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South Asian White Skin obsession

Men and women both should have natural looking light coffee or yellow skin. Both blacks and whites are too exaggerated. Thankfully, Chinese are blessed with naturally good bodies. Smooth skin, light complexion, great physical strength (one person walked 400 km home for New Years, to give you an idea of how much endurance the average Chinese has; this is also how Chinese armies marched 70 km per night during the Korean War), height equal to Americans and beautiful black hair.

:rofl: I won't bother responding to the other stuff, but you don't have height equal to Americans, and thank goodness not. Cause caucasians are too damn tall.

 
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18 pages full of useless argument abt the levels of melatonin in skin.

---------- Post added at 01:08 PM ---------- Previous post was at 01:05 PM ----------

sorry ,18 pages full of useless argument abt the levels of melanin in skin.
 

India's unbearable lightness of being


_47418582_beauty1._cut.jpg


Having lighter skin is considered an asset in parts of India

By Shantanu Guha Ray in Delhi


Having lighter skin is considered an asset in parts of India
It is being called "Snow White syndrome" in India, a market where sales of whitening creams are far outstripping those of Coca-Cola and tea.

India also has the world's second most lucrative marriage industry - the first being neighbouring China - that has grown to a whopping $40bn a year spent on weddings, dowries, jewellery etc.
And demand for fair-complexioned brides and grooms to grace these occasions is as high as ever
Fuelling this demand are the country's 75-odd reality TV shows where being fair, lovely and handsome means instant stardom.
As a result, the Indian whitening cream market is expanding at a rate of nearly 18% a year. The country's largest research agency, AC Nielsen, estimates that figure will rise to about 25% this year - and the market will be worth an estimated $432m, an all-time high.
With the Indian middle class expected to increase 10-fold to 583 million people by 2025, it looks as if things will only get better for the cream makers.
But there have been questions by medical experts about the effect of these creams on the skin.
Brand ambassador
The implicit assumption by many is this: the whiter the skin, the more attractive you are.

India's skin-lightening cream industry gets ever more lucrative
John Abraham, a top Indian actor and model, says: "Indian men want to look better."
And he should know. The market is booming like never before. Launched way back in 1978, Hindustan Unilever's Fair & Lovely is the leader in women's lightening skincare, while Calcutta's Emami group leads the male equivalent with its brand, Fair And Handsome.
The company calls this brand - launched in 2005 - the world's number one fairness cream.
It achieved sales of $13m in 2008-09 and has Shah Rukh Khan, another Bollywood superstar, as its brand ambassador.
And then there are female stars endorsing similar products. Katrina Kaif, naturally fair, sells Olay's Natural White while Deepika Padukone sells Neutrogena's Fine Fairness range.
Sonam Kapoor sells L'Oreal's White Perfect while Preity Zinta, once a top star, endorsed Fem's Herbal Bleach.

If you apply anything on the skin, there will obviously be side effects
Rues VK Sharma, All India Institute of Medical Sciences
And there are many brands on the shelves to choose from: lightening, brightening, clearing, whitening, anti-pigmentation, freshening, anti-dullness and even illuminating.
"India is on a fairness hook, everyone wants to look fair," says Mohan Goenka, director of the Calcutta-based Emami group, whose Fair and Handsome brand for men was the first of its kind in the market.
A recent study by Hindustan Unilever showed how men in southern states like Tamil Nadu, Kerala, Andhra Pradesh and Karnataka are fervent purchasers of whitening creams.
For example, Tamil Nadu has been recording - for the past year - the highest number of sales for Narayanan, a skin-whitening cream from the Unilever stable.
Another report in the daily Economic Times says sales of skin-whitening cosmetic products were also high in tribal-dominated states like Jharkhand and Chhattisgarh.
"The market in India is huge, really huge," says a Procter & Gamble spokesman.
Experts say that demand has boomed because of the tendency to discriminate against a person's skin colour, a practice that is still widespread across rural India.
Steroids
"But if your complexion is fair, you avoid that pinch. Everyone in India wants to be fairer. At times it is repulsive, worse than chalking of geishas' faces in Japan, but everyone wants to have a jar or tube of skin-whitening cream," says fashion designer Rohit Bal, who has dressed Bollywood actresses and visited the sets of reality shows.

Demand for fair complexioned brides and grooms is at a high
As a result, the products - priced between 50 cents and $150 a jar/tube - are in great demand countrywide.
No study has ever been done to discover what "fairness in four weeks" achieves.
Worse, there are several controversies attached to such products.
"If you apply anything on the skin, there will obviously be side effects," says Rues VK Sharma, head of the dermatology department at the All India Institute of Medical Sciences.
"Very few know that many of these creams contain steroids. Whatever doctors say will always be a drop in the ocean, as advertisements flooding the market have a far larger impact on the minds of people."
But companies say otherwise.
"We are not selling steroids and to date the company has not been involved in a single lawsuit where someone has blamed us for messing up their skin. Our products are lab-tested and we vouch for it," says Mohan Goenka of the Emami group.

BBC News - India's unbearable lightness of being
 
I know a lot of people oppose censorship and will disagree with me on this but I think skin whitening ads (at least those that portray darker people as unattractive) should be banned on grounds of racism.
 

India's unbearable lightness of being


_47418582_beauty1._cut.jpg


Having lighter skin is considered an asset in parts of India

By Shantanu Guha Ray in Delhi


Having lighter skin is considered an asset in parts of India
It is being called "Snow White syndrome" in India, a market where sales of whitening creams are far outstripping those of Coca-Cola and tea.

India also has the world's second most lucrative marriage industry - the first being neighbouring China - that has grown to a whopping $40bn a year spent on weddings, dowries, jewellery etc.
And demand for fair-complexioned brides and grooms to grace these occasions is as high as ever
Fuelling this demand are the country's 75-odd reality TV shows where being fair, lovely and handsome means instant stardom.
As a result, the Indian whitening cream market is expanding at a rate of nearly 18% a year. The country's largest research agency, AC Nielsen, estimates that figure will rise to about 25% this year - and the market will be worth an estimated $432m, an all-time high.
With the Indian middle class expected to increase 10-fold to 583 million people by 2025, it looks as if things will only get better for the cream makers.
But there have been questions by medical experts about the effect of these creams on the skin.
Brand ambassador
The implicit assumption by many is this: the whiter the skin, the more attractive you are.

India's skin-lightening cream industry gets ever more lucrative
John Abraham, a top Indian actor and model, says: "Indian men want to look better."
And he should know. The market is booming like never before. Launched way back in 1978, Hindustan Unilever's Fair & Lovely is the leader in women's lightening skincare, while Calcutta's Emami group leads the male equivalent with its brand, Fair And Handsome.
The company calls this brand - launched in 2005 - the world's number one fairness cream.
It achieved sales of $13m in 2008-09 and has Shah Rukh Khan, another Bollywood superstar, as its brand ambassador.
And then there are female stars endorsing similar products. Katrina Kaif, naturally fair, sells Olay's Natural White while Deepika Padukone sells Neutrogena's Fine Fairness range.
Sonam Kapoor sells L'Oreal's White Perfect while Preity Zinta, once a top star, endorsed Fem's Herbal Bleach.

If you apply anything on the skin, there will obviously be side effects
Rues VK Sharma, All India Institute of Medical Sciences
And there are many brands on the shelves to choose from: lightening, brightening, clearing, whitening, anti-pigmentation, freshening, anti-dullness and even illuminating.
"India is on a fairness hook, everyone wants to look fair," says Mohan Goenka, director of the Calcutta-based Emami group, whose Fair and Handsome brand for men was the first of its kind in the market.
A recent study by Hindustan Unilever showed how men in southern states like Tamil Nadu, Kerala, Andhra Pradesh and Karnataka are fervent purchasers of whitening creams.
For example, Tamil Nadu has been recording - for the past year - the highest number of sales for Narayanan, a skin-whitening cream from the Unilever stable.
Another report in the daily Economic Times says sales of skin-whitening cosmetic products were also high in tribal-dominated states like Jharkhand and Chhattisgarh.
"The market in India is huge, really huge," says a Procter & Gamble spokesman.
Experts say that demand has boomed because of the tendency to discriminate against a person's skin colour, a practice that is still widespread across rural India.
Steroids
"But if your complexion is fair, you avoid that pinch. Everyone in India wants to be fairer. At times it is repulsive, worse than chalking of geishas' faces in Japan, but everyone wants to have a jar or tube of skin-whitening cream," says fashion designer Rohit Bal, who has dressed Bollywood actresses and visited the sets of reality shows.

Demand for fair complexioned brides and grooms is at a high
As a result, the products - priced between 50 cents and $150 a jar/tube - are in great demand countrywide.
No study has ever been done to discover what "fairness in four weeks" achieves.
Worse, there are several controversies attached to such products.
"If you apply anything on the skin, there will obviously be side effects," says Rues VK Sharma, head of the dermatology department at the All India Institute of Medical Sciences.
"Very few know that many of these creams contain steroids. Whatever doctors say will always be a drop in the ocean, as advertisements flooding the market have a far larger impact on the minds of people."
But companies say otherwise.
"We are not selling steroids and to date the company has not been involved in a single lawsuit where someone has blamed us for messing up their skin. Our products are lab-tested and we vouch for it," says Mohan Goenka of the Emami group.

BBC News - India's unbearable lightness of being


PAKISTAN: Focus on skin bleaching

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Islamabad, 4 March 2002 (IRIN) - Graduating with a master's degree in science, 23 year-old Nasim Jamil is an attractive young Pakistani lady, but unhappy with her looks. "I am not fair enough," she told IRIN. "White is best," she maintained.

Such comments are not uncommon in this Asian country, where skin colour is increasingly being promoted to reflect one's position in society, a phenomenon which has serious implications. Today Jamil is receiving counselling in the Pakistani capital, Islamabad, to improve her self-esteem.

"When you ask Pakistani ladies what their idea of an ideal woman is, they will tell you that she should have fair skin," Fozia Yasmin, a clinical psychologist with the Pakistani nongovernmental organisation Rozan, told IRIN. Some 50 percent of women that she had counselled had been concerned about their skin colour, she added. Employing three psychologists, Rozan offers workshops on building self-esteem in colleges, and counselling for women.

"You see advertisements for skin creams everywhere you go in this country," she explained, saying that women in this Islamic nation were expected to look their best at all times, but were at the same time expected to be subservient. She used the example of a television advertisement in which a well-known Pakistani actress is promoting a skin bleaching cream. "Women admire these beauties, and they want to look like them, so they will buy the product," Yasmin said.

Skin colour also determines social status, according to the clinical psychologist, who said it was acceptable to be darker skinned if you were a member of the lower classes, but not if you were part of the upper strata in Pakistan. Yasmin added that she had often overheard conversations in which older women encouraged girls to use bleaching creams, telling them that it would improve their chances of finding a wealthier husband. "Men in this country are also to blame, as they look for a marriage partner who is light skinned," she stressed.

However, the psychological aspect is not the only component of skin bleaching: doctors also warn of physical damage. "We have between 10 and 15 female patients per month who are treated for skin burns caused by these bleaching creams," a skin specialist at the state-run Pakistan Institute for Medical Sciences in Islamabad, Dr Naureen Zaheer, told IRIN.

Some women also use steroids to whiten their skin. Zaheer described this as a "lethal combination". "They have a very bad effect on the skin and make it thinner and more prone to disorders. It can cause acne, and could also have the reverse effect and turn the skin black," she warned. "The tissue becomes very delicate and can be damaged even if it is scratched."

The two main bleaching agents in the creams are ammonia and hydrogen peroxide. The ammonia can cause irritation and, according to skin specialists, this is what causes most of the reactions. Mild irritation results in redness. If it becomes worse, the skin can blister and burn. "The burn is usually superficial, but it can go deeper if you leave the cream on for too long," Zaheer said.

The dermatologist cited an example of a patient whose skin was ulcerated and prone to eczema, resulting in the face being covered in marks and blacks spots. "There have been patients whom I have referred to the plastic surgery department because the burns are so bad," she said.

Asked what advice she would give women to encourage them not to use the creams, she replied: "We know that women will use these creams regardless of the advice we give them. But what we do say is that they should not use them when consuming other medication."

Skin-whitening lotions contain chemicals, and are usually derivatives of a substance called phenol and must be used in conjunction with a sun block. Paradoxically, however, they can cause the skin to darken. "I have seen many allergic reactions to this bleach, Dr Rehana Jamil, a skin specialist at Islamabad's Ali Medical Centre, told IRIN. "If your skin does turn black you must stop using it straight away and it will eventually return to its normal colour."

Jamil cited many cases of women suffering second-degree burns to the face. In one incident, a woman treated by Jamil was in excruciating pain due to blisters on her face. Following treatment, the patient's skin settled, but she returned soon after with black patches on her face. "This was the post-inflammatory affect of the pigmentation, and was very difficult to treat. It took years to heal," she added.

The skin specialist warned that excessive use of the cream could also scar for life. "You see, ammonia is corrosive, and if it goes deep enough it can burn very badly, because it eats away the skin," she said.

As the most popular beauty treatment in Pakistan, salons and chemist shops cash in on the skin-lightening craze. "We sell more than 100 tubes of skin and facial hair bleach a week," a sales assistant at Islamabad's biggest pharmacy told IRIN. "These are the most sought-after products."

"About 90 percent of my clients ask for facial hair bleach or skin bleach, but I only offer it to those who are suited to it," the owner of the Zaib beauty salon in Islamabad, Naz Anjum, told IRIN. "I always do a skin test and advise my clients to do a skin test if they are using it at home, and it should only be used once every six weeks," she added.

At the Zaib beauty salon, skin bleach is used for treating scars and for lightening pigmentation. Anjum warned that problems occurred when the solution was not mixed properly, and too much ammonia was used. She, too, told of skin-bleaching horror incidents. "A bride-to-be came to me on the eve of her wedding day. She had used this bleach, and her face had turned red and blotchy and then gone black," she said.

Every year the cosmetic industry makes millions of dollars from the sale of skin-bleaching products in Pakistan and India alone. According to Yasmin, the only way to stop women from using such creams, lotions and potions is to empower them. "We need to promote the natural look. Pakistani women need to feel more comfortable with the way they look without the make-up and without the bleach, and that can be achieved if they improve their self esteem," she stressed.
 
true,i feel natural cleansers like turmeric ll clean the skin and keep the face brighter and healthier.
 
whats wrong in color.. even chinese came from africa

 
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