The Beauty Rewind: How Red Lipstick's Past Will Shape Its Future


To me, red lips have always been a significant marker of adulthood. After years of seeing the gorgeous women on both sides of the family sporting eye-catching red lips for everything from a last-minute trip to the grocery store to a lengthy church service, I was finally given the go-ahead to wear my own with pride. Said empowerment stuck with me as I moved throughout the day, and I was suddenly wondering when I would begin to be called “auntie” by the younger members of my family.

I know I’m not alone in my connection to crimson lipstick. Red lipstick has held a special power over past generations of beauty lovers, so to explore its rich history and how it will shape what we’ll see in the future, I tapped one of the industry’s household names: beauty enthusiast, historian, and Co-Founder of Bésame Cosmetics Gabriela Hernandez. She aims to bridge beauty’s past and present by re-creating 100 years of shades, packaging, and products, so it’s no surprise that the brand’s red lip colors continuously catch my eye. Every red lip color tells a story (especially when it comes to its complex relationship with femininity, womanhood, and the female gaze), and here, she dives into how each narrative ultimately informs future trends.

The Red Lips of Yesterday: Sensuality, Status, and Subdued Femininity

(Image credit: Archive Photos/Getty Images; Silver Screen Collection/Getty Images; Mirrorpix/Getty Images;Donaldson Collection/Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images; Art by Audrey Hedlund)

Red is a power color and will always possess a pull on those who wear it and see it. Red lipsticks have also had a complex past that can inform us of why red lips have been regarded negatively and positively throughout history. In ancient Egypt, aristocrats favored wearing red ochre mixed with resin and carmine as lipstick to indicate social status and power. Then, for centuries, red lips were connected to courtesans, sex workers, and individuals with libertine lifestyles who entire religious and political movements tried to rid society of. In the 1920s, women wearing vampy red lips were designated as self-sustaining individuals (and part of the scandalous party scene of the Prohibition era).