Culture | A mirror on our times and theirs

Mint, wax, poisonous plants: beauty tips from Renaissance Italy

A new book tells the rollicking and relatable history of cosmetics

“Woman at her Toilette”, a 16th-century oil painting by the School of Fontainebleau
Ready for her close-upImage: Bridgeman

Three litres of blood from a healthy red-headed man “no older than 25 or 30” could fix bad skin. Eating nettles was a trick for rosier cheeks. A paste made from marble, wheat and bryony, a poisonous plant, could whiten skin. Most beauty products in Renaissance Italy were made from ingredients that seem strange or foolhardy to modern eyes.

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This article appeared in the Culture section of the print edition under the headline “A mirror on our times and theirs”

From the August 19th 2023 edition

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