• Title/Summary/Keyword: jjokjinmeori

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Comparative Study of Make-up and Hair Styling Cultures of the King Jeongjo and the Edo Period (정조시대와 에도시대(江戶時代)의 화장문화(化粧文化)와 수발문화(鬚髮文化)의 비교 연구)

  • Kim, Min-Kyung
    • Korean Journal of Human Ecology
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    • v.18 no.1
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    • pp.189-200
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    • 2009
  • In the Edo period speaking of hair culture, common women wore decorative pigtail ribbons on the right, and twisted from side to side their tressed hair in such a manner as ungeunmeori and traemeori. Instead of gachae, common women used gogae made of their own hair, ungeunmeori on forehead, or jjokjinmeori at the back of head. During the Edo period, people women naturally exposed their necklines as a way of exposing their faces in the aesthetically ceremonial act of wearing make-up. As for lipsticks, they rouged extracts from red petals of safflowers mainly on their lips, and sometimes on their cheeks by blending this with white powder. Samurai families disliked women who wore thick lip makeup. In the latter period, women painted their necklines or foreheads black, applied a small amount of rouge on their cheeks thinly or thickly, and colored a reddish color into their fingernails by using petals and leaves of balsam flowers. Despite the chronological and spatial proximity of the King Jeongjo period and the Edo period, it was found that there were no similarities between two countries' cosmetic cultures. Moreover, it was discovered that current TV dramas were being produced, even not based on historical evidence in the Jeongjo period.