
šš The Secret History of Lipstick: The Wild, Weird, Allergen-Filled Past of Lip Color
Lipstick Has Always Been a Little⦠Unhinged
Lipstick might be glamorous today, but its past?
Oh, itās completely unserious.
Ancient royalty, witches, warriors, rebels, suffragettes, Hollywood starlets ā everyone has used lip color, but the ingredients were often⦠alarming.
Before modern beauty science, people put literally anything on their lips:
š crushed beetles
š toxic metals
š animal fat
š clay
š berries
š red algae
š poisonous minerals
š and occasionally⦠substances we shall not name before breakfast
Letās take a time-traveling tour through lipstick history ā and discover the bizarre, chaotic, sometimes dangerous origins of the product we swipe on casually today.
š„š 1. Ancient Mesopotamia: The Original Lip Queens (Using Crushed Gems!)
Around 5,000 years ago, Sumerian women and royalty crushed precious stones ā yes, actual gemstones ā into a powder and mixed them with oils.
ā glamorous
ā sparkly
ā extremely abrasive
ā could cut your lips
Imagine exfoliating and coloring your lips at the same time.
Efficient⦠but painful.
šŖ²ā¤ļø 2. Cleopatraās Iconic Red Was Made From⦠Beetles
Cleopatra, queen of glam, believed bold lips were a power move.
Her signature red was made from:
-
cochineal beetles (for pigment)
-
fish scales (for shimmer)
-
beeswax (for texture)
This formula was luxurious by ancient standards.
š Fun fact:
Cochineal is STILL used today as ācarmine,ā a natural red dye.
Sensitive lips? You might react to it.
ā ļøš 3. Ancient Greeks Used Toxic Lead Pigments
Greek women loved a deep berry lip, often made from:
-
red iron oxide
-
seaweed
-
LEAD pigment
Lead.
On the lips.
Every day.
Letās just say dermatologists would not approve.
š¤ā ļø **4. Medieval Europe: Lipstick Was āSinfulāā¦
But Also Contained Mercury**
Lipstick was banned for witchcraft associations.
But those who still secretly used it relied on:
-
cinnabar (mercury sulfide)
-
plant dyes
-
beeswax
Mercury causes neurological damage ā meaning beauty came at a high price.
šš©ø 5. The 1500s: Queen Elizabeth I Made Pale Faces + Bright Lips Trendy
Her chalk-white face + deep red lips combo was iconicā¦
but achieved with:
-
white lead paste
-
red dyes
-
toxic vermilion
People literally poisoned themselves trying to look regal.
šš¹ 6. The 1700s: Lipstick = Rebellion
In France, both men and women wore intense red lips.
It symbolized wealth, power, and social status.
In Britain, it was scandalous.
Women wearing lipstick were accused of:
-
witchcraft
-
seduction
-
ādeceiving men into marriageā
(Imagine blaming your wedding on lipstick.)
šš 7. The 1800s: Lipsticks Still Contained⦠You Guessed It ā More Lead
Even after the dangers were known, lead-based pigments stayed popular because they looked vibrant.
Some lipsticks also used:
-
vermilion (mercury)
-
coal tar dyes (carcinogenic)
Beauty, but make it hazardous.
šāØ 8. The 1900s: Lipstick Becomes Mainstream ā and Still Weird
In the early 20th century, lipstick ingredients included:
-
ground insects
-
animal fats
-
castor oil
-
petroleum
-
early synthetic dyes
-
fragrance (irritant)
-
lanolin (common allergen)
But the biggest twist?
Lipstick tubes were invented in 1915, finally making lip color portable.
Before that, women carried pots of pigment like traveling artists.
š¬ā¤ļø 9. Hollywood Made Red Lips Iconic ā But Also Full of Chemicals
Screen sirens like Marilyn Monroe + Rita Hayworth created the red-lip era.
The formulas?
-
coal tar
-
carmine
-
mineral oils
-
unregulated dyes
-
fragrance oils
Stunning on screen, questionable for the skin barrier.
š·š„ 10. Modern Lipstick: Safer⦠But Still Not Perfect
Today we have strict pigment standards, safer waxes, and stable formulas.
But many lipsticks STILL contain:
-
nut oils (major allergens)
-
gluten contaminants
-
fragrances
-
menthol
-
lanolin
-
carmine
-
petroleum derivatives
-
alcohols
-
essential oils
Beautiful colors are now safer ā
but sensitive lips? Still at risk.
š§Ŗš± 11. The Rise of Allergen-Safe Lipstick (Finally.)
Thanks to:
ā rising allergies
ā celiac awareness
ā sensitive skin epidemics
ā cosmetic science evolution
We now have lipsticks that are:
-
nut-free
-
gluten-free
-
fragrance-free
-
vegan
-
sensitive-skin-safe
The future of lipstick is not only beautiful ā
itās inclusive.
ā **Final Thought: Lipstick Has Always Been Power ā
But Now It Can Also Be Safe**
From crushed gems to beetle dye to mercury to leadā¦
lipstickās history is chaotic, dangerous, and iconic.
But today, we get the best of both worlds:
beauty + safety.
The modern lip revolution isnāt about color ā
itās about comfort.
Itās about knowing whatās on your lips wonāt hurt you.
Itās about allergen-free beauty that empowers EVERYBODY.
šæ The EpiLynx Promise:
Every lip product we make is part of the next chapter in lipstick history:
⨠Nut-Free
š¾ Gluten-Free
š Allergen-Safe
š± Vegan
š° Cruelty-Free
š§“ Made for Sensitive Skin
Bold color ā without the ancient toxins.

