Cosmetics makers have always sold 'hope in a jar' - creams and potions that promise youth, beauty, sex appeal, and even love for the women who use them.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
In the factory we make cosmetics; in the drugstore we sell hope.
In our factory, we make lipstick. In our advertising, we sell hope.
We live in a quick-fix society where we need instant gratification for everything. Too fat? Get lipo-sucked. Stringy hair? Glue on extensions. Wrinkles and lines? Head to the beauty shop for a pot of the latest miracle skin stuff. It's all a beautiful £1 billion con foisted upon insecure women by canny cosmetic conglomerates.
As a little girl I always dreamed of having a cosmetics contract, which was the cherry on top of 'making it' in my opinion.
My mother taught me to appreciate a good drugstore beauty aisle. I regularly use Aquaphor, Chap Stick, Purpose Face Soap, and Aveeno body moisturizer.
I entered the cosmetics industry because I wanted more women to use cosmetics made with safe, healthful ingredients.
The creation of my cosmetics experience has been years in the making.
I think a cosmetics company should be headed by a woman.
I've always wanted my own fragrance; Avon pairs with the way I think: what they do and represent, what they do for women, and the good causes such as domestic violence, and breast cancer.
I'm a drugstore beauty girl, I love going to the drugstore and buying makeup.
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