17 Torture Devices — Ahem, I Mean "Beauty Machines" — That Women Actually Used Throughout History

    No, thank you. I don't want my beauty measured or my neck stimulated.

    Whenever I go to an antique store, I'm reminded that contraptions from several decades ago look complex and extremely uncomfortable. So, without further ado, here are 17 absolutely wild beauty contraptions that scare the absolute heck out of me.

    1. This "beauty micrometer" made to measure the beauty of someone's face with 325 adjustable pins.

    A scientist adjusts a complex metal device on a woman's head, likely for a scientific or medical experiment

    2. This "stimulating neck massager" that this beautician is using. It reminds me a lot of a device from the transformation scene in Captain America: The First Avenger.

    Two women in a vintage beauty salon; one uses a retro machine on the other's face, likely for a beauty treatment

    3. This "facial machine" from 1950 that doesn't at all look like a prop from a sci-fi B-movie.

    Person lying back with eyes covered, undergoing a vintage eye treatment procedure. Metal instruments are positioned around the face

    4. This "shower hood" that protected hair and makeup while in the shower. Personally, I think the steam that would come up under the face shield would be unbearable to me.

    Person using a handheld showerhead while wearing a protective head cover that leaves the face visible, deflecting water away from their face

    5. This "facial exercise apparatus" that I had to do some extensive googling to figure out. Apparently, it inflated to provide "resistive force for facial muscles to work against."

    Person lying down with a treatment mask, attended by someone in a white coat, suggesting a skincare or spa setting

    6. These spring-loaded heels for "exercising," I'm sure, caused one or two broken necks in their day.

    A woman in vintage attire kneels on a deck, adjusting skates attached to her shoes. People with fur coats are blurred in the background

    7. Again, what benefit is there to working out in heels?

    Vintage photo of a woman exercising with resistance bands, wearing a one-piece workout outfit, beside a mannequin

    8. This "leg-slimming" device that looks more like a pasta machine.

    A woman in a swimsuit sits in a vintage exercise machine with leg and arm supports, demonstrating its use

    9. This "fruit mask" that raises a lot of questions for me. While I agree tomatoes, cucumbers, oranges, and bananas are probably good for your skin, I can't shake how gooey and sticky my face would feel after taking these off.

    Person with face covered in citrus slices, including oranges and lemons, used as a facial treatment

    10. This hair-drying machine that looks like if she were to sneeze, she would get a massive burn on her head.

    A woman sits under an early 20th-century hair drying machine, with a man adjusting it. She is covered with a plastic cape

    11. This hair removal device from 1948 that gives me goosebumps just thinking about the little tendrils going up my leg.

    A woman in a vintage two-piece outfit undergoes an electrolysis treatment, assisted by another woman operating the machine

    12. This electric pulse muscle toning machine from 1953 that looks exactly like the lamps they use to keep rotisserie chicken warm.

    A woman smiles while receiving a vintage beauty treatment involving metal equipment in a spa-like setting

    13. This "dermascope" that was used to highlight every blemish and wrinkle by blasting a light at the patient, who is...not wearing sunglasses?

    A group of women in 1930s attire stand and sit around a bright spotlight, interacting and reading papers, in a room with a window and radiator

    14. This "spring leg" that I know is similar to resistance bands in this day and age, but whyyyyyy does it have that rickety-looking mattress spring in the middle?

    Person's leg in mid-kick motion, wearing stocking and high-heeled shoe, being tripped by a coiled wire at ankle level

    15. This 1929 gizmo that made hair waves permanent.

    A woman sits with a vintage hair drying machine on her head, holding a control device, in a salon setting

    16. This ultraviolet tooth therapy lamp that I wouldn't feel comfortable getting anywhere near my mouth.

    A woman in seated position undergoes a vintage beauty treatment with a man using a retro machine aimed at her face in a clinic setting

    17. Finally, this "permanent wave machine." Here's a firsthand account of what it was like to get your hair done in one of these from the Wisconsin Historical Society: "It took all day, and cost $1 each….First our hair was washed and cut, then we waited and waited. There were women everywhere in different stages of getting beautified. Everyone was waiting….My hair wound up on spiral rods so tight that I thought I would never blink again [and] after the machine that looked like a milking machine was attached to the rods, I couldn't move. [Then] it began to steam, and tears rolled down my cheeks. …[finally] someone got a blower and cooled my head here and there, but my scalp was scalded."

    A person sits with an early 20th-century hair perm machine on their head, surrounded by wires, wearing a salon cape

    What's the wildest beauty product you've seen? Tell us in the comments below!