

Experte en maquillage, la Nippone sacrifie à un art millénaire, codifié et raffiné. Teint d'albâtre, lèvres rouges et sourcils haut perchés sur un petit visage ovale: voilà l'archétype de la beauté japonaise. Ce mélange de sophistication, d'épure et de mystère, fut sublimé par les geishas de Kyoto. La marque
Tatcha met à la portée de toutes le secret de la beauté japonaise, avec ces papiers buvards si joliment packagés à tamponner délicatement sur la peau pour un raccord maquillage en journée.
The Geisha. Few women have captured the imagination like this Japanese icon of female beauty. Three hundred years ago, the Geisha discovered that the papers artisans used to pound gold into wafer-thin flakes were the perfect texture to absorb excess oil from the skin without over drying. These women, whose job it was to wear heavy makeup on a daily basis, were able to preserve their flawless complexions by blotting the skin first thing in the morning and after washing their faces in the evening, as well as throughout the day.