
To  colour their cheeks the Egyptians used red ochre in a base of fat or  Gum-resin. Ochre may have been used as lipstick, and a scene in a  papyrus now in Turing shows a woman painting her lips with a brush  whilst holding a container in her hand. Henna was used as a colorant, as  it is today. It was certainly used to color hair and perhaps also the  palms of the hands , soles of the feet  and nails, although it has been suggested that the henna-like stain i n  these parts of mummies was caused by embalmers' materials. Tattooing was  known and practiced by the ancient Egyptians , the earliest direct  evident coming from the Middle Kingdom . Mummies of dancers and royal  concubines have geometric designs tattooed on their chests, shoulders,  armies, abdomens and thighs. In the new Kingdom, dancers, musicians and  servants girls occasionally had a tiny representation of the god Bes  tattooed on their thighs as a good-luck charm.
 
 
 
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