New Shade of Pale (article)

http://news.yahoo.com/s/chitribts/thequestforawhitershadeofpale;_ylt=ApBhtj1WRvHcM5FMk50jRVKs0NUE;_ylu=X3oDMTA3ODdxdHBhBHNlYwM5NjQ-


The quest for a whiter shade of pale

By Jia-Rui Chong Tribune Newspapers: Los Angeles TimesWed Jul 27, 9:40 AM ET

For many Southern Californians, summer is the season for beaches, chaise longues and the quest for the perfect tan.

Not for Margaret Qiu. She and thousands of other Asian-American women are going to great lengths to avoid the sun--fighting to preserve or enhance their pale complexions with expensive creams, masks, gloves, professional face scrubs and medical procedures.

For them, a porcelain-like white face is the feminine ideal, reflecting a long-held belief that pale skin represents a comfortable life. They also believe it can hide physical imperfections.

"There's a saying, `If you have white skin, you can cover 1,000 uglinesses,'" said Qiu, 36, a Chinese immigrant who lives in Alhambra.

Qiu goes through a regimen of skin-whitening products twice a day. She is one of many customers who have turned Asian whitening creams and lotions into a multimillion-dollar industry in the United States.

Take a daylight drive through Asian immigrant enclaves like Monterey Park and Irvine, and you'll see women trying to shield themselves with umbrellas even to go from a parking lot into a supermarket. While driving, many wear special "UV gloves"--resembling the long gloves worn with ball gowns--to protect their forearms, and don wraparound visors.

Beauticians do a brisk business with $65 whitening therapies. Women dab on fruit acid, which is supposed to remove old skin cells that dull the skin, and glop on masks with pearl powder or other ingredients that they believe lighten the skin.

For about $1,000, some doctors will use an electrical field to deliver vitamins, moisturizers and bleaching agents.

Whitening products have been a mainstay in Asia for decades, but cosmetics industry officials said they have emerged as a hot seller in the United States only in the past four years. Whitening products now rack up $10 million in sales a year, according to the market research firm Euromonitor.

But their popularity has sparked a debate among Asian-Americans about the politics of whitening. Qui and others say the quest for white skin is an Asian tradition. But others--younger, U.S.-born Asians--question whether the obsession with an ivory complexion has more to do with blending into white American culture, or even a subtle prejudice against those with darker skin.

Qiu, a native of Xi'an, China, thinks there is nothing politically incorrect about using products that whiten the skin.

Qiu said she was surprised when she first arrived in the U.S. and saw so many young women flaunting their tans.

She came to realize that Eastern and Western ideas of beauty were different. Here, she said, "When you see darker, you think they are very rich. They have a boat. They have enough time to go to the beach."

It's OK for American women to be darker, said her husband, Lei Sun, 36, a sushi chef. "It's part of the sports thing."

For Qiu and others, it's important to find just the right shade of white. Too white, Qiu said, and you look sickly.

"Then they look like Michael Jackson," she said.





(( Every day I learn something new that makes me think women are the wierdest creature in existence. ))

Gilae 20 years ago
Yeah I don't get that part about having whiter skin hiding more flaws. In my experience those of us with "natural" brown skin show less things like vericose veins, sunspots, blotchy skin, wrinkles, etc etc. Asians start looking older earlier imo. Compared to say a black woman who is all wrinkled, that woman isn't in her 60s...that woman is like 95. Seriously, it's a bragging point for me (one of my few). I anticipate I'll be dead before I show any signs of serious aging.
Sarah 20 years ago
Oh, god that means I'm going to look ancient when I'm only 50. I'm so excited.
Gilae 20 years ago
Well...look at your other family members, moms dads and grandparents. I'm lucky that even on the white side of my family there isn't much in the way of wrinkles.
Sarah 20 years ago
See the thing is, I seem to have inherited all the throwback genes in my family. So my luck will be I'll have heavy jowls and like a thousand crow's feet. I hope there is someone out there willing to shoot me before I get too ugly.