Extinction laws observed in spectra of Be stars are shown to be evidently different from the mean extinction curve. They do not contain in many cases the prominent extinction feature - the 2200A bump. The results are derived both from multicolour (ranging from the far-IR until the ultraviolet ANS) photometry and from TD-1 UV spectra. It is strongly suggested that the observed extinction phenomena are originated in circumstellar, disk-shaped shells as the shape of resultant extinction curve suggests both the presence of big, core-mantle grains and continuous infrared emission of circumstellar origin.