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Ride the TITLE WAVE into the 17th century

November 21, 2014

by Marci Jefferson

Ride the TITLE WAVE into the 17th century

My friend Christy Robinson is so clever  - she’s rounded up a list of 17th…

Girl on the Golden Coin – A Pearl-Themed Gift Giveaway!

April 21, 2014

by Marci Jefferson

Girl on the Golden Coin Pear-Themed Gift Giveaway

Girl on the Golden Coin has been on shelves for two months now. Two whole…

Advanced Copies and Free Giveaways!

October 24, 2013

by Marci Jefferson

Advance Reader Copies of GIRL ON THE GOLDEN COIN

Look what came in the mail! Advance reader copies of my debut novel GIRL ON…

A Shimmering Cover Reveal for Girl on the Golden Coin

July 29, 2013

by Marci Jefferson

A Shimmering Cover Reveal for Girl on the Golden Coin

This is a VERY exciting day for me because I get to share something very…

Lips Through the Millennia

March 12, 2013

by Marci Jefferson

Indian Collecting Cochineal with a Deer tail

A friend recently requested a lipstick recommendation, and I couldn’t name a single one. I’m…

Where to Begin…

February 21, 2013

by Marci Jefferson

Time to deliver on the goods. I promised meaty details on cosmetics in the seventeenth century, and today…I’m trying to decide where to begin.

When I started researching for THE DUCHESS OF RICHMOND, it was difficult to find information on the web about makeup during Restoration Period England. I quickly discovered the reason for this - there isn’t a ton of information out there in the first place.

The 1600’s were rather eventful. England split into Royalist and Parliamentarian factions and proceeded to bludgeon each other during the Civil Wars. These ended in 1649 when Parliament executed the head of the Royalists, King Charles the First. Royalists fled into exile, and the Puritan head of the Parliamentarians, Oliver Cromwell, took it upon himself to rule England as a Commonwealth for the next eleven years. Apparently Puritan rulers are pretty drab, because England got sick of the situation and invited the heir to the throne, Charles the Second, home. They called this the Restoration of the Monarchy, and legendary partying ensued.

Throughout this upheaval, there were necessary changes in access and attitudes toward cosmetics. Wars shorten supply. Puritans denounce artifice. Restored Monarchs revel in it. Despite the confusion, time was kind enough to preserve family letters, paintings, records left by herbalists, plays, poetry, woodcut illustrations, and extant cosmetic containers to help us. 

So as you read future posts on this blog about gross ingredients (puppy dog fat!), odd elements (mooches and plumpers!), and strange practices (forehead shaving!), keep context in mind! We’re going to jump around through the decades mentioned above to get an understanding of beauty trends in the seventeenth century. 

Gerrit Dou: A young woman at her toilet, 1667

Time to deliver on the goods. I promised details on cosmetics in the seventeenth century,…

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