Showing posts with label Applying Make Up in Public. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Applying Make Up in Public. Show all posts

Sunday, April 20, 2025

Etiquette for Reapplying Lipstick

 

If one’s lipstick is on the cup, it isn’t on the lips any longer. Reapplying a bit of lipstick at the table is fine with Etiquipedia, as long as one does it without show and it is a one step process only. Lip liner, a base coat or top coat are not allowable without excusing oneself to go to the powder room or elsewhere to apply. We are torn over the 1983 advice for powdering one’s nose. We feel that anything that requires the opening of a compact and mirror at the table, is best left for another setting.

To Makeup or Not

Is it proper to touch up your shiny nose and your lipstick at the table when you're dining out?

Most etiquette experts say a discreet dab of powder and lipstick is fine and might even be a trace alluring, but a major repair job belongs in the ladies' room.

A subtle touch up of powder to take away face shine and freshening of lipstick does not mean adding lipliner, lip gloss and eye makeup, though. Remember, makeup should remain a mystery to the observer. – Desert Sun, 1983


🍽️Etiquette Enthusiast, Maura J. Graber, is the Site Editor for the Etiquipedia© Etiquette Encyclopedia

Monday, July 15, 2024

1963’s New Etiquette for Teens

Advertisement for teen girls in 1960’s Seventeen Magazine

A teen-age girl doesn't HAVE to wait for her date to open the car door…

She MAY apply powder or lipstick at a restaurant table ...

There are times when ANYONE may put his elbow on the table!

These are some of the new standard-setting etiquette hints designed with today's teen-agers in mind by Enid A. Haupt, author of “The Seventeen Book of Etiquette and Entertaining,” just released by the David McKay Co. Writing with strong personal conviction and a deep understanding of young people, Mrs. Haupt, who is editor-in-chief of Seventeen Magazine, explores all areas where teen-age girls and boys may feel unsure and answers questions before they arise on subjects ranging from eating to dating, from meetings to skating.

For the first time ever in an etiquette book, complete chapters are devoted to “The Art of Saying No Nicely,” a “16-Point Plan for Making Good on College or Prep-School Weekends” and “When You Eat or Entertain in Restaurants.” Subjects including beauty parlor etiquette, school, sports and spectator manners, job manners, dating, telephone talk, hotel and bus travel, and the formalities of life are handled.

Don't wait and wait for your date to open the car door. “This is one of those agonizing customs. It's good manners for him to open the car door for you so it's good manners for you to wait until he can get around the car to do it ... If, however, he gets out of his door and then just waits for you to join him, hop out by yourself. If he’s one that does (open the door), appreciate him.”

“You may touch up your lipstick or powder the tip of your nose” at a restaurant table. “But .. the place for major reconstruction is the ladies' room.”

Elbows “are fine on the table - occasionally - except when you have food or eating implements in hand.” –San Bernardino Sun, 1963




Etiquette Enthusiast, Maura J. Graber, is the Site Editor for the Etiquipedia© Etiquette Encyclopedia

Wednesday, December 14, 2022

“Prinking” in Public is Bad Habit

Some women might like to have revived that custom of 200 years ago when beaux used to attend their women friends at their toilet table, but there is no charm or coquetry about seeing a woman wield a powder puff or lipstick in public. There was some artifice about the ladies of 200 years ago. For they had taken an hour at their dressing table to make ready for their dressing. Their maids had thoroughly made them, up and the hair had been labored with to produce the desired effect of charming disarray. Then, too, the men of those days left a renewed interest —and so, too, would the men of today if the custom were revived— in the fact that they were seeing something that all the world might not see—there was something a little risqué about chatting to a lady in her boudoir, even though it was sanctioned by conventional etiquette. 


“There is a time for some things and a time for all things; a time for great things, and a time for small things.”—Cervantes

Grandmother used to think its shockingly bad manners for a woman to put on her gloves after she had left her own front door. They should, not only be on, but all buttoned up by the time she started forth. What would the gentle old soul think if she could see the girls of this day who not only put on their gloves after they have left their homes, but adjust their veils by the nearest penny-in-the-slot chewing gum vendor, tuck up their stray locks with “invisible” hairpins taken from their handbags, and, anywhere or at any time that their little mirror in the top of their bags prompts them to do so, powder their noses and chins regardless of spectators? 

Of course, the young woman with what we call the finer instinct does not do these things, but the practice of “prinking” in public is by no means confined to the class of women who are usually not regarded as lacking in manners. I have seen many a woman, when the lights were partly down at the theater or the opera, surreptitiously pull a powder puff from her opera bag and, with a skilled stroke, efface any effect that the warmth may have had on her perfect makeup. One thing is certain and that is that no man ever enjoys seeing women of his acquaintance perform these little rites of the toilet table in public. 

Some women might like to have revived that custom of 200 years ago when beaux used to attend their women friends at their toilet table, but there is no charm or coquetry about seeing a woman wield a powder puff or lipstick in public. There was some artifice about the ladies of 200 years ago. For they had taken an hour at their dressing table to make ready for their dressing. Their maids had thoroughly made them, up and the hair had been labored with to produce the desired effect of charming disarray. Then, too, the men of those days left a renewed interest —and so, too, would the men of today if the custom were revived— in the fact that they were seeing something that all the world might not see—there was something a little risqué about chatting to a lady in her boudoir, even though it was sanctioned by conventional etiquette. 

But with all the world and his wife looking on when your lady fair powders her nose or publicly acknowledges her own poor, health or lack of vitality by applying rouge to cheeks or carmine to lips, what can you—mere man—do but pray that some kind fate might give her the gift to see herself as others see her? – By Mary Marshall Duffee, 1917


🍽Etiquette Enthusiast, Maura J. Graber, is the Site Editor for the Etiquipedia© Etiquette Encyclopedia