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C-beauty

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

C-beauty,orChinese beautyis an umbrella term encompassing contemporary beauty products, practises, and ideals originating fromChina.[1][2]China has the second largest beauty market in the world, after the United States.[3]Common C-beauty products includecosmetics,skin care,hair care,perfumes,andnail art.[4][5][6][7]C-beauty often incorporates influences fromtraditional Chinese medicineandChinese art.[8][9]

Overview

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Chinese beauty products are known for their elaborate packaging, rapid innovation, and cost-effectiveness due to the high expectations of Chinese consumers.[10][11]As the Chinese market is intensely competitive, some C-beauty brands have multiple product lines in the works simultaneously. They may take only three to six months to conceptualize, launch, and manufacture a product line.[12]

Pechoin,founded in 1931, is China's oldest skin care brand.[13]Lip muds are a cosmetic product invented by Chinese brand INTO YOU, and later adopted by several other Chinese brands.[11][14]C-beauty content creators are credited for popularizing the skincare routine of Vitamin C and Vitamin A serums at different times of day via the "Morning C, Night A" slogan.[15][16][17]C-beauty products that are heavily influenced byChinese culturemay be characterized as being part of a broader social movement known as "guócháo" ( quốc triều ) or "China chic", which celebrates traditional Chinese culture.[18][9]

K-beautybecame popular in China in 2012 and South Korea surpassed the United States and Japan in 2015 to become the second largest exporter of cosmetics to China after France. However, the popularity of K-beauty declined sharply starting from 2018 due to a combination of unappealing packaging, low efficacy, unreasonable prices, and an over-reliance on the popularity of theKorean Waverather than focusing on the quality of the products themselves to maintain consumer interest. This provided the opportunity for domestic C-beauty brands to grow their market share as they offered a more diverse range of higher quality products at more affordable prices compared to K-beauty.[19][20]

Global expansion

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The intense competition of the Chinese beauty market has caused Chinese companies to expand into overseas markets.[21]Skincare brand Herborist was the earliest to expand, opening its first European flagship store inParisin 2015.[22]In 2016, Chinese cosmetics brand Kailijumei's color-changing, flower lipsticks became a viral sensation overseas.[23][24][25]One of the most internationally successful C-beauty brands is Flower Knows.[26][27]

Within a five-year span, from 2017 to 2022, the C-beauty industry doubled its market share. In 2022, C-beauty brands surpassed international competitors in sales within China.[28]China exported US$4.85 billion worth of cosmetics in 2021.[29]In 2023, the C-beauty market value was worth US$67.18 billion.[30]In the early 2020s, Chinese makeup styles and cosmetics became popular inJapan.[31][32]

In 2021, the practice ofgua shafacial massage and jade rollers became viral in the West throughTikTok.[33][34]Although this faced criticisms ofcultural appropriationas most brands selling Chinese facial tools in the West were not of Chinese origin and Western influencers were promoting gua sha massage methods with no basis intraditional Chinese medicine.[35][36][37]

A broad range of Chinese makeup styles and techniques have been labelled "Douyin makeup" in the West, named after the Chinese version forTikTok.[38][39]However, the majority of these makeup trends have nothing to do with Douyin, and people in China do not use the term "Douyin makeup" themselves. Chinese people simply refer to the makeup styles collectively as "Chinese makeup" or by the specific names of the styles.[40]

Regulation

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Since 2014, cosmetics manufactured and sold in China do not require animal testing if reliable safety assessment reports are provided, although it continued to require animal testing for imported products from other countries. This law was amended in 2021, when foreign companies were allowed to export cosmetics to China without animal testing.[41]

See also

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References

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  1. ^Luo, Jiaqi (2020-01-05)."The New Generation of C-Beauty".Jing Daily.Retrieved2024-01-18.
  2. ^International, Oban (2022-02-02)."The Rise of Chinese Beauty Brands".Oban International.Retrieved2024-01-18.
  3. ^"China's Cosmetics and Personal Care Market: Trends and Outlook".China Briefing News.2023-07-20.Retrieved2024-01-18.
  4. ^"13 C-Beauty Products You Need to Know for the Year of the Rabbit".Vogue.2023-01-20.Retrieved2024-01-19.
  5. ^Luo, Jiaqi (2022-07-18)."The Lipstick Index Is Out. Meet The Nail Effect".Jing Daily.Retrieved2024-01-19.
  6. ^Zhang, Tianwei (2022-05-13)."A Closer Look at China's Hair Care Market Boom".WWD.Retrieved2024-01-19.
  7. ^Achim, Adina-Laura (2022-07-14)."Detangling the Complexities in China's Haircare Market".Jing Daily.Retrieved2024-01-19.
  8. ^Team, Dao (2022-01-12)."Is C-beauty on its way to surpassing international brands?".Dao Insights.Retrieved2024-01-18.
  9. ^ab"Can China's Cosmetics Giant Florasis Crack America?".The Business of Fashion.2023-05-30.Retrieved2024-01-19.
  10. ^Luo, Jiaqi (2020-01-05)."The New Generation of C-Beauty".Jing Daily.Retrieved2024-01-19.
  11. ^ab"Is This the World's Prettiest Makeup?".ELLE.2023-11-22.Retrieved2024-01-18.
  12. ^Teh, Cheryl."Fast fashion brands like Forever 21 and H&M have inspired China's latest monster trend — fast beauty brands turning out new products in record time".Business Insider.Retrieved2024-01-18.
  13. ^"Top Leading Cosmetics Brands in China and Full Strategy Analysis".2023-09-13.Retrieved2024-01-18.
  14. ^Luo, Jiaqi (2021-10-19)."How Did 'Lip Mud' Become China's New Beauty Obsession?".Jing Daily.Retrieved2024-01-19.
  15. ^Hu, Denni (2023-03-24)."C-beauty in 2023: A New Competitive Landscape".WWD.Retrieved2024-01-19.
  16. ^Dynvibe."Morning C, Night A".Dynvibe.Retrieved2024-01-19.
  17. ^Nan, Lisa (2023-12-13)."Beauty buzz 2023: The top 6 Chinese slang terms that shaped skincare trends".Jing Daily.Retrieved2024-01-19.
  18. ^"'China-chic' trend builds youngsters' patriotism, cultural confidence ".South China Morning Post.2022-11-10.Retrieved2024-01-19.
  19. ^"Đã từng vượt duy đả kích Hàn trang, hiện giờ bại tẩu Trung Quốc".
  20. ^"South Korean cosmetics lose shine in China as local brands glow".Nikkei Asia.Retrieved2024-01-19.
  21. ^"China's start-ups take on big global beauty brands".ft.Retrieved2024-02-20.
  22. ^WW, FashionNetwork com."Herborist: first European store in Paris".FashionNetwork.Retrieved2024-01-19.
  23. ^"This Flower Jelly Lipstick Is Going Viral For All the Right Reasons".Cosmopolitan.2016-06-22.Retrieved2024-01-19.
  24. ^"These Lipsticks With Actual Flowers in Them Might Be the Prettiest Ever".Allure.2016-06-21.Retrieved2024-01-19.
  25. ^"Kailijumei's line of color-changing, flower lipsticks are all the rage now across the world".SoraNews24 -Japan News-.2016-06-28.Retrieved2024-01-19.
  26. ^"Flower Knows, China's up-and-coming beauty brand, is rapidly gaining international popularity through its distinct approach to aesthetics".Elle Canada.Retrieved2024-01-19.
  27. ^"Chinese Beauty Brand Flower Knows Surges Into the International Beauty Market".Grazia Middle East.Retrieved2024-02-20.
  28. ^Nan, Lisa (2021-07-28)."C-Beauty Surpass International Brands For The First Time".Jing Daily.Retrieved2024-01-18.
  29. ^Rozario, Kevin (2023-07-06)."C-beauty doubles its market share in just five years".Jing Daily.Retrieved2024-01-18.
  30. ^Nan, Lisa (2023-12-19)."China beauty trend predictions for 2024".Jing Daily.Retrieved2024-01-18.
  31. ^"Chinese-style makeup catches eye of young Japanese women".Nikkei Asia.Retrieved2024-01-18.
  32. ^"Japanese youngsters want to look like Chinese starlets".The Economist.ISSN0013-0613.Retrieved2024-01-18.
  33. ^"What's gua sha? Chinese medicine experts explain TikTok's viral skin care technique".ABC News.Retrieved2022-09-23.
  34. ^Seo, Hannah (2022-09-12)."Dry Brushing, Body Scraping, Gua Sha: Lymphatic Health Is All the Rage".The New York Times.ISSN0362-4331.Retrieved2022-09-23.
  35. ^Burke, Cait (2020-10-28)."Has the gua sha beauty tool been culturally appropriated?".Fashion Journal.Retrieved2024-01-19.
  36. ^Velasco, Pia."Here's What I Wish the West Would Understand About Gua Sha".
  37. ^Bowman, Emma."Asian founders work to steer the narrative as beauty trends pull from their cultures".NPR.
  38. ^Zhou, Maggie (2023-07-03)."What is Douyin makeup, according to a makeup artist".Fashion Journal.Retrieved2024-01-19.
  39. ^"How to Get the Douyin Makeup Look Trending On TikTok".Teen Vogue.2023-04-04.Retrieved2024-01-19.
  40. ^Tai, Crystal (2023-09-20)."The viral rise of Chinese-style beauty and 'Douyin makeup' on TikTok".Jing Daily.Retrieved2024-01-19.
  41. ^"China Exempts Almost All Imported Cosmetics From Animal Testing".The Business of Fashion.2021-03-05.Retrieved2024-01-19.