@🌐Sugar Xyler I teach classes over video conference if you are interested. Prices depend upon the type of class but if you are interested let me know and I'll give you my business e-mail.
Those "came in" with Brooke Shields, in the Calvin Klein commercials, in 1980. Parents gasped, at both the controversial content of the ad and at the brows.
I can remember in the early 1970s when salons became unisex. There would be a mix of people older women getting a blue rinse, and young teenage boys like myself getting a shaggy cut. And the salon would have Gary Glitter blaring out on a Stereo.
Oof military grooming standards... When I was in the Marines in the 80s, it was "above the bottom edge of the collar, and arranged in a neat, attractive, feminine style". Makeup was that "lips and eyes" were required, in appropriate shades. If you got a cold sore, you needed a "no lip chit" during boot camp. I'm allergic to most lipsticks, so... yeah.
I was in the Navy in late 70s, we weren't allowed to wear makeup in boot camp. A little vaseline smoothed on the eyelashes helped to condition and define them.
While I was in the Navy from 2005-2010 makeup was optional and had to be natural. A red lip was allowed as long as it wasn’t overly dramatic. Hair couldn’t go past the collar. No extreme hair or bright nail polish was allowed.
Woah that's wild. When I went to bootcamp we weren't allowed to wear makeup. They also cut our hair into these god awful bobs...which makes no sense either bc once you're out and in the fleet or a student you bun it up. It would make sense if you always had to keep your hair cut into some regulation navy bob for females, but that wasn't the case. Of course, males had their heads completely shaved in bootcamp. Fleet- same regulations as most other branches. I do remember filling out a few chits to have some tattoos approved though.
Love it. He exactly explained to her how the hair style would still work even after her concerns with the hat. They just don’t do it like this anymore. I love vintage beauty videos. Especially the color matching make up videos, it’s nice to see hair dressers took their jobs just as serious ❤️
5:00 Whoooaaa... PURPLE nail polish? Trippy! Don't wear _that_ to the office! Fast forward to today; when we wear jewels, studs, and every color imaginable on our nails. In every length and shape imaginable.
I grew up in the 1980s and that's pretty much how I was raised, and I raised my girls the same way. Lol. For me, though, my mom was a lot more strict. No pierced ears. Pale pink nail polish. No makeup until 16. With my girls I was still strict but nothing like that. I let them wear makeup when they started high school, and took them to Clinique for their first lessons. No bright red lipstick or crazy nail polish colors. Blue, green, purple, big glitter nail polish doesn't look chic to me. Once they had a job at 16, they could buy whatever colors they wanted. They went SUPER Vamp for a while. And then Vamp lipstick with mint green or baby blue nails. They had fun with all of it. They knew I just thought it was funny, nothing bad or crazy. They went through their winged eyeliner phase, their nail art phase. It taught them the value of money, if you work several hours, it becomes your time that you're spending on something at the store, not some imaginary piece of paper. They learned what looked good, they learned to value their time and money, and they've actually reverted to my much more simple style in their mid-20s.
@@carelixacosta5601 or 1971. Seeing those hair styles and attire are like walking back in time! Remember the white frosted nail polish? and all the blue eyeshadow? Wow. and the frosted lipstick? Of course these days, one sees blue and black nail polish, even green, so each era has its features.
"Each woman is an individual and represents an individual set of problems." I like the real talk. Whenever I try to get makeup/hair/style advice or tips, all I get are a showering of toxic positivity (you look FINE, you need to ACCEPT YOURSELF just the way you are, F those beauty standards, blah blah blah). No, Ashleigh/Ashlee/Ashley, I don't want to go out looking like a swamp monster, I want to look presentable.
I was a teen in the 70's, that wasn't anything near realistic. That was more like the early to mid '60's when I was a toddler or in early grade school. Totally mislabeled.
@@8luvbug How old are you and what year were you born? Those of us who were alive during that era know what we SAW in real life! Don't believe everything you see on social media!!!
Oh my gosh. I remember watching these type of movies in basic training in 1975 as a WAF at Lackland AFB!!! This type of training would go over like a lead balloon today. I'll take the old days any time.
It's like a swarm of young women with greasy hair out there nowadays. I'll be watching a vlog and the uploader says offhandedly, "I'm putting my hair up today because I haven't washed it yet this week." HUH?! Back in the 1980s we would never have even left the house with dirty five or six day hair LOL. Let alone filmed ourselves in that state for public consumption. It's quite strange.
@@denverdubois5835 You're right, it never would have happened. Remember all the mousse and gel we used in the '80's? We looked good. I'm sure some would imagine that to be conceited, but we did look good, minus the shoulder pads and overly spiked hair, :).
@@denverdubois5835 it actually depends on your hair type. If you have dry and frizzy hair generally, it's recommended to wash once a week by hairstylists, same for long hair as well, otherwise you experience frequent breakage. Also back in the 80s big poofy hair was trending so of course nobody would have visible slight grease lol
@@dreambrush7251 This is correct. Naturally oily hair may need washed more often but dry hair will suffer from too much washing. Stripping the hair of its natural oils, especially if you have curly hair like mine, is not beneficial. I wash once per week and have no issues.
I always felt this was important for teenagers . I know not everyone can afford a salon, but you can afford a bar of soap and shampoo for a dollar at the dollar tree. I see so many young people who don't know how to groom themselves. It's very sad. This would be a great addition to any high school student Home Ec. Classes. I think it would be good for Morale.
@Pink World I agree. Today's moms are lazy. They don't think many of them seem to care about it. I wasn't that kind of mother. I was always presentable when I picked up the children from school or conferences. I remember my mother always doing the same. While other mothers were wearing rollers in their hair, my mother was always well coiffed.
They don't care what they look like today..enough tattoos to be an Aborigine...piercings like a bull..and dressing like crap..and showing off body parts in public..yeah .real classy times we have now..😂🤣💯
@@cacatr4495 It depends on the school, but very many who have that offering don't call it Home Economics anymore. It's sometimes called "Living on your Own", or has been broken up into individual subjects (Culinary, Apparel & Textiles, Home Decor, etc.) and is placed under the Family and Consumer Sciences umbrella.
It wasn't "psychedelic," it was just a large print. People here are suggesting they were high, but many spoke like that back then. Sometimes it was a put-on (an act), sometimes it wasn't.
@@aamanpour3630 That one did sound high, you're right, and many spoke slowly and softly, but I think those were just the results of high levels of estrogen.
I like it, too. A lot of women where I was born (Eastern Europe) speak like that. But here in America, majority of women have such metallic-sounding voices, it grates the ears. Like something stuck in their throats. 😔
@@agirlisnoone5953Someone wirh common sense. These people will believe anything that's on a screen. As if Marilyn really spoke like that. As if real women in their everyday lives had nothing else to worry about but restraining themselves and their natural voices everytime they spoke...
@@JRNarian really! once the 70s hit (this seems like late 60s tbh) women started to shed the traditional mentality and started to become more free-minded.
Starting at 4:50 that's the Robin Mary Paris (the "dancing troll" girl) that you see in some of the music videos of old songs posted on TH-cam, ("Love Grows Where Rosemary Goes", Summer In The City"etc) th-cam.com/video/OTebyR-vQA0/w-d-xo.html
For Pete's sakes, this is 1970! Fashion doesn't change overnight. 1967 to 1973 is all the same except for the daily news. 1973 to 1979 those are the years where there will be some new innovations in fashion 🌼 and vehicle styles that in turn will bleed into the early 80s. The early 80s still had some late 60s blood stain 😅
I was a teen from 1958 to 1964. Styles were pretty boring then! Once the Beatles came, everything seemed to change, especially hair and clothing styles!
Early to mid '60s it seems to me, I graduated in '78... and in the boonies. Nobody EVER was weird enough to use such a lame word as 'groovy' when I was a teen, you'd have been harrassed about that forever. Only time I ever saw someone use 'groovy' was on 'Laugh In', and that show made me roll my eyes SO bad.
@@Glimmmerra agreed I graduated in '79. I think this could have been early seventies as the hairdresser looks like my teachers from elementary and junior high school. A lot of women were stuck in the sixties styles.
Ugh I love glamourdaze but the comment sections are always so sexist and toxic. What makes people think just because the hairstyles were nice 50 years ago, we also need to go back to that attitude?? This channel needs to monitor that a little better, it's always a frustrating experience having people talk trash the women of my generation. I always leave this channel in a bad mood.
@@sallyguberman6310 The cosmetician could have been gentler and smoother in application, slower, more gracious about it, and that is why I think the model was reacting, to the roughness. The cosmetician should have coached on that.
“each woman is an individual and represents an individual set of problems” I spilled my water laughing at that 😂
Seriously, so funny!
Said every man who ever got married 🤣🤣🤣
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
@@peecee1384🙄
Lmfao me too! What a comment
That girl's bestie took the role of a hippie pretty seriously 🤣
The bestie is Robin Mary Paris who is immortalized in numerous You Tube videos as "The Dancing Troll." She has quite a fan base.
She looks like a drag queen here.
She Nailed it..
@@coolcpa3321She also had a small role in Woody Allen's film Annie Hall. She passed away in 2022 💙
As a professional makeup artist I love watching these older tutorial videos. Its so interesting to me.
Well gee, I need your help
😂
@🌐Sugar Xyler I teach classes over video conference if you are interested. Prices depend upon the type of class but if you are interested let me know and I'll give you my business e-mail.
Shut up
Same❤
Little did they know that the shaggy brow would become the popular brow look of the 80's!
Yes! 🤣
I never liked the shaggy brow,heavy brows don't look good on a women
@@lindahollander3588 Well those are my natural brows without any plucking!
Yours don't look too heavy ,you look nice. 👌
Those "came in" with Brooke Shields, in the Calvin Klein commercials, in 1980. Parents gasped, at both the controversial content of the ad and at the brows.
I can remember in the early 1970s when salons became unisex. There would be a mix of people older women getting a blue rinse, and young teenage boys like myself getting a shaggy cut. And the salon would have Gary Glitter blaring out on a Stereo.
Oof military grooming standards...
When I was in the Marines in the 80s, it was "above the bottom edge of the collar, and arranged in a neat, attractive, feminine style". Makeup was that "lips and eyes" were required, in appropriate shades. If you got a cold sore, you needed a "no lip chit" during boot camp. I'm allergic to most lipsticks, so... yeah.
I was in the Navy in late 70s, we weren't allowed to wear makeup in boot camp. A little vaseline smoothed on the eyelashes helped to condition and define them.
While I was in the Navy from 2005-2010 makeup was optional and had to be natural. A red lip was allowed as long as it wasn’t overly dramatic. Hair couldn’t go past the collar. No extreme hair or bright nail polish was allowed.
Woah that's wild. When I went to bootcamp we weren't allowed to wear makeup. They also cut our hair into these god awful bobs...which makes no sense either bc once you're out and in the fleet or a student you bun it up. It would make sense if you always had to keep your hair cut into some regulation navy bob for females, but that wasn't the case. Of course, males had their heads completely shaved in bootcamp. Fleet- same regulations as most other branches.
I do remember filling out a few chits to have some tattoos approved though.
Why in hell would you need lipstick on in boot camp. Bizarre.
No lip chit?
Love it. He exactly explained to her how the hair style would still work even after her concerns with the hat. They just don’t do it like this anymore. I love vintage beauty videos. Especially the color matching make up videos, it’s nice to see hair dressers took their jobs just as serious ❤️
I love natural 70s makeup and fashion
70s makeup and fashion was not natural 🤣
I’m addicted to vintage lifestyle videos send help 💀
5:00 Whoooaaa... PURPLE nail polish? Trippy! Don't wear _that_ to the office!
Fast forward to today; when we wear jewels, studs, and every color imaginable on our nails. In every length and shape imaginable.
This video was made for military women. Different rules than for civilians although, yes, purple probably wasn't worn by many to work.
I grew up in the 1980s and that's pretty much how I was raised, and I raised my girls the same way. Lol.
For me, though, my mom was a lot more strict. No pierced ears. Pale pink nail polish. No makeup until 16.
With my girls I was still strict but nothing like that. I let them wear makeup when they started high school, and took them to Clinique for their first lessons. No bright red lipstick or crazy nail polish colors. Blue, green, purple, big glitter nail polish doesn't look chic to me. Once they had a job at 16, they could buy whatever colors they wanted. They went SUPER Vamp for a while. And then Vamp lipstick with mint green or baby blue nails. They had fun with all of it. They knew I just thought it was funny, nothing bad or crazy. They went through their winged eyeliner phase, their nail art phase. It taught them the value of money, if you work several hours, it becomes your time that you're spending on something at the store, not some imaginary piece of paper.
They learned what looked good, they learned to value their time and money, and they've actually reverted to my much more simple style in their mid-20s.
This is a little earlier then the 70’s…it’s more like the 60’s.
Absolutely, doesn't look like the 70s at all!
Also think late 60 years from 1966 to 1969. Very nice video. A great time. Greetings from Germany Torsten
Probably 1970
I was a teen in the late 60s, early 70s. This is definitely 60s.
@@carelixacosta5601
or 1971. Seeing those hair styles and attire are like walking back in time! Remember the white frosted nail polish? and all the blue eyeshadow? Wow. and the frosted lipstick? Of course these days, one sees blue and black nail polish, even green, so each era has its features.
Love these classic docs; quite the visual time capsule they are, eh 👍❤👍!!!
I love the accents in this. ❤❤❤
I love their voices
i love the 70s fashion!!!👢👚
Always love the vintage
"Let me tell you this but I'm sure you've heard it before: Cleanliness is good for the hair" ---> Looks at him like "You think I'm dirty?" 😆
The groovy friend was right on, Dude!
Absolutely nobody I knew every used the word 'groovy' in the '70's... I graduated in '78. Incredibly lame... that was in the early 60's probably. Eww.
As a professional hairstylist, this is FANTASTIC 🤣❤️✂️
I really miss those magnolia blonde colours, I hope they come back one day.
That barber is VERY Southern
This is fabulous! ❤
"Each woman is an individual and represents an individual set of problems." I like the real talk. Whenever I try to get makeup/hair/style advice or tips, all I get are a showering of toxic positivity (you look FINE, you need to ACCEPT YOURSELF just the way you are, F those beauty standards, blah blah blah). No, Ashleigh/Ashlee/Ashley, I don't want to go out looking like a swamp monster, I want to look presentable.
Lol! This is so true in today’s world
Ashleigh/Ashlee/Ashley😭😭😭😭
Yeah honesty's the best. YOU LOOK FILTHY! TAKE A BATH! There. 😄 You can swish me later.
Yes ma'am! Spread those facts!
Yeah Ashlie, what do you know?!
I'm a 70s baby.😍😍😍 love this!
I was a teen in the 70's, that wasn't anything near realistic. That was more like the early to mid '60's when I was a toddler or in early grade school. Totally mislabeled.
That wasn't the 70's darlin, that was the 60's!!!!
Why do I think you're lying?
@@8luvbug How old are you and what year were you born? Those of us who were alive during that era know what we SAW in real life! Don't believe everything you see on social media!!!
@@Glimmmerra I was talking to op, but okay.
I've got my own individual problem. I need to look alive and alert.😂 This video has me Rollin'!
Oh my gosh. I remember watching these type of movies in basic training in 1975 as a WAF at Lackland AFB!!! This type of training would go over like a lead balloon today. I'll take the old days any time.
As a woman I'll take the new, outside of the USA though
Oh wow I live 40 minutes from Lackland!
I got my hair real big beauty queen style
Driving down the coast going bout 99
@@catcat9582 Got my bad baby by my heavenly side
@@xxromanovaxx6682 my high heels on, I’m feeling alive
I know if I go, I'll die happy tonight
@@CosmicZero515 Oh, my God, I feel it in the air
Telephone wires above are sizzlin' like a snare
Very cool vintage.😊😊😊
I love this 💓🌸💓 do you have any 80s beauty vids?
As a teen in the 80's, the make up was awful. I cringe when I look back.
I LOVED this!
1970s: "you have to wash your hair frequently"
today: "if you wash your hair too much, you'll damage it"
It's like a swarm of young women with greasy hair out there nowadays. I'll be watching a vlog and the uploader says offhandedly, "I'm putting my hair up today because I haven't washed it yet this week." HUH?! Back in the 1980s we would never have even left the house with dirty five or six day hair LOL. Let alone filmed ourselves in that state for public consumption. It's quite strange.
@@denverdubois5835
You're right, it never would have happened. Remember all the mousse and gel we used in the '80's? We looked good. I'm sure some would imagine that to be conceited, but we did look good, minus the shoulder pads and overly spiked hair, :).
@@denverdubois5835 it actually depends on your hair type. If you have dry and frizzy hair generally, it's recommended to wash once a week by hairstylists, same for long hair as well, otherwise you experience frequent breakage. Also back in the 80s big poofy hair was trending so of course nobody would have visible slight grease lol
@@denverdubois5835 oof you would not like the early 1900s when they only washed hair once a month lol
@@dreambrush7251 This is correct. Naturally oily hair may need washed more often but dry hair will suffer from too much washing. Stripping the hair of its natural oils, especially if you have curly hair like mine, is not beneficial. I wash once per week and have no issues.
Yay another video❤❤❤ I love this channel
Love these!
I'm amazed by his hair!👌
Brilliant to see this, thanks for uplaoding it 🙏👌😁
I think someone overlooked that hairdresser guy when it came to a good cut and the right style. 😂
This was ASMR inducing
Love these videos
This was awesome and really informative 💜💜👍
My mother says this looks like about 1966 or 67.
Maybe it was then in California or NYC.
1970. 60's style bled in the 70s until about '73, then the 70's style had it's own identity
I always felt this was important for teenagers . I know not everyone can afford a salon, but you can afford a bar of soap and shampoo for a dollar at the dollar tree. I see so many young people who don't know how to groom themselves. It's very sad.
This would be a great addition to any high school student Home Ec. Classes. I think it would be good for Morale.
Nowadays i see everything from teens to adults wearing pajamas! It all starts at home!
@Pink World I agree. Today's moms are lazy. They don't think many of them seem to care about it. I wasn't that kind of mother. I was always presentable when I picked up the children from school or conferences.
I remember my mother always doing the same. While other mothers were wearing rollers in their hair, my mother was always well coiffed.
They don't care what they look like today..enough tattoos to be an Aborigine...piercings like a bull..and dressing like crap..and showing off body parts in public..yeah .real classy times we have now..😂🤣💯
They don't have Home Ec. Classes anymore, do they?
@@cacatr4495 It depends on the school, but very many who have that offering don't call it Home Economics anymore. It's sometimes called "Living on your Own", or has been broken up into individual subjects (Culinary, Apparel & Textiles, Home Decor, etc.) and is placed under the Family and Consumer Sciences umbrella.
Love her dress
Wow her hair turned beautiful 😍❣️❣️👍 how they did that!
I like that "purple raspberry glow" is a light pink.
Brilliant as always !! 😃👍❤❤❤❤❤❤
With a clean and well-cared-for complexion..you will always look 😊👍 good..
My go-to channel 😊
They used use the face shaped a lot , also any hair formations how the hair grew .. Looks like the 60’s not 70’s 😳👏👏👌
Perfect skin
Tom; now there’s a really swingin’ guy…
😆
Definitely the 60s, mid to late.
Loving the honesty 😂
I am dying for there skin how clean how nice ughhhhhhhhh😢
Isn’t their skin gorgeous?
@@daisydukes8252 yessss but how i wanna know 🧐😊
The hippie with the southern belle accent
the girl at the end is high af right ?
Looks like 60’s hair to me too 🥴. This video is cracking me up 😂😂😂
🤭🤣 I Love the part where he says make up can "make a woman appear more alert and alive" .
.
.
"The Shaggy Look" is my thick eyebrows after I wake up lol 😅😅😅
"Each woman is an individual and represents an individual set of problems!"
Lmao.... love these time capsule vids; ty GD
This is what the Minister says to the groom at the altar 🤣🤣
😂😂😂😂😂
@@peecee1384
Lol.. cheers
Ikr and it’s always some paternal male voice telling women all about woman stuff
@@fighterflight
True!
how high was that brunette in the psychedelic mini dress lol?
thought so too 😂
It wasn't "psychedelic," it was just a large print. People here are suggesting they were high, but many spoke like that back then. Sometimes it was a put-on (an act), sometimes it wasn't.
@@cacatr4495 The way she spoke was annoying lol. High or not, she sounded as if she was. Maybe it was in to sound high? Grooooooooooovy.
@@aamanpour3630
That one did sound high, you're right, and many spoke slowly and softly, but I think those were just the results of high levels of estrogen.
Impecables 🌷
Sage advice indeed 😊
Precious!!!
I love how woman spoke so softly like marylin
I like it, too. A lot of women where I was born (Eastern Europe) speak like that. But here in America, majority of women have such metallic-sounding voices, it grates the ears. Like something stuck in their throats. 😔
@@mimosa27 i doubt you've met the "majority" of american women...
These women are acting... They are using a trained voice. Women didn't mostly talk like that
@@mimosa27 😂😂😂
@@agirlisnoone5953Someone wirh common sense. These people will believe anything that's on a screen. As if Marilyn really spoke like that. As if real women in their everyday lives had nothing else to worry about but restraining themselves and their natural voices everytime they spoke...
Omg I loved this can you find a real 90s one similar to this atmosphere?
the 90s wasn't this structured lol. We rebelled and did all kinds of things.
@@JRNarian really! once the 70s hit (this seems like late 60s tbh) women started to shed the traditional mentality and started to become more free-minded.
@@dazem8 it’s from the year 1970 so makes sense
First off, his hair is majestic.
He's Billy Bob, the Southern good-ol-boy women's hair stylist!
This is a real swingin' video
Starting at 4:50 that's the Robin Mary Paris (the "dancing troll" girl) that you see in some of the music videos of old songs posted on TH-cam, ("Love Grows Where Rosemary Goes", Summer In The City"etc) th-cam.com/video/OTebyR-vQA0/w-d-xo.html
Damn that makeup makes her skin glow
So interesting to see this.
How to be pretty? First step: Already be pretty.
Which every woman is
@@madeleine774 let’s not be delusional
Robin is so pretty
I’m an esthetician…..
Watching this skincare “Routine” was torture! 😂
Haha! The makeup artist at about 2:34 really seemed like she was about to say, "waaaylll, my advice would be to quit while you're ahead."
Am i the only one that thinks shes just so pretty!
1:45: Me being narcissistic and not paying attention to anyone else. 😂
For Pete's sakes, this is 1970! Fashion doesn't change overnight. 1967 to 1973 is all the same except for the daily news. 1973 to 1979 those are the years where there will be some new innovations in fashion 🌼 and vehicle styles that in turn will bleed into the early 80s. The early 80s still had some late 60s blood stain 😅
I was a teen from 1958 to 1964. Styles were pretty boring then! Once the Beatles came, everything seemed to change, especially hair and clothing styles!
This looks more like the early 60s than 70s.
I was a teenager in the 70s and this seems more like late 60s, but perhaps it's really early 70s?
Early to mid '60s it seems to me, I graduated in '78... and in the boonies. Nobody EVER was weird enough to use such a lame word as 'groovy' when I was a teen, you'd have been harrassed about that forever. Only time I ever saw someone use 'groovy' was on 'Laugh In', and that show made me roll my eyes SO bad.
@@Glimmmerra agreed I graduated in '79. I think this could have been early seventies as the hairdresser looks like my teachers from elementary and junior high school. A lot of women were stuck in the sixties styles.
It says 1970.
Oscar worthy acting :)
This was a trip!
This is a fantastic restoration! I can literally smell the cigarette smoke and cocaine on the set!
Your second mention was about 20 years premature. That was not 'in' at that time, but was much more 'in' in the 1980's.
@@cacatr4495And in the late 70s. Everyone in Studio 54 was a cokehead
My grandmother was surely there
Bless their hearts ......this must have been filmed in Alabama !
Awwww a family project
Love these ❤❤❤
Lovely video. Still applies.
Hairstylist and lactation consultant? I can't be the only one! 🤣🤣🤣
the wild comb-over part on the first young woman at 1:47
I want whatever the long haired girl in the minidress is on
I literally see my mom❤
Was she in this video?
I love the obnoxious best friend 😂
That is quite some ‘do’ he’s sporting himself 😂😂
Dude imagine the pressure all these girls got! Sheesh! Like you had to be perfect all the time....
Kinda like today….
Kinda nice to know other people noticed and cared-society had expectations which was good.
"Some people say don't use soap." lol.
I was in my 20’s in the 70’s and I don’t remember hair being like those styles the fashion was to have long hair
Not her bestie just casually dropping a hint into the conversation that "by the way, I think your boyfriend isn't entirely straight."
Well that cleared things up
Epic!!!
Ugh I love glamourdaze but the comment sections are always so sexist and toxic. What makes people think just because the hairstyles were nice 50 years ago, we also need to go back to that attitude??
This channel needs to monitor that a little better, it's always a frustrating experience having people talk trash the women of my generation. I always leave this channel in a bad mood.
What is she wiping across the face at 4:08 ? Is it foundation ?
Yes, that's foundation.
@@cacatr4495Thanks, It seems to be applied so roughly The model’s face has an odd expression during it too!
@@sallyguberman6310
The cosmetician could have been gentler and smoother in application, slower, more gracious about it, and that is why I think the model was reacting, to the roughness. The cosmetician should have coached on that.