blanc: Revision history

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  • curprev 02:1702:17, 31 May 2023WingerBot talk contribsm 12,365 bytes −35 Catalan: remove unnecessary sort keys; clean up and templatize etymologies; use 'mfbysense'; remove some unnecessary {{ca-adj}} params; use {{demonym-adj}}, {{demonym-noun}}; misc cleanup (manually assisted) undo

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14 July 2022

  • curprev 23:0023:00, 14 July 2022Equinox talk contribsm 12,306 bytes +341 #* '''2013''', M. C. Beaton, ''Rake's Progress'' #*: Had Miss Fipps not told her what they were, she would have taken them for ladies of fashion. In an age when women wore less than they had ever done but wore just as much '''blanc''' and rouge, there was little difference between the ladies in the side boxes and the ladies in the centre. undo
  • curprev 22:5822:58, 14 July 2022Equinox talk contribsm 11,965 bytes +501 #* '''2020''', Amelia Rauser, ''The Age of Undress'' (page 127) #*: A white mask of cosmetic face paint, or '''''blanc''''', had long been the norm for formally dressed ladies in the eighteenth century, but by the 1790s the deliberate artifice of the white mask was supplanted by a desire for a "natural" whiteness without additional coloring. "Rouge is no longer used; pallor is more interesting," wrote one commentator in 1804; "The ladies only use the '''blanc''', and leave the rouge to the men." undo
  • curprev 22:5622:56, 14 July 2022Equinox talk contribsm 11,464 bytes +309 #* '''2015''', Richard Corson, ‎James Glavan, ‎Beverly Gore Norcross, ''Stage Makeup'' (page 322) #*: A guest at a party in 1764 was described as wearing on her face "rather too much yellow mixed with the red; she . . . would look very agreeable if she added '''blanc''' to the rouge instead of gamboge." undo

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  • curprev 05:5405:54, 3 July 2022WingerBot talk contribsm 10,896 bytes −43 incorporate 1 {{l}} link into {{desc|lou}}; incorporate 1 {{l}} link into {{desc|enm}}; incorporate 1 {{l}} link into {{desc|nrf}}; incorporate 1 {{l}} link into {{desc|wa}} undo

10 June 2022

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