Step into the make-up time machine

Kate Moss, 38, and Carol Vorderman, 51, were shown to have the most age-reducing regimes, with both looking nine years younger after applying make-up.

Kate Moss, 38, and Carol Vorderman, 51, were shown to have the most age-reducing regimes, with both looking nine years younger after applying make-up.

Published Nov 16, 2012

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London - As any woman knows, a spot of make-up can work wonders by seemingly turning back the clock.

But exactly how many years does that foundation, mascara and blusher knock off?

Now research suggests that when applied well, it can make the wearer look almost a decade younger.

Those who go out in their warpaint appear to be between five and nine years younger than when they are bare-faced.

Kate Moss, 38, and Carol Vorderman, 51, were shown to have the most age-reducing regimes, with both looking nine years younger after applying make-up.

Meanwhile, 57-year-old Madonna managed to shave seven years off her age and Cindy Crawford, 46, took off six.

The research – which you won’t be surprised to hear was conducted for a beauty retailer – involved showing respondents images of well-known women, first bare-faced and then with make-up.

Respondents were asked to identify a “make-up age” and a “bareface age”, with the collective results making an average for each. Britney Spears, 30, managed to look five years younger with make-up on. Demi Moore, 49, was the only woman whose “bareface age” was below her real age at 47 – but with make-up on she looked even younger, at 43.

Respondents were also asked about their own make-up, with 70 percent of over-30s saying it makes them look younger.

Of that, 36 percent thought that make-up made them look one to three years younger, while 29 percent thought it could make them look three to five years younger. An optimistic two percent thought make-up took ten years of their real age while 18 percent thought it took off five to seven years.

Only women under 21 thought that a slick of black kohl and some lipstick actually added a few years.

The survey by Escentual.com showed that the older you are, the more reliant you are on make-up to turn back the clock. Only 60 percent of those aged 30 to 39 thought they looked younger with make-up, compared with 100 percent of those aged 60 to 69. - Daily Mail

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