- Physical Beauty
- Care Of The Hands
- By Michael Fortomas
NO hands, as one authority on
female beauty has declared, "reveal every hidden secret
of the soul .... in their shape, texture and color" ? We
doubt it. But they reveal themselves quickly enough as beautiful
or the reverse. What is beauty of hand ? It is not so much the
shape, just as in hair it is not the color, which counts here.
Texture, skin quality and skin tint, the manner in which the
hands are used, the nails, these determine their beauty. Nothing
will give away your age quicker than the condition of your hands.
Lets take a look at some tips to try and hold off the ravages
of time.
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Care is what produces
beautiful hands. If you are not your own manicurist then visit
a professional one every week. Protect your hands against water
by using gloves, rubber or canvas. Always have a cut of lemon
handy to the sink. Whether you have a "psychic" or
a merely plebeian hand, lemon juice removes stains, whitens the
skin and cleans the nails. Vaseline, which keeps the nails from
growing brittle, also makes up for the drying effect of hot dishwater. |
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Dish washing should
always be followed by a vaseline or cold cream application. Always
wear gloves when gardening, and use vanishing cream on them before
you expose them to the bright sunshine or cold. A cold cream
application before retiring and cotton gloves should accompany
chapped hands into bed.
Red Hands.When red hands are not caused
by some trouble which calls for a doctor's care, use a good rich,
cream massage, for it will help circulation if bad circulation
is the reason. A mere surface redness may be treated by rubbing
in some standard skin food, after washing with hot water and
soap, and leaving it overnight.
The Ideal Hand.The ideal hand has smooth, tapering
fingers. If you have square or knotty fingers give them treatment
for pressing out the ends. A soft, white skin, a firm palm, firm
and supple wrists and well-kept nails and fingers are all possible
of attainment by manicuring, massage and constant cleanliness.
Hands should be neither too fat nor too thin. Regular diet in
the first place, then massage and special exercises are correctives.
This applies as well to fat wrists. Remember that, like the ideal
face and figure, the ideal hand is only relatively so. There
is a different style of hand for nearly every style of being,
and there are as many different hands as there are face beauties.
Gloves.Tight gloves will make your palms
perspire, give your hands a pudgy look, and, if you wear them
right along, will turn the hands red and mottled. Red hands often
result from continual wearing of tight-fitting gloves. Andif
you do not chemically clean your gloves after each wearingyour
hands will grow dirty as soon as you put them on. Gloves which
are not perfectly clean chap and coarsen the skin texture of
the hand, and at times cause infections
A narrow palm is
supposed to be a sign of a feeble temperament, one lacking imagination.
A fairly generous palm shows imagination and a nature capable
of greatly enjoying physical pleasures. Too large, broad and
pronounced a palm denotes egoism and sensuality. Hard, thick
palms, out of proportion to the rest of the hand, show an animal
nature, void of intelligence. Knotty fingers mean originality,
imagination and a scientific trend. Smooth, tapering fingers
hint at aptitude in art and sentiment predominating over reason.
Square fingers mean a sense of method and order. Spatulate fingers
are a sign of ability, activity, tact and knowledge.
THE NAILS
A woman's nails
should have home attention, but this should be supplemented by
occasional visits to the manicurist. Else it is impossible to
keep them in perfect condition. You may use an orange stick or
an ivory pusher to push back the cuticle from the nails (after
it has been softened by cold cream or vaseline), but do not cut
the cuticle yourself. This had far better be left to the professional.
If you use the professional cutting tools you may easily cut
and scar the surface of the nail, and weeks may elapse before
the scar disappears. If the cuticle be cut constantly the edges
grow hard and thick.
Manicuring.Always see to it that your orange
stick is well covered with absorbent cotton or a bit of silk.
When you have shaped the external edge of the nails with a fine
pair of scissors, finish with emery or a steel nail file. And
always, before beginning to manicure your nails, soak them in
hot soap water and cleanse with the nail brush. When you polish
the nails, use paste first, and do not apply the powder till
afterward. As a buffer you can use the palm of the other hand.
A thorough "home" manicuring should be undertaken at
least once a week.
There are many very
satisfactory nail pastes and polishes on the market. A liquid
polish is usually best for the nails, all the more if there is
no paste foundation. Carmine, which gives a pleasing pink tint,
should be the paste used. Never use the liquid varnishes which
produce a sheen without the aid of the buffer. They have a deteriorating
action on the nails themselves. You brush your teeth every night.
It is just as easy to devote a few minutes to your nail cuticles
as well.
The Nail Bleach A good and simple nail bleach
for use beneath the free edges of the nails is made by mixing
an ounce of hydrogen peroxide with a quarterounce, respectively,
of ammonia and lemon juice. Before polishing the nails wash out
the bleach with hot water. Keep your manicuring tools in good
condition, and throw away your orange stick as soon as it roughens.
For a buffer, if you do not care to use your palm, buy a buffer
frame and renew the chamois skin.
Bruised Nails A hot water dip, with an overnight
application of antiphlogiston, is good for bruised nails. The
white nail spots which often result from a bruise will fade out
slowly of themselves as a rule. Their departure can be hastened,
however, by application of refined pitch and myrrh in equal parts.
Nail-Bite The only real cure for nail biting
is not to bite the nails. The application of tincture of myrrh
is merely a reminder not to do so. |