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MAKEUP CAN MAKE THE MAN: Andrei, one of Willamette Week's
fearless interns, consented to let us "experiment" with his
look. |

COLUMN
The Illustrated MAN
by
ELIZABETH DYE
243-2122 ext. 335
I can't
count on both hands the times I've seen boys watch girls put on
makeup with barely stifled envy. Who blames the little tykes? Makeup
is buckets of fun. It's theater, and every last Gap-shopping one
of us needs that dose of drama once in a while. And let's put to
bed once and for all the myth that men aren't vain, and therefore
don't primp. My high-school prom date excused himself--10 times!--during
dinner to check his hair (the waiter and I got real friendly, but
that's another story).
Notwithstanding
all the go-in-disguise, cover-your-flaws arguments in favor of drawing
on yourself, men should know the obvious: Makeup is paint. Arts
and crafts. It's a form of creative expression like any other, with
all the soothing and soul-restoring benefits of ceramics or journaling.
Plus it's temporary. You can squander your salary at one
of those paint-your-own pottery parlors and wind up with a lumpy
tureen you'll grow to loathe, or you can play with Maybelline and
scrub down when you've tired of it. Why should girls have all the
worry-free fun?
So, boys, you're
ready to take the plunge. Or a baby step. Now what? Though
profuse goos and hues pander to appearance-conscious women, where
does the soon-to-be-made-up man begin? For this I needed an expert.
Jason Paulson is a retail makeup artist for MAC Cosmetics (find
him at the downtown Nordy's counter, 224-6666, ext. 1066). When
I asked him if men frequently approach the counter for cosmetic
guidance, he laughed and said he gets as many hecklers as curious
shoppers. "Portland is a conservative town. People here are pretty
easily freaked out by makeup." Sad, people, sad. Still, Jason
is informed and professional, and he's a makeup wearer himself--a
great resource for your first experiment. He does see makeup on
Portland men, although it tends to be on members of a "hipster"
or fashion-y crowd. "Street kids come in sometimes--and fashion
starts on the street," he says.
Speaking of
the street, check out other boys to see what they've got on (Jason
recently spotted a Matador doorman in some slick iridescent black
eyeliner. Cool). Scrutinize magazine advertisements and fashion
spreads, and not just the obvious guy-as-Tammy-Faye examples. Makeup
is everywhere. I don't care if he does crack a raw egg into his
daily OJ, that Abercrombie & Fitch bohunk's flushed cheeks and
bee-stung lips aren't natural.
Still don't
want to put stuff on your face? OK, I give up. But cosmetic companies
won't. Ever eager for new markets, Estée Lauder and the like
have begun courting men with what are euphemistically termed "grooming"
products. In substance, they differ not at all from women's products,
but vive la difference in style. To disguise the girly
implications, men's grooming products are described using butch
techno-terms familiar to anyone who's ever endured halftime Afta
commercials--"smoothing," "optimizing," "bracing." Aramis' Surface
line offers moisturizer, bronzer, mattifying cream, and a line-smoothing
spackle, but calls every goop in the lot "gel" (as in "don't be
afraid, it's just like toothpaste"). Clinique has introduced Stop
Signs Serum for men, identical except in name to its Stop Signs
Age Defending Complex (dude, it's not cool to care about aging if
you're a man. That sun damage makes you look--what's the cliché?--distinguished).
Hype aside,
even wash-and-go men have plenty to gain from a basic, no-frills
skin-care routine. This means a good moisturizer with sunscreen
(Jason also recommends a blotting powder to keep down shine), and
cleansing and shaving products containing mild ingredients. Just
because men's products don't promise instant and permanent youth
like women's do, it doesn't mean they don't lie. For example, shave
creams that contain menthol and camphor claim to soothe skin and
create a closer shave, but actually irritate hair follicles and
encourage ingrown hairs. The beauty backlash that led to better
labeling and more plausible claims for women's products has yet
to hit the man's world.
Gentlemen, make
a point of educating yourself about the products you use, and resist
those cheap appeals to machismo that somehow sell Brut and Barbasol.
If you buy from department-store counters, ask questions of the
salespeople and read the tiny-print disclosure pamphlets that accompany
products. Cosmetics companies want to make money, so let them know
what you want. That mint-green mascara you've longed for may not
be far off.
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