BEYOND BEING AN eternal symbol of love and romance, roses also happen to be a part of my earliest childhood memories, like my grandmother picking fresh blooms from the garden every morning. A small bunch of petals would always make its way to my mother’s vanity, as crushed powder or rose water.
The exquisite and perfect beauty of a rose has given us pleasure for centuries, from face creams to fragrance, from tinctures to teas—the properties of the rose are both heady and soothing, renowned for uplifting the mood and alleviating depression. It’s surprising how as a skincare ingredient, roses have maintained their superiority over centuries across the world. In ancient times, the Egyptians boiled down roses to use in balms for their skin, while the Greeks and Romans made rose poultices as an anti-wrinkle treatment alongside having mood-lifting rose petals in the bath. During medieval times, rosewater was used as a skin toner and rose oil, as the basis of perfumes. By the late 1800s and early 1900s, roses became popular in prettily scented creams, soaps and toiletries for the hands and body.
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der May 2022-Ausgabe von VOGUE India.
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Diese Geschichte stammt aus der May 2022-Ausgabe von VOGUE India.
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Anupama Parameswaran knows the cost of being seen, of being a young woman in a world that's always watching. Beyond the beauty, the glamour and her young 28 years, she speaks five languages more than enough words to tell her story. The actor opens up to AKSHAYA PILLAI on the quiet details of a loud life.
ALL POWERED UP
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HOT!
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LA DOLCE VITA
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