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Red nail theory this and red car theory that—there’s no denying the color is having a moment, but the power of a red lipstick is what everyone is talking about right now.
A cosmetics policy that applies to only one sex, such as a policy requiring women to wear lipstick or a policy forbidding men to wear nail polish, is considered a form of sex discrimination by some critics. Sex-specific cosmetics policies may place burdens on women workers and may also present difficulties for transgender and non-binary people ...
The issue of whether it is possible to be a feminist while embracing femininity, particularly through the use of lipstick, has sparked debates within feminist circles for years. The ideology of lipstick feminism asserts that one can wear lipstick and still identify as a feminist, as feminism encompasses far more than superficial appearances.
Women are thought to have worn the equivalent of a red lipstick as early as 10,000 B.C. [8] As such, the link between sexual receptiveness and red may be a result of social conditioning; however, this social conditioning may have originated for biological and evolutionary reasons, and is simply an extension of our primal instincts.
Red lipstick is powerful, provocative, and deeply personal. Here, how (and why) a swipe of scarlet remains as timeless as ever.
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Brazil is participating of the One Laptop Per Child project, [37] aiming at providing low cost laptops to poor children in developing countries, but the program is moving slowly. The Human Rights Measurement Initiative [38] finds that Brazil is doing 86.8% of what should be possible at its level of income for the right to education. [39]
Being a makeup artist for more than-- ahem -- 25 years now, I have learned there is undeniable power in using cosmetics to our advantage. All women -- and, yes, I do mean all, even the most ...