In 1882,
Henry Labouchère, of the British periodical
Truth, reported: "Parisians have found out how to make false eyelashes [by having hair sewn into the eyelids]". A similar report appeared in the July 6, 1899, edition of
The Dundee Courier, which described the painful method for elongating the lashes, under the headline "Irresistible Eyes May Be Had by Transplanting the Hair": the article explained how the procedure achieved longer lashes by having hair from the head sewn into the eyelids. In 1902,
Karl Nessler, a German-born hair specialist and inventor, patented "A New or Improved Method of and Means for the Manufacture of Artificial Eyebrows, Eyelashes and the like" in the United Kingdom. By 1903, he began selling artificial eyelashes at his London salon on Great Castle Street. He used the profits from his sales to fund his next invention, the
permanent wave (perm) machine. In 1911, Anna Taylor, a Canadian, patented false eyelashes in the United States. Taylor's false eyelashes had a crescent-shaped strip of fabric bearing tiny pieces of hair. Another inventor of false eyelashes is
Maksymilian Faktorowicz, a Polish beauty guru and businessman, who founded the company
Max Factor. applying false eyelashes in
Film Fun (1917) In 1916, while making his film
Intolerance,
D. W. Griffith felt his actress,
Seena Owen, was missing something. Griffith wanted her eyes to be twice as large and "supernatural". He then spoke to his
wigmaker to create false lashes. They were made of human hair, which was then fixed to her eyelashes by
spirit gum. One day, Owen showed up with her eyes swollen nearly shut, her co-star
Lillian Gish wrote in her memoir. By the 1930s, false eyelashes were becoming widespread. False eyelashes were featured in
Vogue. makeup In the 1960s, eye makeup that made the eyes seem larger was very common. This look was achieved by applying false eyelashes to the top and bottom eyelids to mimic the look of a doll.
Twiggy advanced the trend. In 1968, at the feminist
Miss America protest, protestors symbolically threw a number of symbolic feminine products into a "Freedom Trash Can", including false eyelashes. In 2014, Katy Stoka, founder of One Two Cosmetics, invented magnetic false eyelashes as an alternative to those affixed with glue. == Temporary false lashes ==