Hi! Newbie here, can ya tell?
I'm looking for someone who knows a lot about old makeup. The nice people over at the ebay forums sent me here.
My husband's grandmother has a tube of Revlon Touch & Glow lipstick (at least, I THINK it's lipstick) that belonged to her mother. Her mother died in 1972. I think it may be from early to mid 60s.
I dont know if this is lipstick or some sort of concealer/coverup. It looks white, and I assume it's supposed to be white since the color printed on the label on the bottom of the tube is E56 Ultralite. (I've done a lot of research in my career field with the same types of pigments that go into makeup and I have never heard of a pigment that loses all of its color after 30-40 years.) I suppose that was popular back in the 60s, but I cant figure out for the life of me why a sixty-something woman would want to wear white lipstick.
I have attached links to two pictures of the lipstick. My question is, does anyone know what year this may have been manufactured? I searched on ebay and Google for vintage Revlon products and ads, and I saw that the font for the "Touch & Glow" changed between the 50s and 60s a couple of times. I saw the font that was used on this product on an ad from 1961 and 1967, but one for 1962 wasnt quite the same. Can anyone help?
lipstick tube
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v80/kat9375/sideview.jpg
bottom of tube
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v80/kat9375/bottom.jpg
I'm looking for someone who knows a lot about old makeup. The nice people over at the ebay forums sent me here.
My husband's grandmother has a tube of Revlon Touch & Glow lipstick (at least, I THINK it's lipstick) that belonged to her mother. Her mother died in 1972. I think it may be from early to mid 60s.
I dont know if this is lipstick or some sort of concealer/coverup. It looks white, and I assume it's supposed to be white since the color printed on the label on the bottom of the tube is E56 Ultralite. (I've done a lot of research in my career field with the same types of pigments that go into makeup and I have never heard of a pigment that loses all of its color after 30-40 years.) I suppose that was popular back in the 60s, but I cant figure out for the life of me why a sixty-something woman would want to wear white lipstick.
I have attached links to two pictures of the lipstick. My question is, does anyone know what year this may have been manufactured? I searched on ebay and Google for vintage Revlon products and ads, and I saw that the font for the "Touch & Glow" changed between the 50s and 60s a couple of times. I saw the font that was used on this product on an ad from 1961 and 1967, but one for 1962 wasnt quite the same. Can anyone help?
lipstick tube
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v80/kat9375/sideview.jpg
bottom of tube
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v80/kat9375/bottom.jpg