Global Times

Korean beauty secrets

North Korean factory aims to compete with Chanel and Shiseido on quality and safety

- By Fan Lingzhi

North Korea officially opens up a cosmetic factory to the media for the first time.

North Korean scientists figure their brand is running neck and neck with Chanel by four main metrics, and superior in safety, said the factory’s chief engineer.

Russia placed its first order this month, and the cosmetics are being exported to other nations.

Wandering on the streets of Pyongyang, it is not hard to notice that women in the capital city of North Korea care about their dress and appearance a lot despite the country’s underdevel­oped economy.

Local residents believe that cosmetic products in North Korea are gentle, simple and elegant, just like women in this country.

Global Times reporters visited the Pyongyang Cosmetics Factory on September 8, uncovering the beauty secrets of North Korean women.

It is also the first time that North Korean authoritie­s opened up about the domestic cosmetic industry to the media.

Beloved leader

Located in the Pyongchong­uyok district of downtown Pyongyang, the Pyongyang Cosmetics Factory’s best-known brand is Unhasu, one of the two main brands in the country.

Driving a car into a factory yard surrounded by manufactur­ing workshops, the first impression left to this reporter is quietness and tidiness. Surprising­ly the place is free from the smell of chemicals.

Like other factories in North Korea, there is a small museum attached to the factory exhibiting photos and items showcasing the three North Korean leaders’ visits to the factory and the glorious history of the factory in past decades.

North Korean leader Kim Jong-un visited the factory twice from 2015 to 2017, instructin­g the factory to produce “world’s best cosmetics” to rival internatio­nally renowned cosmetics brands.

An LED screen displays the comparison results between Unhasu and several leading cosmetics brands around the world including Shiseido and Chanel on the four indexes stability, safety, sensation and effect.

“Our beloved leader sent us 138 kinds of cosmetic products from different world-famous brands, and we have made a detailed analysis,” Lee Seonhee, the chief engineer of the cosmetics factory, told the Global Times.

“We developed our own products on the basis of the analysis. As you can see, our products have caught up with or even surpassed these internatio­nal brands in terms of nutrition constituen­ts,” Lee said proudly.

As the LED screen shows, moisturizi­ng creams from Unhasu and Chanel are running neck and neck over three indexes, and Unhasu even beats Chanel on safety.

Lee explained to the Global Times that many of their cosmetics contain abundant extracts from plants and animals that grow or live in North Korea, and this is the reason why the products of the Pyongyang Cosmetics Factory are safer compared with competitor­s’ products.

“People use cosmetics to stay young. Therefore, we got a grip on the research and developmen­t of anti-aging products with sheer medicinal materials that boast natural effects, and the extraction is also done in our factory with high-tech equipment,” Lee told the Global Times.

Lee was not exaggerati­ng about the high-tech equipment. As this reporter saw in the factory, a dozen LED screens on the front wall of the manufactur­ing

“We developed our own products on the basis of the analysis. As you can see, our products have caught up with or even surpassed these internatio­nal brands in terms of nutrition constituen­ts.” Lee Seon-hee chief engineer of Pyongyang Cosmetics Factory

workshop showed the working status of each production line. Two workers monitor the manufactur­ing workshop via live video streams displayed on their desktops.

The second floor is a manufactur­ing workshop for Unhasu lotion, where production line management has been automated. In order to prevent contaminat­ion, the entire production area is absolutely isolated from the outside, with only few workers patrolling along the production line in contaminat­ion suits complete with respirator­s.

It looks like a big internatio­nal top-class factory.

“Our beloved leader paid visits to this cosmetics factory on February 4, 2015 and October 27, 2017, and provided us precious maxims. Under his leadership, we have seen a significan­t improvemen­t in ‘combat power,’ as a result, the production capacity in our factory increased sixfold, and our number of product categories also proliferat­ed by several times,” Lee told the Global Times.

“Our priority is to meet the domestic demand for cosmetics, and we are striving constantly to ensure the quality of our products overtakes other internatio­nal brands and make sure our people get access to cosmetics of higher quality,” said Lee.

“By then, the quality of our products will be recognized by the world. If other countries want to place an order, we can also fulfill their demands as we have adequate production capacity,” she said.

On a globe placed in the exhibition hall, several small red flags were pinned on some countries including Russia, Iran, Cyprus and Australia.

Lee explained to the Global Times that the marked countries are the export destinatio­ns their cosmetics will be shipped to in the near future.

“We got an order from Russia this month, and that’s why we are stepping up manufactur­ing,” said Lee. But the chief engineer refused to reveal detailed informatio­n about the order, saying that it is a business secret.

Word of mouth

The Pyongyang Cosmetics Factory says it produces more than 300 kinds of products with reasonable prices ranging from a couple of dollars to around a hundred dollars.

A saleswoman said the antiaging cream that Lee mentioned earlier was priced at 89,500 won ($90).

“On average 10 sets of the anti-aging products can be sold a day, and 300 can be sold in a month. Many people come to us because the superb quality (of our cosmetics) is spread by word of mouth.”

It is true that word of mouth is the way people in North Korea to get to know a brand. This reporter has never seen any television commercial advertisem­ents during his stationing in Pyongyang.

Likewise, the Pyongyang Cosmetics Factory has never advertised on television. Nonetheles­s, the saleswoman said they have some advertisin­g videos on the screens hanging over the sales counters, and broadcast advertisem­ents as well.

The factory has a diagnostic room for skin tests for consumers and gives accurate suggestion­s on skin-care products.

When asked about whether the government would allocate cosmetics, the saleswoman gave a nimble answer.

“This is a store run by the cosmetics factory,” she said. “But many people still come to us because we priced our products at a rather low level.”

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ?? Photos: Cui Meng/GT ?? Two saleswomen work in the retail store of the Pyongyang Cosmetics Factory on September 8. Inset: A worker tests the products in the Pyongyang Cosmetics Factory on September 8.
Photos: Cui Meng/GT Two saleswomen work in the retail store of the Pyongyang Cosmetics Factory on September 8. Inset: A worker tests the products in the Pyongyang Cosmetics Factory on September 8.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China