Take
Skincare Matters Into Your Own Hands
Indulge in Baths Ritually
In Sophia Coppola's 2006 film Marie Antoinette, Antoinette,
played by Kirsten Dunst, can often be found de-stressing in a large white
bathtub inside her decadent Versailles wash room. And it's not a
dramatization—the queen bathed frequently even though it was uncommon for the
time. According to Melanie Clegg, author of Marie
Antoinette: Intimate History, she would spike her bath water with
skin-soothing pine nuts, linseed, and sweet almonds, as well as gently
exfoliate her skin with rice bran-filled muslin pads.
Try an All-Natural Hair Color Boost
Antoinette loved all-natural, D.I.Y. elixirs
for her hair, too. In fact, underneath her towering gray wigs, she was a
strawberry blonde. To pull out the copper tones and increase vibrancy, she'd
apply ginger-hued, plant-based ingredients such as turmeric, sandalwood, and
rhubarb to her strands in paste form, says Clegg.
Fake a Beauty Mark
During the 18th century, smallpox was a major
endemic disease that left many with dark marks and deep scars on their face. In
tandem with other makeup techniques, such as a veil of creamy white face powder
and heavy-handed rosy rouge on the cheeks, women would conceal pock spots with
faux beauty marks made of velvet or satin called mouches,
in cheeky shapes such as hearts, moons, and stars. And they could convey
different things based on placement. A heart shape on the right cheek indicated
that you were married, for instance, while shapes near the corner of the eye
denoted passion. Antoinette was said to have applied hers near the corners of
her mouth to indicate she'd like a kiss.
Surround Yourself with Fragrance
During Antoinette's reign, the Palace of
Versailles, despite its arresting beauty, left much to be desired when it came
to odor due to its lack of adequate bathrooms. To ensure a pleasant smelling
bedroom, Antoinette would fill her space with fresh flowers and potpourri, as
well as mist fragrance—she was partial to rose, jasmine, tuberose, and
especially orange blossom—and apply essential oils, such as lavender, onto her
body. Antoinette was also notorious for her obsession with signature
fragrances, looking to French perfumer Jean-Louis Fargeon to create bespoke
scents including the rose, jasmine, and bergamot blend she kept with her, even
during her imprisonment in the Tower of Paris.
Credit: Vogue

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