LIPS STYLE
Lips Style - Cleo Lipstick Vibrator White Pink (Dimensions: 10.2 cm, Water Resistant)
Lips Style - Cleo Lipstick Vibrator White Pink (Dimensions: 10.2 cm, Water Resistant)
Now the LYPS STIYLE brand is launching a quality lipstick vibrator with 10 incredible vibration modes, encased in silky soft, anti-allergenic silicone. Now, not only a lipstick is a symbol of femininity, but also a symbol of pleasure, evolution and history have led to the reasoning and freedom of women, the pleasure of living everything, STYLE It It style inspires in the history of women's lipsticks and in honoring 100 years of history, selling the best vibrator lipsticks for women today!
- Anti-allergenic silicone
- USB rechargeable included
- 10 vibration patterns
- 1 engine
- Powerful and silent
- Lithium ion battery
- Easy to clean
Although its creation may be even older if we consider the pigments we use from Egyptian and Greek culture, the text and knowledge date back to its first century and it remains in effect as a complex symbol of femininity.
Is there any woman who doesn't carry a lipstick in her purse? It can, although it is undeniable that this item is the epitome of feminine beauty and an icon of popular culture. The laboratory turns 100 years old and remains the best-selling makeup product with almost 1,000 million units worldwide.
The history of the labia may be even older if the primary makeup of ancient women is considered. In one part of Egypt, some natural pigments functioned as the basis of today's makeup. The nets are fused to give the colors that are used in the eyes and mouth, but at first they were only allowed for the aristocratic social class. (Also read What if women want to wear makeup?)
In Greece, changing women painted their lips to indicate that they were prostitutes, while in Rome they became high-class ladies.
Ancient pharaohs and kings also wore make-up, although this fact was far from a matter of vanity, for them make-up was related to the separation of spirits and medicinal properties. For example, they attributed properties to ward off the evil eye or to represent the power of their ancestors.
But the revolution would come in 1915 from the hand of American producer Maurice Levy. With the idea of making application easier and eliminating the cumbersome process of needing a brush - which, paradoxically, is coming back into fashion today - Levy and other manufacturers felt that a simpler and more hygienic presentation was the solution.
After many attempts, Levy created a stick-shaped balm that was a little unstable at first, but later became the product we see today. In short, he designed a lipstick attached to a platform - which slid as the lipstick was worn - and which was inside a metal tube with a cap. In this way, the bar became reusable.
Voilá, something so simple is still today the product par excellence and a complex symbol of femininity. Loved by the majority, but scrutinized by the most radical who categorize it as an oppressive, macho, provocative and terribly sexual object, lipstick still remains on the beauty market.
The lipstick is perceived as an object of consumption and personal arrangement accepted in an environment where modernity is desired and professional success prevails as the goal of life (...) But we must not forget the first function of makeup, namely that of create a visual illusion.
It temporarily alters the face and therefore the way its users appear to others, as a study by the Catholic University of Peru entitled Lipstick: Identity, Presentation and Experiences of Femininity describes.
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This research also suggests that certain colors accentuate these macho practices. Red lip color has always had an eminently sexual connotation.
The elements that identify femininity may be understated, but they contain discourses and knowledge that tell us about what it means for society not only to be a woman, but also to achieve a certain ideal image. The cosmetic industry plays with these symbolic values, the text indicates.
The union of make-up and advertising has probably given birth to one of the most powerful weapons of mass propagation of all time. From magazines, mass media and now social media, the ideal of perfection, of fashion, of trend, of being a woman, a man, a child, a homosexual, is enhanced by constant presentations of models of this life.
The labial has played an important role at key moments in history. As well as being an item for theatre, for example, it was a product marketed by Elisabeth Arden during the Second World War in a campaign called the Debt Campaign to try to tone down the crisis through which the world passed.
PRODUCT INFORMATION
- Total length: 10.2 cm
- Diameter: 2.5 cm
- Weight: 45 gr
- Material: Silicone and ABS
- Color: White and pink
- Water resistant: Yes
- Battery: USB rechargeable