[identity profile] justkyhdding.livejournal.com posting in [community profile] omonatheydid
The east is rouge

How local cosmetics brands are getting under men’s skin

20151205_wbp502.jpg

IT HAS become the “essential item for every man’s bag”, says Kim Jin-ho, who runs IOPE, a high-end skincare line owned by AmorePacific, South Korea’s biggest cosmetics firm. Its male “Air Cushion” compact, launched last year, encloses a sponge steeped in tinted moisturiser and sunscreen, patted onto the face with a puff to cover blemishes and oiliness. IOPE is selling over 100,000 of the compacts a year—almost three times as many as it sells of its regular sunscreen products for men.

According to one survey, South Korean men use 13 grooming products on average a month, almost half the number that their female peers use (South Korean women follow multi-step skincare routines, involving cleansers, essences and ampoules). Almost all big South Korean brands have men’s lines. The country’s male skincare market doubled in value from 2009 to 2014, according to Euromonitor, a research firm. Its men are the leading consumers of male cosmetics per capita (and buy four times more than the next-vainest, the Danes), making up one-fifth of worldwide sales.

On the face of it, such preening is at odds with South Korea’s macho, socially conservative culture. Yet it is during their two-year military service that many men first dabble in make-up: girlfriends offer them camouflage face-paint kits, and moisturisers for the country’s dry winters and sizzling summers.

Innisfree, a high-street brand also owned by AmorePacific, has launched a range of Extreme Power Military Masks, facial sheets soaked with a gel that relieves skin, to be used “After field work” (soothing) or “Before going on leave” (whitening, long a popular beauty trend with women). Innisfree hands out samples of its male products at baseball games. The Face Shop, a cosmetics brand owned by LG Healthcare, advertises its “Neo Classic Homme” line in the Gukbang Ilbo, a defence daily.

Yet many men still hesitate to go beyond moisturising. Few feel comfortable perusing shelves in department stores (and few sales assistants know how best to apply foundation to a stubbled face). Olive Young, a health and beauty retailer, has set up male product zones in-store. IOPE says it has focused on how to market its men’s products to sisters and wives, but is now beefing up its online store too. On “Every Man Is”, a forum showcasing LG Healthcare’s lines, men exchange tips. One asks: are you supposed to switch your make-up according to the seasons?

Most beauty firms also push their products through metrosexual brand ambassadors, celebrities from the world of K-pop or Korean television dramas. In the modish streets around Hongik University in Seoul, your correspondent glimpsed one male student looking fabulous in black eyeliner, eyebrow mascara and silver eyeshadow. But Wondin, a 16-year-old who gives male make-up tutorials on YouTube, says few South Korean men want to mimic the stars. He says they “just like to primp”: a polished look is seen as a prerequisite for success in work.

Wondin’s most popular tutorial is a six-minute clip on applying daily make-up. He is focusing on eyebrow tips at the moment because current male hairstyles reveal the forehead. In particular, he advises opting for a transparent brow mascara, which is more natural and easier to apply than a pencil. Male readers, you’re very welcome.

The Economist

Date: 2015-12-08 09:48 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] classicfire.livejournal.com
That's more products than I use being a female. I just don't think I need to use too much because when I do I feel I look older which I don't want to. I've actually stopped wearing eyeliner everyday like I used to.

Date: 2015-12-08 10:03 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] kaykaydelight.livejournal.com
Skincare marketed to males is just a similar "feminine" product disguised with "manly" packaging. It's so ridiculous. Most of the time the packaging is ugly too.

Date: 2015-12-08 10:04 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] classicfire.livejournal.com
But scents defer too.

Date: 2015-12-08 10:11 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ocean-pig.livejournal.com
I just want my bf to properly moisturize his face and lessen his frowns so he doesn't get early wrinkles. Can't even imagine him ever being okay with makeup.

Thanks for the article! I want to see a future society where men and women feel the same amount of pressure about their looks.

Date: 2015-12-08 11:55 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] modestgoddess79.livejournal.com
A moisturizer is a moisturizer, it shouldn't have to be marketed to a gender.

Date: 2015-12-09 12:16 am (UTC)
jeliza: custom avatar by hexdraws (walken-winter)
From: [personal profile] jeliza
Reminds me of this skit:



Though increasing societal pressure on everyone is not really that awesome, on the other hand, support for good grooming and skin care for men is a trend I would like to see continue

Date: 2015-12-09 04:33 pm (UTC)

Date: 2015-12-09 12:45 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] sra-interesante.livejournal.com
korean guys trying make up for the first time on military service is surprising but i guess that makes sense ....

i was trying to imagine how idols on the army keep their daily beauty rutine on common bathrooms with other conscripts watching like "wtf dude?? ... you're using more products than my gf" lolz
after all if you see them day after day and they have a nice skin , you will at least try ... and maybe one day (out of curiosity ,of course) you will ask about brands

Date: 2015-12-09 03:38 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] broadway-bound3.livejournal.com
After reading the first paragraph I anticipate going back to Korea and sitting on the subway watching a guy pull out a compact and touch up their face like I've seen Korean women do countless times.

Date: 2015-12-09 06:30 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] achan123.livejournal.com
as a guy, I'd say companies should focus more on the cosmetic functionality instead of visual aesthetics changes. Market products such as skin cream instead of skin whitening. Or marketing them as tinted face moisturizer instead of BB cream. However, i realllly don't see products like mascaras and eye shadow be popular with men, atleast in the next 5 years :/

Date: 2015-12-09 07:52 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] mercury-sound.livejournal.com
I just learned that it's apparently reasonably popular for young men in South Korea to get a temporary eyebrow tattoo (lasting 1-2 years) before they start working. Less work than having to do it every day, I guess.

Date: 2015-12-09 04:14 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] unicornios.livejournal.com
That is all super interesting but also a mindfuck? They start their cosmetic ~journey during army service. That is crazy!!
They still use WAY more products than I do lol


ugh men sometimes get so lucky with their skin. My bf does NOTHING to his face and he has the smoothest and softest skin ever. I hate him lol

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