuffed tool to remove the creatures. But the device was inserted through the digestive tract, and it often choked patients to death.
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The Romans, for example, obsessed over white teeth and even brushed their teeth with urine. They also used the liquid body waste as a mouthwash, preferring Portuguese urine over any other kind. Even though urine does contain ammonia, a natural cleaning agent, we’ll pass!
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Back in the early 1900s, Sears sold Arsenic Complexion Wafers.
Arsenic wafers did help people achieve clear complexions. However, it also had the potential to poison people or even cause death. And it was sold at Sears! This makes us slightly worried.
It makes you wonder; is there anything we do now that will seem disturbing a hundred years in the future?
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