Fun fact the "red" lipstick you see in black and white movies is acctually BLUE, since blue shows up so much better in the lighting and camera lences used.
Brands that offer refills/ sustainable packaging if you're interested. - Besamé Cosmetics - Elaté cosmetics. - Eré Perez - The Body Shop - Lush That's all I have purchased from and personally recommend.
When my grandma was a teenager her mom let her buy mascara and blush for the first time. So my grandma went to the store and bought that exact Maybelline mascara not knowing that it was a refill! So she thought all mascaras were like that for a few years. so she learned how to put mascara on with a Bobby pin and she still does it today!!
NO WAY haha I am glad your great grandma also made the same mistake, so I am not alone 😆 That is too funny your grandma just continued to apply it that way for so long!
I just went through my grandmothers old makeup and I have several tubes of lipstick. It smells horrible but it was made with bees wax. So much healthier than today.
My grandmother used to love pear soap, used it everyday up until she died last month. Her bathroom smelled of the orange pears soap. So i welled up a little when hope brought it on screen❤
If you ever want to try 1920-1970 vintage make up, without the expired scare, you should check out Besame Cosmetics! They have the classic styles , cake mascara, cream rouge and more. They label their make up with the year the recipe was created so you know what era you are buying. :) Their 1930 cake mascara looks just like the one you tried in this video.
23:17 so fun fact, my mom was obsessed with pears soap when i was little, so that was the soap that i used before i got older and discovered other products, and i can still remember the smell to this day. like throughout the whole section, i could literally smell the soap and when hope mentioned it, i was like “i know exactly what you’re talking about lmao”
I live in Australia and will be 60 at the end of the year. I enjoyed seeing a lot of these items. The spit and brush mascara I had, I wish they still made it. I now want to go get some pears soap, my favourite as a kid. Those sun lamps were used to help heal womens stitches after childbirth. Good fun hey. 😂
It's worth remembering that while a bar of soap might have only been 17 cents in the 20s, the average yearly salary in the US was only about $1300. It's all relative 😊
Did u know u can use eye drops or contact solution to add to ur mascara or eyeliner to bring it back to life or moisturize it. Just add in like 3-5 drops and shake it up 😊 I do it all the time, it really works! ✌️💜✌️💜
@@francy99fb i think she's just referring to dried out mascara. But YES please don't use expired mascara! Make sure you don't touch the dropper or bottle with your hands when you are doing this.
LOVE this video! I’m obsessed with vintage stuff, especially 1920s and 50s.. please do more videos like this😍 Also Besame has reproductions of vintage makeup, also the cake-mascara! Try it😍
Resident old lady here (P.S. love your style, and also have magenta-pink hair!) but I was, indeed, born in the 70s, and started using makeup in the mid 80s and, even then, brown eye liner, as well as brown mascara, was FOR SURE a "trend" (or fad as we called it "back in my day") until I found the iconic black "Great Lash", and the makeup game was on at that point! Lol.. 😉.. Keep up the fun, awesome vids! Take care!
@@Johanna-n2l Aw y’all are so cute. ❤️🫶🏻 I definitely will share her thoughts and let y’all know. She definitely speaks her mind too and criticizes, so I’m sure she’ll have some funny things to say. 😂
UV lights were used to treat Jaundice in new born babies. Even as late as 1998, I was advised by nurses to leave my baby by a window in the sun for a little bit. Worked.
I thought that was a general knowledge, in my home country babies are supposed to received a little bit of sun really early in the morning. Idk for what buuuttt yeah 😂
I was curious so looked it up and apparently it's actually the blue light that is helpful. Newborn babies with jaundice have a build up of bilirubin and so phototherapy helps breaks down the excess in their bodies. Nowadays, at least in the NHS (i'm british), it's not advised to just put your baby in the sun presumably because of the now known effect of UVs and the access to specific blue light emitters. Anyway, so sorry about the unprovoked information dump but I was curious and thought maybe others might be too. :)
Love this video so much! In the 1920’s nail polish the white actually would have been used under the top of the free edge of the nail to whiten the appearance kind of like a natural French manicure!
just a tip: if you have a dried out mascara, put some contact solution in the bottle and take the applicator and just vigorously mix the product with the solution!
In case you were curious... According to a US based inflation calculator $9.95 in the year 1959 is the equivalent of $107.64 in 2024, and the same price in 1950 becomes $129.97. So, at $108-$130, depending on when, in the 1950s, these were sold, these UV tanning bulbs were probably more of an investment really.
@@davidfl4 I'm assuming it wasn't considered? Which is more than fine lol I ♥ Hope and I dunno about you, but I'm not watching her for math content 😝 I only looked it up out of curiosity
@@desireeg5807 I really enjoyed the video actually. It just irked me cause you’d think it’s common knowledge that the value of money changes over time. She just kept making these comparisons that were, ultimately, completely wrong. No things were not “cheaper,” back then. You don’t have to act like I did something wrong for pointing this out😝. I love seeing big UA-camrs convey history to a broader audience, Hope did a good job, but it’s important that information is accurate.
I know this was a minor point you touched on in the video but THANK GOD. I have waited for people to realize that brown mascara is the way to go for most people. I was tired of seeing 5,000 shades of black “classic black” “very black” “blackest black”. As a natural redhead, I always felt that black was too much for me. Now I use redhead mascara :)
@@missMediaChick Crazy cause my mom was born in 1973 and the only color she ever told me to use was black and claimed that “you can’t see your lashes if you don’t”. Maybe this was because brown was in when she was younger?
My cousin was a miss pears in the UK in the 90s and all my family have all the memorabilia of it, it's so beautiful the packaging and the memorabilia it's gorgeous!!
There is a company now called Besame that has reproduction make-ups from the 1900's up. Their lipsticks are amazing, and I LOVE their mascara. It is seriously the best!
You can try Beseme makeup. They remake old make up with formulas that are safe. Their cake mascara/eyeliner is really nice. Also they have great lipsticks and all other makeup items. ❤
I sold Avon for a bit in the 80s. Lol I think I spent more than I ever sold 😅 between my mother and myself we have a few boxes of the little perfume bottles my very first one was a gift from a grandmother of sweet honesty perfume in a lounging unicorn bottle lol. Right now in my bathroom I have that small blue milk glass pitcher/bowl from Avon. I can't remember what was in it. Skin so soft oil maybe?
I could've sent you loads of vintage make up to try 🥺 I lost my nanny last year and I've kept ALL of her makeup from 1940 onwards just for the memories 🥰 there's some really cool stuff in there too, wish I could attach photos here 😭 I still use Avon make up to this day! New of course, I'm not sat digging through my nans dusty eyeshadows 😂 but I still get a brochure delivered every month and honestly they do some great stuff!!! And another fun fact about the pears soap... my MIL gave my partner a bar of pears soap to put at the end of his bed to help his restless leg syndrome 😅😂 apparently its meant to help - he didn't find it helpful 😂 but loads of people have sworn by pears soap for restless leg syndrome!!!! ❤
I am love love love loving this video but I do want to say that there is a makeup company that makes a lot of accurate reproductions that you can use, and that are safe to use, but would give the effect of what makeup used to be. It's called Besame! You should do a video with their products!
Ok, so I’m old, and I actually used that Covergirl Makeup in the 80’s. I remember it being medicated with Noxzema. The jar even looked the same. They didn’t used to change up makeup formulas like they do today. I used the same makeup for almost 2 decades. I loved this trip down memory lane!!
My dad was brown in 1971 and my mom was born in 1973 so most of the products my mom might have remembered ❤❤😂😂 Plus I love Avon, it’s still really popular in England and I’ve got some Avon things they are pretty good 👍🏻 ❤❤
Fun fact, ACTUAL 1920’s lipstick was actually dark blue to show up dark in V&R’s photos and on film and black! So often you’d see women out and about with full black pencil thin brows, black lipstick and black eyeshadow. Marilyn Monroe was an icon in the 1950’s, 30 years later! So comparing her red lipstick to the 1920’s trends was completely wrong
@@CatKim2 factually wrong. That wasn’t for “film only” as it became a trend that celebrities did it (like today) so young women did it too. The alt scene and speakeasy underground party scene was huuuuuuuge
In early coloured films colour didn't show properly either. On "Gone with the Wind" Leslie Howard had to wear a light green wig for it to show up as blonde on the film. In black and white films red lipstick didn't show dark enough so they would wear dark green too.
The baby on the box for the sunlamp is because if you don't get enough sunlight you will get rickets "A lack of vitamin D or calcium is the most common cause of rickets. Vitamin D largely comes from exposing the skin to sunlight, but it's also found in some foods, such as oily fish and eggs. Vitamin D is essential for the formation of strong and healthy bones in children."
It is really amazing that how a little makeup can make you look glowy but tbh i think natural beauty and smile is the best makeup you can wear..... Anyway i really love your videos❤❤
That specific brand of lip tint has been sold at the dollar tree for at least the last decade. it's funny how it didn't become a trend until someone decided to start selling them for more 😂
I have a hairdryer(handheld), a bonnet hairdryer, hot rollers, a Electrolux cannister vacuum, ice cube trays, and curling irons from the 1950's, 60's, and 70's that my Grandma gave to me. I also have a antique Victorian eyelash curler. All of them work fantastic. They were made of real sturdy materials aand metals. They were considered investments back then and expected to last generations. It's sad consumerism today is based on FOMO, cheap materials, and trends. A valid trend I wish that people would adopt is " show me something you had to have ten years ago was worth the price, is still used, and works perfectly today".
@@CatKim2 I’m 52 and my parents had an Electrolux vacuum until the late 90’s- early 2000’s. It was a canister vacuum that they bought in the 60’s or 70’s and got repaired whenever it stopped working. I think they got a new vacuum because they stopped making the vacuum bags. It was a beast!
I graduated high school in 1977. You nailed the look. I remember a big splurge was to get a bottle of nail polish for $1.00. I was earning a 0.75 an hour for babysitting.
I remember my grandma had like a weird compact foundation thingy from like the 50s. I used it because I didn't know it was like 70 years old and started breaking out really bad. I hope you dont break out!!!!
That first black and white close up photo is stunning. I’d love to see a video of you becoming a pinup model for a day or something and actually learning some pinup poses
I love how much work you put in your videos all the information you give us plus you get to experience it in real life so I just think it’s really cool!
I think one of the reasons they did that with nail polish in the 1920s was because their polish wasn’t as durable as what we have today. The place you are most likely to chip a nail is at the ends, and if you don’t paint the moon, then grow out isn’t an issue.. honestly, genius.
so the wet setting gels are used for dry rollers. Hot rollers are just used as hot rollers with no pre-prep. The trick was to let them heat up for about 20 minutes put them in when they were burning your fingers and then let them cool completely so you spent a good hour and a half, dealing with them. But they would last a long time and you sprayed the crap out of your hair afterward.
You should do another skin care routine but this time include Sky Organics jojoba oil (i swear im not sponsoring this brand) but it is literally the BEST moisturizer out there in my opinion. It's moisturizing, anti- flammatory, anti aging, it has balancing oil production which mimics the skins natural sebum which in return helps reduce breakouts on the skin, it's also non- comedogenic, it's light and doesn't block pores making it PERFECT for acne prone skin.
Low key…you look perfect in all of these, but 1920’s was chef’s kiss! 😘 also I had those curlers from the 70’s from my mom and used to use them as a teen! This was such a fun video, thanks Hope!
For the 1920's hair, I think the soot is specifically from the smores maker. Today, there are still similar products in use (see: hot combs) for textured hair that do not have the same issue. Im sure using a stove, rather than the smores maker would have improved this.
Some of the info you gave was wrong. Some of this stuff is a quick google or a 5 minute read away that doesn't include the AI portion (which I don't trust cause it told me to put glue in my dough). edit: i didn't realize how spicy i came across when i was writing this lol. no hate intended.
Thank you Shopify for sponsoring this video! Start your Shopify Free-Trial here 👉🏻 shopify.com/hopescope
no comments and 13 likes what the heck
Fun fact the "red" lipstick you see in black and white movies is acctually BLUE, since blue shows up so much better in the lighting and camera lences used.
Red looks more grey.
Hallo
Love you hope
It’s crazy to realize that back in the day makeup was actually more environmentally friendly b/c they focused more on refills than repackaging.
But it was also poisonous
Agreed if only we kept that part xD
Brands that offer refills/ sustainable packaging if you're interested.
- Besamé Cosmetics
- Elaté cosmetics.
- Eré Perez
- The Body Shop
- Lush
That's all I have purchased from and personally recommend.
I think we're getting back into doing that again...I was also surprised that was a thing that long ago!! If it ain't broke don't fix it😊
@@marienovotna6060 lmao yes , but that has nothing to do with refilling the packaging lol.
1920's redemption! 😂 There's actually a shop called Besamé that reproduce most of those products and actually work.
They do really cool mascara with a brush and black pan don't they?❤
came here to say this @hope!
Oooo I’m totally going to look into this!! That could be fun as it’s own video!!
Love that brand!
You can also get vintage inspired makeup (remember Tangee?) and bath products from the Vermont Country Store.
When my grandma was a teenager her mom let her buy mascara and blush for the first time. So my grandma went to the store and bought that exact Maybelline mascara not knowing that it was a refill! So she thought all mascaras were like that for a few years. so she learned how to put mascara on with a Bobby pin and she still does it today!!
NO WAY haha I am glad your great grandma also made the same mistake, so I am not alone 😆 That is too funny your grandma just continued to apply it that way for so long!
@@hopescopei sold AVON while i worked at my Waitress job. Everyone loved it. Especially the guys with the Cologne
@@hopescope you’re so pretty
My grandmother is exactly the same)
@@bridgetclement2968 no way my mom sells avon like right now
Love the 70’s hair. You missed a makeup icon Revlon’s Cherries in the Snow lipstick was an OG and is still being produced
I just went through my grandmothers old makeup and I have several tubes of lipstick. It smells horrible but it was made with bees wax. So much healthier than today.
كيف من شمع النحل
@@FatamAil-f8mpretty sure it's like a lip balm
My grandmother used to love pear soap, used it everyday up until she died last month. Her bathroom smelled of the orange pears soap. So i welled up a little when hope brought it on screen❤
Mine used pink Dove. It smells like roses. When I miss my grandma I just buy the soap.
Sending you oceans of love
Condolences to you and your family
❤
that’s so lovely, im glad you have that beautiful connection with your grandmother ❤️
I love Pears... it's my fav clear soap
If you ever want to try 1920-1970 vintage make up, without the expired scare, you should check out Besame Cosmetics! They have the classic styles , cake mascara, cream rouge and more. They label their make up with the year the recipe was created so you know what era you are buying. :) Their 1930 cake mascara looks just like the one you tried in this video.
Agreed! I hope she sees this
23:17 so fun fact, my mom was obsessed with pears soap when i was little, so that was the soap that i used before i got older and discovered other products, and i can still remember the smell to this day. like throughout the whole section, i could literally smell the soap and when hope mentioned it, i was like “i know exactly what you’re talking about lmao”
I live in Australia and will be 60 at the end of the year. I enjoyed seeing a lot of these items. The spit and brush mascara I had, I wish they still made it. I now want to go get some pears soap, my favourite as a kid. Those sun lamps were used to help heal womens stitches after childbirth. Good fun hey. 😂
It's worth remembering that while a bar of soap might have only been 17 cents in the 20s, the average yearly salary in the US was only about $1300. It's all relative 😊
Exactly
1300 is a decent salary in Italy 😭😭 I think 800-1000 is a real average salary
@@naiadelacrimosa5234 a year?
@@naiadelacrimosa5234 $1300 was the average YEARLY salary. I hope you're all getting paid more than that 😭
The average wage in 1920 was about $3,270 according to the IRS. Not relative anymore. We are in a silent depression.
Did u know u can use eye drops or contact solution to add to ur mascara or eyeliner to bring it back to life or moisturize it. Just add in like 3-5 drops and shake it up 😊 I do it all the time, it really works! ✌️💜✌️💜
Thank you for this tip!! 🙏🏼
A couple drops of Inglot duraline in the tube works too! Drop drop shake shake shake ❤
Be careful with that because you risk of getting an eye infection, maybe try it only with dried mascara but not on expired ones!
@@francy99fb i think she's just referring to dried out mascara. But YES please don't use expired mascara! Make sure you don't touch the dropper or bottle with your hands when you are doing this.
Do you know if it works on waterproof?
LOVE this video! I’m obsessed with vintage stuff, especially 1920s and 50s.. please do more videos like this😍 Also Besame has reproductions of vintage makeup, also the cake-mascara! Try it😍
Resident old lady here (P.S. love your style, and also have magenta-pink hair!) but I was, indeed, born in the 70s, and started using makeup in the mid 80s and, even then, brown eye liner, as well as brown mascara, was FOR SURE a "trend" (or fad as we called it "back in my day") until I found the iconic black "Great Lash", and the makeup game was on at that point! Lol.. 😉.. Keep up the fun, awesome vids! Take care!
I’m gunna show my nana this video. She’s 96 so it’ll be cool to see what she thinks of the 100 year old products. ❤
That's so cute! Please share her thoughts ❤
Ooh p.eaze share her thoughts :D it baffles me that there's people still alive thats nearly a century years old!
I love this idea. I hope that she enjoys watching it with you.
Such a fun idea and she lived through the 70s too so she would know how that all went lol
@@Johanna-n2l Aw y’all are so cute. ❤️🫶🏻 I definitely will share her thoughts and let y’all know. She definitely speaks her mind too and criticizes, so I’m sure she’ll have some funny things to say. 😂
UV lights were used to treat Jaundice in new born babies. Even as late as 1998, I was advised by nurses to leave my baby by a window in the sun for a little bit. Worked.
Me too, for my Daughter born in 2016!
My son is a 2019 baby & our nurse advised us to do the same thing
I thought that was a general knowledge, in my home country babies are supposed to received a little bit of sun really early in the morning. Idk for what buuuttt yeah 😂
I was curious so looked it up and apparently it's actually the blue light that is helpful. Newborn babies with jaundice have a build up of bilirubin and so phototherapy helps breaks down the excess in their bodies. Nowadays, at least in the NHS (i'm british), it's not advised to just put your baby in the sun presumably because of the now known effect of UVs and the access to specific blue light emitters. Anyway, so sorry about the unprovoked information dump but I was curious and thought maybe others might be too. :)
It's still a thing actually lol
Love this video so much! In the 1920’s nail polish the white actually would have been used under the top of the free edge of the nail to whiten the appearance kind of like a natural French manicure!
I have my mom’s white pencil she used to whiten her nails. She was born in 1916. Love this video ❤😊
pretty
just a tip:
if you have a dried out mascara, put some contact solution in the bottle and take the applicator and just vigorously mix the product with the solution!
Omgg! I actually love the 1920s lipstick tho-
U actually nailed it!
In case you were curious... According to a US based inflation calculator $9.95 in the year 1959 is the equivalent of $107.64 in 2024, and the same price in 1950 becomes $129.97.
So, at $108-$130, depending on when, in the 1950s, these were sold, these UV tanning bulbs were probably more of an investment really.
Idk why she didn’t adjust for inflation at all during the video. Rather strange choice.
I find these conversions SO interesting!! You had to be pretty well off to be able to afford a tanning bulb
@@davidfl4 she was saying how cheap everyone was which makes no sense
@@davidfl4 I'm assuming it wasn't considered? Which is more than fine lol I ♥ Hope and I dunno about you, but I'm not watching her for math content 😝 I only looked it up out of curiosity
@@desireeg5807 I really enjoyed the video actually. It just irked me cause you’d think it’s common knowledge that the value of money changes over time. She just kept making these comparisons that were, ultimately, completely wrong. No things were not “cheaper,” back then. You don’t have to act like I did something wrong for pointing this out😝. I love seeing big UA-camrs convey history to a broader audience, Hope did a good job, but it’s important that information is accurate.
18:10 i did not expect to see myself 🤣 i love your videos so much!!
haii hailey!hove ur content!!
Haiii
omggg haleyyyy !!!!!!!!! why does this have only 12 likes and 2 replies?!?! i want hope to see this!!!!!!!
Heyyy love ur vids
OMG, hi love your content
I know this was a minor point you touched on in the video but THANK GOD. I have waited for people to realize that brown mascara is the way to go for most people. I was tired of seeing 5,000 shades of black “classic black” “very black” “blackest black”. As a natural redhead, I always felt that black was too much for me. Now I use redhead mascara :)
Yep, I was born in 1971, and brown mascara was very much the norm for most people until the past couple of decades. There were even different shades.
@@missMediaChick Crazy cause my mom was born in 1973 and the only color she ever told me to use was black and claimed that “you can’t see your lashes if you don’t”. Maybe this was because brown was in when she was younger?
My cousin was a miss pears in the UK in the 90s and all my family have all the memorabilia of it, it's so beautiful the packaging and the memorabilia it's gorgeous!!
that’s awesome!!
Tanning in the 70’s was baby oil and bake in the sun. I never did this. Also use a product called Sun-in to lighten you hair while tanning.
😁 I did both
For dry mascara use eye drops to revive it works like wonders❤ you should also look i to Besame Costmetics for 1920-1960s makeup without it being old.
I would be so scared holding a 100 year old hairdryer
Frrr
It shocked me a little bit as I plugged it in, and I was TERRIFIED 😅 safe to say I won’t be actually using it again any time soon haha
@hopescope it's a collectors item, not really for using
Same 😭
Sameeeeeee
UNDER A DAY GANG 👇
edit: TY FOR ALL THE LIKES
Meee😊
Mee
Me
Meee
Yeah, I actually have never besides lives
The evolution in the beauty industry is truly unbelievable. Liking how you actually demonstrated the use of each item.
There is a company now called Besame that has reproduction make-ups from the 1900's up. Their lipsticks are amazing, and I LOVE their mascara. It is seriously the best!
At 0:47 your background. FLAWLESS😂😂❤❤
As a blonde, I’ve always used brown mascara. It doesn’t look as harsh, and it actually brings out the blue in my eyes better than black.
exactly!!! have never used black if I could avoid!
I use the black brown. Black is definitely too harsh.
Yeah I was surprised she thought it was a new trend. There's very very rarely a brand new trend. Most are recycled.
yesss
Ohhhh, I loved the smell of that Covergirl foundation! I feel like I can smell it through the TV.
Yummy
As soon as she opened it brought me right back to middle school
lol
That smell was unique.
That bedroom and bathroom tho 2:20 😍😍😍
I want it
You have REALLY stepped up the look and feel of your videos and I'm loving it!!!
the vintage makeup is so tiny & cutesy
@@UA-cam omg hiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!
@@UA-cam omg what’s up!! 2nd!!!
@@UA-cam 3rd replyy
right!!
girl the pink bathroom??!!! i need a tour asap plz😍
0:46 is no one gonna talk about the room she is in
?
Literally the first thing I noticed haha
@@ForGiveMePeter13_13it’s different
@@witteno okay but thats not a big deal
It's not a big deal but it's really cute and makes you look at it so you should expect people to talk about it@@ForGiveMePeter13_13
You can try Beseme makeup. They remake old make up with formulas that are safe. Their cake mascara/eyeliner is really nice. Also they have great lipsticks and all other makeup items. ❤
18:04 I WAS ABOUT TO COMMENT THAT!!! WHO LOVES DRESS TO IMPRESS LIKE ME?
Omg Hope’s a real one for this, sacrificing her skin for us🥺💖 sending prayers for you girl lol💗 love ya!!!
nhjry
I collect vintage Avon perfume bottles! Especially the animal ones. I love your 70's dress. 😊
My mom sold Avon, my dad still has some of the animals
I sold Avon for a bit in the 80s. Lol I think I spent more than I ever sold 😅 between my mother and myself we have a few boxes of the little perfume bottles my very first one was a gift from a grandmother of sweet honesty perfume in a lounging unicorn bottle lol. Right now in my bathroom I have that small blue milk glass pitcher/bowl from Avon. I can't remember what was in it. Skin so soft oil maybe?
I love Avon perfume bottles! My favorite are the little houses. 💗
I could've sent you loads of vintage make up to try 🥺 I lost my nanny last year and I've kept ALL of her makeup from 1940 onwards just for the memories 🥰 there's some really cool stuff in there too, wish I could attach photos here 😭 I still use Avon make up to this day! New of course, I'm not sat digging through my nans dusty eyeshadows 😂 but I still get a brochure delivered every month and honestly they do some great stuff!!!
And another fun fact about the pears soap... my MIL gave my partner a bar of pears soap to put at the end of his bed to help his restless leg syndrome 😅😂 apparently its meant to help - he didn't find it helpful 😂 but loads of people have sworn by pears soap for restless leg syndrome!!!! ❤
I’m sorry gurlll
4:31 the song is giving meepcity
Fr
@@UseronRobloxisdownbelow11 slay
I am love love love loving this video but I do want to say that there is a makeup company that makes a lot of accurate reproductions that you can use, and that are safe to use, but would give the effect of what makeup used to be. It's called Besame! You should do a video with their products!
Someone mentioned this a day or so ago and Hope actually responded and said she would look into making a whole video with their products.
Oh my gosh the filming setup!!?
Wondering if it's on a green screen...? Super cute tho ❤
@@Liminal_Galaxie Idk if it is on green screen it looks way to realistic and its not clipping either it might just be a background setup
Ok, so I’m old, and I actually used that Covergirl Makeup in the 80’s. I remember it being medicated with Noxzema. The jar even looked the same. They didn’t used to change up makeup formulas like they do today. I used the same makeup for almost 2 decades. I loved this trip down memory lane!!
omg this is just so cool! i love ur vids btw
My dad was brown in 1971 and my mom was born in 1973 so most of the products my mom might have remembered ❤❤😂😂
Plus I love Avon, it’s still really popular in England and I’ve got some Avon things they are pretty good 👍🏻 ❤❤
Fun fact, ACTUAL 1920’s lipstick was actually dark blue to show up dark in V&R’s photos and on film and black! So often you’d see women out and about with full black pencil thin brows, black lipstick and black eyeshadow.
Marilyn Monroe was an icon in the 1950’s, 30 years later! So comparing her red lipstick to the 1920’s trends was completely wrong
That was for film only. If you see vintage lipsticks from the time, they are red and deep red.
@@CatKim2 factually wrong. That wasn’t for “film only” as it became a trend that celebrities did it (like today) so young women did it too. The alt scene and speakeasy underground party scene was huuuuuuuge
In early coloured films colour didn't show properly either. On "Gone with the Wind" Leslie Howard had to wear a light green wig for it to show up as blonde on the film.
In black and white films red lipstick didn't show dark enough so they would wear dark green too.
The baby on the box for the sunlamp is because if you don't get enough sunlight you will get rickets
"A lack of vitamin D or calcium is the most common cause of rickets. Vitamin D largely comes from exposing the skin to sunlight, but it's also found in some foods, such as oily fish and eggs. Vitamin D is essential for the formation of strong and healthy bones in children."
Also a lot of babies have a little jaundice. UV light breaks down the build up of bilirubin so this is like a home remedy.
Here's a history lesson for everyone. Mascara was originally mad for mens beards.
My dad used to nick mine and use it on his Jason King moustache (back in the 70s) 😄
What a fun video! This was a joy to watch. You get an A+++ for creativity. Love you Hope. 🥰
It is really amazing that how a little makeup can make you look glowy but tbh i think natural beauty and smile is the best makeup you can wear.....
Anyway i really love your videos❤❤
That specific brand of lip tint has been sold at the dollar tree for at least the last decade. it's funny how it didn't become a trend until someone decided to start selling them for more 😂
As someone with pale skin, blonde hair and blue eyes, I’ve been wearing brown eyeliner and mascara my whole life. It’s much less harsh than black.
Same except green eyes
I have really dark hair and green eyes and tend to use brown when I just want a subtle lil something
Is that exquisite dog in your user pic YOUR doggie???
@@whutzatright! it’s gorgeous!
OBSESSED with the '70s hot-roller hair.
The wit and integrity is so important and the fact they can make the can
Work with me in any
I have a hairdryer(handheld), a bonnet hairdryer, hot rollers, a Electrolux cannister vacuum, ice cube trays, and curling irons from the 1950's, 60's, and 70's that my Grandma gave to me. I also have a antique Victorian eyelash curler. All of them work fantastic. They were made of real sturdy materials aand metals. They were considered investments back then and expected to last generations. It's sad consumerism today is based on FOMO, cheap materials, and trends. A valid trend I wish that people would adopt is " show me something you had to have ten years ago was worth the price, is still used, and works perfectly today".
Very wise and we had Electrolux vacuum cleaners and they were amazing. I should think of what you say when I shop, lol.
@@CatKim2 I’m 52 and my parents had an Electrolux vacuum until the late 90’s- early 2000’s. It was a canister vacuum that they bought in the 60’s or 70’s and got repaired whenever it stopped working. I think they got a new vacuum because they stopped making the vacuum bags. It was a beast!
I totally agree, everything was made to last.
I graduated high school in 1977. You nailed the look. I remember a big splurge was to get a bottle of nail polish for $1.00. I was earning a 0.75 an hour for babysitting.
I remember my grandma had like a weird compact foundation thingy from like the 50s. I used it because I didn't know it was like 70 years old and started breaking out really bad. I hope you dont break out!!!!
Thank you for the great content!
Who remembers Lee Press on Nails from the 80s.. frosted eyeshadow & lips and hellacious perms? Fun times lol
Oh yes, frosted blue shadow and Lee press ons!
Yep. I was born in 85 but watched my mom do fashion with her Perms etc
NOT JAMES CHARLES’ PALE FACE ERA💀💀💀 4:07
That first black and white close up photo is stunning. I’d love to see a video of you becoming a pinup model for a day or something and actually learning some pinup poses
I love how much work you put in your videos all the information you give us plus you get to experience it in real life so I just think it’s really cool!
I haven’t watched your channel for a bit so I was surprised to see your pink hair back (slaying as per usual).
Slay hope you look super beautiful in all of it
She always looks beautiful
@@rachelbyrge9521 I know right
I think one of the reasons they did that with nail polish in the 1920s was because their polish wasn’t as durable as what we have today. The place you are most likely to chip a nail is at the ends, and if you don’t paint the moon, then grow out isn’t an issue.. honestly, genius.
so the wet setting gels are used for dry rollers. Hot rollers are just used as hot rollers with no pre-prep. The trick was to let them heat up for about 20 minutes put them in when they were burning your fingers and then let them cool completely so you spent a good hour and a half, dealing with them. But they would last a long time and you sprayed the crap out of your hair afterward.
You should do another skin care routine but this time include Sky Organics jojoba oil (i swear im not sponsoring this brand) but it is literally the BEST moisturizer out there in my opinion. It's moisturizing, anti- flammatory, anti aging, it has balancing oil production which mimics the skins natural sebum which in return helps reduce breakouts on the skin, it's also non- comedogenic, it's light and doesn't block pores making it PERFECT for acne prone skin.
Low key…you look perfect in all of these, but 1920’s was chef’s kiss! 😘 also I had those curlers from the 70’s from my mom and used to use them as a teen! This was such a fun video, thanks Hope!
OMG, massive flashback with the 70s rollers. My mom curled my hair with a set very much like that one. They are, in fact, terrifying.
For the 1920's hair, I think the soot is specifically from the smores maker.
Today, there are still similar products in use (see: hot combs) for textured hair that do not have the same issue. Im sure using a stove, rather than the smores maker would have improved this.
Yeah the little stove for the irons doesn't create any soot lol just gets extremely hot
@@wigglemelon8807 I didn't think so, but I'd never seen it used on lighter color hair and couldn't confirm hahah
Definitely agree - they would use the stovetop to heat these typically!
4:56 I use Avon!!!!! They still sell stuff
Omg that pink vintage room is everything Hope I’m shocked at how beautiful it is💗💗💗
OMG HOPE!!!! I LITERALLY LOVE YOUR VIDS!!!!❤
The james charles jump scare🤣🤣
Sorry that bathroom ur in during the 70s makeup look is EVERYTHING??? 💓💓💓💓 love
Who thinks hope should give American girl dolls preppy makeovers 😊
YASSS HOPESCOPE POSTED A VIDEOOOOOOOOO!!!
I went from this 😐to this 🤩 after I saw that u posted, luv uuuu 💗!
girllll you look so good oh my gosh
I'm loving the pink room 😍
you can try indian/Bangladeshi Saree content. Or desi bridal. 🇧🇩🇮🇳
I LOVE YOU SO MUCH HOPE!!! you have inspired me in so
many ways!!❤
You should try Besame Cosmetics. They do replications of old school makeup!
“Ayyyyyyyyyyy”😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂 I can’t even right now hope 😂😂😂😂😂😂
Love this type of video! So interesting, definitely make it a series!
i just stared watching you a few weeks ago and im OBSESSED i love your videos there so heartwarming
Hi Hope! I absolutely ADORE your channel 🩷
Can’t believe you put that on your skin 😂😂😂
RUN. DON’T WALK. HOPE UPLOADED.
I always wore brown mascara in the 70’s. And the 1st mascara I used was like the 20’s one! I was born in the 50’s 😊 Eyeshadows were fun in the 70’s
Everytime that I'm bored I just go to your channel and its literally kill the boredome in me.
-Abby from the 🇵🇭
Some of the info you gave was wrong. Some of this stuff is a quick google or a 5 minute read away that doesn't include the AI portion (which I don't trust cause it told me to put glue in my dough).
edit: i didn't realize how spicy i came across when i was writing this lol. no hate intended.
Maybe not commercial mascara but people have been using coal/ash for eyeliner and mascara since ancient times!
@@jj-if6it yes you're right. obviously not commercial until much more recently. i was getting conflicting info about kohl from my searches lol.
@@jj-if6it yeah definitely. obviously not commercial though. i think at most, recipes in books for some cosmetics. and its called kohl.
Under a decade gang 👇🏻
the way Hope started calling every product mascara accidentally made me chuckle
I usually watch your other channel, I'm glad I checked out your main. You're just so sweet, thanks for brightening my day.
Omg I love how your bathroom is pink! That reminds me of Barbie that’s so cute!
Under a year gang👇🏽
Yesss
Yazss
Her room