Monday, November 30, 2015

Gigi Hadid Has Date Hair Down to a Science

gigi hadid date night

If there’s one beauty lesson to be gleaned from Gigi Hadid’s dating escapades this year, it’s that elaborate coifs or a complex contouring routine are hardly the stuff of budding romance—if anything, a rendezvous calls for the easygoing chic of glowing skin and the kind of simple hairstyle that could easily be crafted en route to the restaurant.

Spotted in West Hollywood last night with rumored new boyfriend Zayn Malik, fashion’s golden girl stayed true to low-key form with her blowout twisted into a sleek low bun that left out two thick, face-framing pieces. The ’70s-inflected style offered an evening-ready take on the textured courtside knots and seaside twists that caught our eye earlier in the year, but still felt casual enough to let another date-night-ready asset shine: knockout abs.

 

Go inside Gigi Hadid’s boxing workout:

The post Gigi Hadid Has Date Hair Down to a Science appeared first on Vogue.

How Lykke Li Does Pregnancy: Crime Shows, Sushi Cravings, and Her Favorite Natural Face Oil

Alessandra Ambrosio Brings Back a Cult ’90s Fitness Craze

Are Your Flats Causing Your Foot Pain? The Surprising Pitfalls of a Discreet Heel

flat foot problems

There’s an epidemic sweeping the Vogue offices this fall—and we’re not talking about the common cold. More and more editors have been spotted wearing a covetable fur-lined loafer or patent slide on one foot….and a thick black aircast on the other.  The cause of their sartorially compromising condition? An unsupportive pair of flats.  “I always assumed [the casts] were prescribed due to stiletto injuries,” says Vogue Bookings Director Helena Suric, who recently sustained a strained Achilles after logging regular laps around One World Trade Center in a deficiently supportive pair of ballet slippers—and it turns out she’s not an exceptional case study.

“There are a lot of diagnoses attributed to heels, but there are just as many caused by flats,” explains Chicago-based podiatrist Dr. Megan Leahy, D.P.M. When a heel is too low, or the toe of a shoe too tight, the natural distribution of pressure in a step becomes concentrated and strained, causing injuries that can lead all the way from the toe to the knee, back, hips, and even shoulders.

When it comes to flats-induced injuries, “most commonly you’re talking about heel pain caused by plantar fasciitis,” says David A Schofield, D.P.M., who explains that the constant trauma of landing hard on your heel, and the lack of arch support can cause the band of tissue running the length of your foot (the plantar fascia) to stretch and tear. Alternately, shoes that don’t provide enough room for the front of the foot can lead to nerve inflammation, arising when toes cannot spread to distribute weight along the metatarsal bone.

Both doctors agree, however, that avoiding the air boot, or worse, is a simple matter of paying attention. “I think some of us are under the impression that a little foot pain is normal, especially when you’re breaking something in,” says Leahy. “But foot pain is almost never normal.” If pain, fatigue, and swelling from new shoes, vertiginous heels, or waifish slippers persists longer than one day, she suggests paying a visit to your podiatrist. In addition to assessing any underlying issues, custom orthotics can be made to address the specific structural contours of your own foot and will fit into even the lowest of leather frames. For a quicker, albeit less-tailor-made fit, she suggests Super Feet’s over-the-counter inserts, which slip easily into ballet flats.

Similarly, wearing suspect shoes in moderation (a few hours, preferably seated) should save your soles without narrowing your wardrobe. “I use the same rule of thumb for flats that I do for higher heels,” says Schofield. “[If you] will be on your feet all day, keep a pair of shoes with you that’s more comfortable, then when you need to be in presentation or public mode, go ahead and wear the shoe.”

Beyond that, the final solution may surprise you. “I was told to start wearing heels immediately,” says Suric of her own podiatrist’s temporary suggestion. According to Leahy, a two-inch lift in the back of your shoe is just the right height to take pressure off of the Achilles tendon and relieve pain caused by planter fasciitis. Just the excuse we’ve been looking for to stock up on Tabitha Simmons’s mid-heel pumps and Rochas’s low-slung Mary Janes.

The post Are Your Flats Causing Your Foot Pain? The Surprising Pitfalls of a Discreet Heel appeared first on Vogue.

Sunday, November 29, 2015

How to Spend Your Thanksgiving Vacation: The Case for Double Masking Your Hair

hair masks


Among the great luxuries of a long weekend are the untold amounts of free time that suddenly drop into your lap. So how to while away the hours in the most indulgent way possible? One inarguably positive use of that time is a targeted beauty overhaul. By merely passing the weekend navel-gazing in your loungewear you can tackle the kind of tasks that would usually require a month’s worth of scheduled maintenance appointments—starting with the hair phenomenon known as double masking. By using two treatment masks in a row—one that’s a deep cleansing formula, and another that’s ultra replenishing—you can press reset on anything from a dry and irritated scalp, fried ends, and color damage. “[It’s like] only drinking water and not eating,” says Parisian superstylist Christophe Robin of the single mask approach. For next-level hair “from root to tips,” he insists, “you need both.”

To assure the “perfect nutrition for scalp and hair,” Robin first massages a tablespoon of his own self-titled granular Cleansing Purifying Scrub with Sea Salt into wet strands, starting at the hairline and moving toward the ends. The salt, which breaks down gradually as it’s massaged with water, is a “grandma’s recipe” for absorbing impurities, cleansing the skin, and really allowing the scalp to breathe. Once the hair and head are perfectly clean, Robin reaches for his Regenerating Mask with Rare Prickly Pear Seed Oil for phase two. Concentrating the vitamin E and antioxidant-spiked conditioner on the mid-lengths and ends of the hair (with the remainder finger-combed into the roots), he says, will tame even the frizziest, most damaged strands. Best of all, once applied, you have 15 minutes in front of you to do whatever you want—read a book, paint your nails, reorganize your medicine cabinet, all of which can be accomplished with the peace of mind that your party season hair will be unprecedentedly bouncy and glossy. Feeling thankful yet?

The post How to Spend Your Thanksgiving Vacation: The Case for Double Masking Your Hair appeared first on Vogue.

The 10 Best Beauty Instagrams of the Week: Lady Gaga, Zendaya, and More

Dev Windsor

From Cookie Monster blue to sun-soaked blonde, this week’s best beauty Instagrams centered on aspirational lengths in every hue. Chanel Iman topped her mahogany mane with a black Panama hat for a quick road trip, allowing stray strands to blow in the desert wind, while Candice Swanepoel tousled her blanched strands on the sunny shores of Costa Rica. Emily Ratajkowski embraced a temporary shade of cobalt blue, a shock of color enhanced by a trio of loose cornrows and matching denim jacket.

Selfies came courtesy of Lady Gaga—who paired her signature peroxide dye job with matte red lip and oversize cat-eye sunnies while requesting Thanksgiving recipes from followers—and Zendaya, whose slicked-back bun helped pull focus to the fringe benefits of baby hairs and long lashes. Elsa Hosk hopped in an NYC Uber to escape the chill, topping her baby blonde lengths with a burgundy beanie for a fashionably cozy ride. And while Izabel Goulart embraced an alfresco beauty moment in Cannes—voluminous waves, white robe, and all—DJ Hannah Bronfman served up major health inspiration in the guise of a frothy green beverage (and a minimalist manicure), just the type of elixir we will be reaching for throughout the remainder of the holiday season.

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Saturday, November 28, 2015

10 Models Share Their Favorite Songs to Work Out to This Party Season

joan smalls


The turkey’s been carved, the leftovers devoured, and it’s finally time to head home, but the feasts—and, more importantly, the festivities—are far from over. Now, we’re gearing up for party season, otherwise known as the five solid weeks of cocktails and blowout fetes that call for bottomless reserves of energy and holiday cheer.

How, then, to get into tip-top partying shape before the year is over? Make like a model, of course, and turn to a dynamic playlist that will get your blood pumping. Above, 10 of our favorite faces share the songs they used to get fit and fired-up this fall—from Emily Ratajkowski to Bella Hadid. Bonus: We’ve assembled the best of them into one master Spotify playlist below.

The post 10 Models Share Their Favorite Songs to Work Out to This Party Season appeared first on Vogue.

Pre-Gaming for Cyber Monday: 5 Beauty Buyers on What’s Worth the Investment

tim walker vogue april 2012

It’s Cyber Monday, it’s almost December, and it’s officially the holiday season. Translation: Today is a perfect day to browse the Web in search of beauty gifts for everyone on your list—including yourself! But, since the Internet can feel infinite and overwhelming (with e-commerce stores for just about everything), we asked a handful of our favorite online boutiques to point us toward their most exceptional beauty, health, and wellness items this season. The resulting collections—curated by the buyers at Aedes de Venustas’s cult perfumery, the wellness-minded pros at Goop, and more—are sure to inspire your holiday-shopping spirit. There’s a luxurious oil to protect your skin from frigid winds, and a gold-tinted “rubber” mask for a dazzling at-home spa session. Get the gilded candles with notes of Christmas-y myrrh for a beloved hostess, and the delicious Moon Juice powders for your jet-setting cousin. With most of the shopping legwork done for you, there’s little left to do but sit back on your couch and start clicking.

Blair Lawson, Goop

 

 

Robert Gerstner, Aedes de Venustas

 

Alicia Yoon, Peach and Lily

 

Rachel Albright, Urban Outfitters

 

Desiree Verdejo, Vivrant

The post Pre-Gaming for Cyber Monday: 5 Beauty Buyers on What’s Worth the Investment appeared first on Vogue.

Thursday, November 26, 2015

I’m Going to My High School Reunion: Here’s the Beauty Game Plan

The Ultimate Hotel Room Workout: 7 Body-Sculpting Moves With Model Irina Shayk

The Mini-Me Effect: How Celebrity Kids Take Good Hair for a Street Style Spin

Photo: The Image Direct

Fashion’s favorite bombshell moms may be walking proof of the undeniable magic that happens when a great head of hair is treated to a bouncy blowout, but it seems their kids are taking their beauty cues from an edgier source: street style.

Cindy Crawford’s teenaged doppelgänger, Kaia Gerber, who has clearly inherited her mother’s legendary mane, was spotted in Manhattan recently with thick twin Grecian braids, an off-duty-model favorite that was paired with a downtown uniform of black skinnies and a biker jacket.

Over in Boston, Gisele Bündchen’s 2-year-old, Vivian, showed off a wispy, face-framing wreath that promised to benefit as much from a gusty day as her mother’s trademark windswept waves do.

Speaking of the offbeat chic of a little seasonal static, one look at Vivienne Jolie-Pitt’s fuzzy flaxen waves may be all you need to give your hairbrush a break this Thanksgiving weekend. And we wouldn’t be surprised if Ciara’s son Future inspired the singer’s recent natural-curls moment with his adorable fluffy texture. Here, four amply maned mini-me’s who have much to be thankful for—good genes included.

The post The Mini-Me Effect: How Celebrity Kids Take Good Hair for a Street Style Spin appeared first on Vogue.

Wednesday, November 25, 2015

This Is What 68 Looks Like: Marisa Berenson on the Secrets Behind Her New Cult Skincare Line

Why Rosie Huntington-Whiteley Is Our Travel Beauty Spirit Guide

Put Down the Sheet Mask: The Best Travel Masks Are Clear and Amazing

face masks


Whether you find yourself headed over the river and through the woods or jetting to a tropical oasis to escape the forthcoming winter chill, the effect is often the same: Planes, trains, and automobiles tend to make even the most seasoned travelers look a little lackluster. In recent years, turning a long-haul flight into an opportunity for a spa treatment has become a completely acceptable practice, provided you are brave enough to endure the public humiliation of a sheet mask, which can transform even a supermodel into a mildly macabre version of Michael Myers in Halloween. But for those who desire the same nourishing effects minus the scare factor, we suggest reaching for one of the latest clear hydrating options instead.

Herbivore Botanicals’s Brighten Pineapple Enzyme + Gemstone mask lights up the skin with Brazilian tourmaline and rice powder to fight the drying effects of bicoastal air travel, while Guerlain’s Abeille Royale Repairing Honey Gel Mask does the same by way of raw, organic honey, each in a virtually imperceptible guise. And though a few of our favorites—Ren Wake Wonderful Night-time Facial and Decléor Baume Excellence Regenerating Night Balm Mask among them—are touted as overnight options, applying them at takeoff and rinsing just prior to descent allows for the kind of rejuvenation more commonly associated with stage 4 sleep. When all else fails, reach for Derm Institute’s single-dose, invisible antioxidant-packed masks: One slim packet, which goes into skin in a thick, invisible layer and gradually absorbs over the next 30 minutes, delivers nothing short of miraculous results at 35,000 feet. Here, 10 invisible face masks ideal for an under-the-radar spa session.

The post Put Down the Sheet Mask: The Best Travel Masks Are Clear and Amazing appeared first on Vogue.

Tuesday, November 24, 2015

What Goes Into the Perfect Eyeliner Collection? A Pro’s Guide to Painting It Black

Why Nude Makeup and Head-to-Toe Black Are the Holiday Party Pairing to Beat

Lara Stone

The British Fashion Awards honored the likes of Karl Lagerfeld, Alessandro Michele, and Mary Katrantzou last night, but a quick survey of the red carpet revealed the evening’s unofficial winner:  rich, earthy makeup that made an unfailingly chic partner for a head-to-toe black ensemble.

Model of the Year Jourdan Dunn showed off her trademark smoldering lids and caramel lips for the black-tie affair, while fellow It-Brit Edie Campbell offset a boyish blazer with a swirl of tawny blush and a dab of warm beige lipstick. Lara Stone lent her wispy ponytail and peach flush an evening-ready edge with a stroke of kohl, and Georgia May Jagger channeled a ’70s allure with bohemian waves and a soft bronzed glow. Even Fashion Innovator award winner FKA twigs traded in her usual crimson mouth for barely there makeup and a russet lip stain. Here, four arguments for the scene-stealing impact of a monochromatic palette.

The post Why Nude Makeup and Head-to-Toe Black Are the Holiday Party Pairing to Beat appeared first on Vogue.

10 Beauty Staples That Give New Meaning to the Phrase “Black Friday”

david sims vogue march 2014


In less than 72 hours, the Thanksgiving sales will be in full swing, but for a certain kind of woman—one who embraces a diffused rimming of kohl eyeliner or jet-colored manicure on a regular basis—it’s always Black Friday. That’s why this weekend, we suggest inventing your own appropriately themed ritual by shopping for noir-inspired products that capture the moody vibe of winter—without actually requiring you to set foot outdoors. To help you get started, we’ve done the legwork, scoping out 10 dark beauty staples worth using all year long.

The post 10 Beauty Staples That Give New Meaning to the Phrase “Black Friday” appeared first on Vogue.

A Guide to Stocking Your Guest Room: 23 Products for a Warm Welcome

Arthur Elgort vogue november 2003

If you’re hosting Thanksgiving this season, chances are you’re offering up your guest room to a favorite family member or friend. Part of welcoming overnight visitors is imagining how they’ll feel when they set down their bags and step inside their new home. Beyond the right bed linens or fluffy towel set, it’s a winning mix of personal beauty staples—from the most comforting hand cream to an obsessively pretty jar of bath salts—that makes for a truly memorable stay. Here, a few ideas for what to place in the shower, on the vanity, and in every nook and cranny in between.

The post A Guide to Stocking Your Guest Room: 23 Products for a Warm Welcome appeared first on Vogue.

The Best Beauty Looks: Week of November 23, 2015

Monday, November 23, 2015

7 Polish Models Share Their Hometown Beauty Secrets, From Honey Water to Zinc Cream

Photo: Courtesy of Asia Piwka / @asiapiwka

Enter the Polish enclave of Greenpoint, Brooklyn, and there is one thing you’ll notice: Polish women—as well as men—have wonderful skin. Are those clear complexions and rosy cheeks the result of an endless supply of antioxidant-rich kasha? Or are they the result of regular trips inside the neighborhood’s traditional pharmacies? With more and more of the country’s fresh faces turning up on major fashion runways in recent seasons, we decided to delve into just how those who hail from the Central-meets-Eastern European nation maintain their eternally glowing skin. Because who better to ask than its stock of stellar models? There’s Gucci campaign girl Julita Formella, who opts for kitchen ingredients for her winter cuticle cure, while the wide-eyed Maja Salamon is a DIY face mask regular and Titian-haired Magdalena Jasek swears by her homeland’s well-formulated face products. Whatever the solution, we’ll take it. Here, see what seven of our favorite industry insiders recommend for their beauty treatments.

The post 7 Polish Models Share Their Hometown Beauty Secrets, From Honey Water to Zinc Cream appeared first on Vogue.

Ciara Brings Back a ’90s Hair Statement at the American Music Awards

How Amber Heard, Kendall Jenner, and More Master the Festive Black-Tie Bun

Amber Heard

A quick wispy bun may be the ultimate off-duty hair upgrade, but when it comes to instilling the style with after-dark appeal, there’s more than one way to tie a topknot.

Spotted at the American Music Awards in Los Angeles last night, Kendall Jenner trod the red carpet with her blowout crafted into a sleek, gravity-defying coil. Together with a fresh set of choppy, eyelash-skimming bangs (which have already sparked a wave of real-or-fake Internet chatter), the look channeled a hard-edged glamour befitting of a Balmain muse.

Over in London, Gugu Mbatha-Raw’s textured ladylike twist offered a softer take on the style, while Amber Heard recalibrated her signature bombshell beauty formula to an off-kilter pairing of a tux and an unfinished sculptural knot in Westwood, California. Just in time for a week of holiday gatherings, here are three next-level buns good enough for a night out.

The post How Amber Heard, Kendall Jenner, and More Master the Festive Black-Tie Bun appeared first on Vogue.

The 10 Best Beauty Gifts for Your Thanksgiving Hostess

hostess

Your mother was right: Showing up empty-handed to Thanksgiving dinner is entirely unacceptable. And yet, the expected flower arrangement can leave something to be desired. This year, why not spring for the kind of thoughtful gift your hostess never knew she needed—and soon won’t be able to live without?

We can’t think of anyone who wouldn’t swoon after opening Dolce & Gabbana’s exuberant candle or Susanne Kaufmann’s 24-day herbal advent calendar, filled with small luxuries like a calming whey bath, rose oil, or antiaging tea. Simplehuman’s next-level makeup mirror contains perfectly pre-calibrated lighting that will turn on automatically when your hostess’s fleet-footed steps approach.

For the woman who has everything, on the other hand, Ex Nihilo’s personalized perfume experience—redeemable at Bergdorf Goodman, where a skilled scent expert will walk her through the creation of her own custom signature fragrance—can’t be beat.

From Frédéric Malle’s new linen spray (you’re going to want to pick up a second for yourself) to Wary Meyers’s charming striped nautical soaps, here are 10 hostess gifts that will make a lasting impression.

The post The 10 Best Beauty Gifts for Your Thanksgiving Hostess appeared first on Vogue.

The Coconut Oil Makeup Wipes You Need in Your Thanksgiving Carry-On

theo wenner vogue november 2015

As we prepare for next week’s holiday travel, we’re stocking our Dopp kits with the essentials. Among them, we’ll be packing what is now considered the phone, keys, and wallet of travel beauty products: makeup wipes. Coming to the rescue on planes, camping trips, and in times of jet-lag exhaustion, they are the disposable, effortless, water-free stand-ins for our favorite cleansers. But until now, they’ve always been just that—a runner-up to our actual skincare routine.

Makeup artist and natural beauty guru Rose-Marie Swift’s latest contribution to the product category will make you reconsider. After decades of employing chemically driven wipes on her model clients, Swift grew weary of their downsides. “I [had] to rub too much to get makeup off,” she says, adding that most formulas were ultimately  drying to the skin and eyelashes. In search of something “easier and more effective,” she’s now adding The Ultimate Makeup Remover Wipe to her collection of cultish makeup and skincare.

Harnessing the same star ingredient found in her best-selling balm cleanser—100 percent organic raw coconut oil— the individually wrapped wipes boast a game-changing ability to seemingly melt off your foundation, mascara, liner, and lipstick in one compostable cloth, no violent rubbing required. What’s left is a layer of hydration so soothing it renders further moisturizing unnecessary.

As the sole ingredient in each wipe, coconut oil delivers a concentrated source of anti-fungal and antibacterial lauric and caprylic acids, which reduce breakouts while leaving skin with a healthy sheen. Doubling as a multitasking cloth for hands and any dry patches, it may be the perfect in-flight remedy, leaving skin as primed and ready for a fresh face of makeup before landing as it is for a replenishing night’s sleep. Consider your bag packed.

The post The Coconut Oil Makeup Wipes You Need in Your Thanksgiving Carry-On appeared first on Vogue.

Sunday, November 22, 2015

Did Gigi Hadid Just Get a Bob?

Why a Textured Knot Is Our Favorite Sunday Street Style Solution

gigi hadid

Whether this marks your last low-key weekend before you’re whisked into the holiday party vortex or you have already dived into the festivities, we can all agree that the ideal Sunday morning beauty routine should involve little more than getting your hair up and out of the way—so you can get back to enjoying your day of rest. It doesn’t matter if you’re starting with shower-fresh waves or last night’s blowout: There’s hardly a more reliably chic hair upgrade than a quick bun.

Spotted in Los Angeles recently, Alessandra Ambrosio piled her strands into a messy topknot, which looks as good while you’re breaking a sweat as it does over a post-workout plate of eggs, while Gigi Hadid’s textured twist channeled a sweater-ready cool that was made for an afternoon of shopping. Over in New York, Olivia Palermo put a luxe stamp on the style with the help of a fur vest and a fresh manicure—a pairing with enough day-to-night elegance to navigate afternoon strolls and impromptu party pit stops alike. Here, three cheers for the breezy—and instant—polish of a fuzzy bun.

The post Why a Textured Knot Is Our Favorite Sunday Street Style Solution appeared first on Vogue.

The 10 Best Beauty Instagrams of the Week: Lady Gaga, Karlie Kloss, and More

Lady Gaga

When it comes to snapping an autumn selfie, good hair, glowing skin, and above-the-neck accessories render filters almost obsolete. Such was the case with this week’s best beauty Instagrams, which found Pernille Teisbaek coyly snuggling into her heathered knit turtleneck, her golden blonde hair tucked and protected from the icy winds of Switzerland’s Matterhorn. Amy Sall drew focus to her luminous complexion with a bright, printed head wrap, while Alexa Chung and Lady Gaga each relied on signature hair and makeup statements, respectively, to embolden their self-facing shots. Scintillating metallic additions starred in snaps from Fig & Viper’s Alisa Ueno, who shared her celestially bedecked manicure with the masses, and Leila Rahimi, who credited makeup artist Jeffrey Baum with creating her gilded foil liner look.

Models fought the chill by fleeing to warmer climates: Constance Jablonski embraced the golden lights of Morocco (the perfect environment for her warm, highlighted lengths), as Eniko Mihalik and Nadja Bender took to the shores of Turks and Caicos with only rounded sunnies to shield them from the elements. But, for our part, we’ll be drawing inspiration from Karlie Kloss: The ever-aspirational It girl could be found in a New York City studio, lengthening and strengthening her limbs in honor of #fitnessfriday, a hashtag holiday we’ll be sure to celebrate in the coming weeks.

The post The 10 Best Beauty Instagrams of the Week: Lady Gaga, Karlie Kloss, and More appeared first on Vogue.

Friday, November 20, 2015

Could Your Thanksgiving Pie Be the Healthiest Dish on Your Table? 5 Fresh Spins on Holiday Dessert

Photo: Courtesy of jugofresh / @jugofresh

Thanksgiving is a holiday predicated on a bountiful, multi-course, marshmallow-crowned feast. It’s delicious, it’s decadent—even the green beans are drowned in cream. But by the time dessert rolls around, a slice of pie can feel like too much of a good thing. This year, consider showing your thanks for the family and friends around your table by serving a stealthily lighter—but no less flavorful—incarnation of after-dinner pie. Creative bakeries across the country are radically rethinking classic dessert standbys, swapping butter for trans-fat-free oils, refined sugar for raw dates, and bleached flour for ground nuts, all the while elevating the textures and flavors we look forward to each year. After the turkey, the stuffing, and the sweet potatoes (let’s be honest, a mid-meal dessert in themselves), these modern versions of your favorite pies are the ultimate palette-sealer.

Raw Pumpkin Pie, Nourish Café, San Francisco
San Francisco’s Nourish Café builds its seasonal pie on a gluten-free crust of pecans and oats flecked with omega 3–rich flax seeds. Organic pumpkin sweetened with maple syrup and infused with a signature blend from the city’s beloved Spice Ace shop forms a rich and aromatic filling, minus the processed sugar, butter, or eggs. Topped with a dollop of whipped coconut cream, this pie is nutrient-dense and irresistible.

$25; Nourish Café, 189 Sixth Avenue, San Francisco 94118, 415.571.8780, nourishcafesf.com

 

Vegan Apple Pie, Blossom Bakery, New York City
Manhattan’s Blossom Bakery keeps its apple pie traditional while simultaneously cutting all cholesterol, trans fats, and animal products from the equation. Vegan and organic, its Granny Smith pie is tart, sweet, and, thanks to a blend of heart-healthy oils, buttery in flavor. Bonus points for the nutmeg-crumble topping.

$35; Blossom Bakery, 174 Ninth Avenue, New York, NY 10011, 212.242.3339, http://ift.tt/1Elmvpc 

 

Gluten-Free Coconut Cream Pie, Café Gratitude, L.A.
The raw, live, and gluten-free Coconut Cream Pie at L.A.’s cultish Café Gratitude has the custardy texture and exuberant flavor of a classic cream pie—but it shares just two ingredients with its heavier predecessors: vanilla and salt. Unsweetened coconut flakes and dates form the basis of the flour-less crust, while house-pressed coconut milk and fresh coconut meat blend together to create a silky filling. In place of whipped cream topping, it’s finished with a crunchy coconut dusting.

$75; Café Gratitude, 512 Rose Avenue, Venice, CA 90291, 424.231.8000 (additional locations in the L.A. area), cafegratitude.com

 

Cranberry Ginger Pear Pie, Chaco Canyon Organic Café, Seattle
For fresh flavor and feel-good vibes, Chaco Canyon Organic Café packs its pie with local, sustainably produced cranberry and pear. Studded with candied ginger, this fully organic treat is available with a whole wheat or gluten-free crust and vegan streusel. 

$20–$35; Chaco Canyon Organic Café, 4757 12th Avenue, Seattle 98105, 206.522.6966, chacocanyoncafe.com

 

Raw Key Lime Pie, JugoFresh, Miami
Miami’s JugoFresh takes the health-first standards it developed for its cold-pressed juices and distills them into its raw Key lime pie. Available only for Thanksgiving, the almond-date crust and lime-avocado filling, garnished with vitamin-rich chlorella, is a fresh, bright, and shockingly tasty take on the standard.  

$32; JugoFresh, 1935 W Avenue, Miami Beach 33139, 786.472.2552, jugofresh.com

The post Could Your Thanksgiving Pie Be the Healthiest Dish on Your Table? 5 Fresh Spins on Holiday Dessert appeared first on Vogue.

How to Be a Modern-Day Katniss Everdeen: Introducing The Hunger Games Beauty and Fitness Challenge

How Freckled Black Women Are Rewriting the Pippi Longstocking Mystique

Did Rihanna Just Dye Her Hair Blue?

rihanna

With a newly announced styling agency and a major beauty line in the works, it’s safe to say that Rihanna is one of the busiest women in the business.

Not that it’s slowed down her quick-change beauty game. The singer stepped out in New York City in her head-to-toe black best with her hair swept under a baseball cap—a nod to Rhythm Nation–era Janet that still bore the requisite RiRi twist: freshly Manic Panic’d ends that were coiled into a bright blue bun.

It’s a 180 from the side-swept Hollywood curls and ladylike color palettes that the Dior muse has been favoring of late—and now that we’re approaching the darkest stretch of the year, the look felt like confirmation that there’s no better time to go bright.

 

André Leon Talley talks to Rihanna at the 2015 Met Gala:

The post Did Rihanna Just Dye Her Hair Blue? appeared first on Vogue.

Thursday, November 19, 2015

The Secret to Jacqueline de Ribes’s Signature 1965 Updo—From the Vogue Archives

Jacqueline de Ribes

Today the Metropolitan Museum of Art opens “Jacqueline de Ribes: The Art of Style,” an exhibition celebrating the incomparable French aristocrat who is as famous for her unerring fashion sense as her indelible beauty. Her chiseled bone structure invites comparisons to Greek statuary. Classic, too, is her signature look: winged eyes, swanlike neck, a bouffant of dark hair. In her ’60s heyday, the latter was often styled by Alexandre, the leading French coiffeur of the times, or, often, at home by De Ribes.

Intent on discovering the vicomtesse’s secrets, Vogue aimed its “private eye” on her, reporting in the January 15, 1965 issue that “in one swift hour, [she] demonstrated at least a dozen of her ingenious and dexterous ways with [her hair].” Not only did De Ribes disclose the technique behind her voluminous and soigné updo—a style that continues to captivate in photographs some 50 years later—but her weakness for American lipstick. Here, from the archives, a rare inside glimpse of how the famous De Ribes glamour is achieved.

The Art of the French Twist
“Seated, and with head bent well forward, her strong, capable hands divided her hair into thick sections,” wrote Vogue, capturing the precise movements De Ribes used to create the base of her gravity-defying look. Next, she picked up a boar-bristle brush and “went at each tusk, back-combing with a vengeance.” Finally, the magazine reported, “she flipped her head back, her hair now three times more enormous than it was before, radiating like a sunburst. With a brush—she never uses a comb, even in her handbag she carries a narrow, rattail brush, shaped like a kitchen knife—she smoothed her hair with fantastic speed, shaping the mass into a sleek mound.” Afterward, De Ribes tucked the back ends into a French twist, “held with big, sturdy tortoise pins” that, in her words, she was “completely lost without—they are the only ones that reach to the scalp.”

The Hair Regimen
According to Vogue, when De Ribes didn’t head to Alexandre’s salon, she washed her own hair once a week before putting it in natural waves, then made “huge curls out of the rest and [wandered] around the house until it dries.” Although the countess had been “teasing that incredible mop of hair since she was fifteen years old,” the magazine recounted, she “did not completely brush through or back-comb her whole head every day”—performing it about three times a week in the interest of time.

The Skincare and Makeup Ritual
“Funnily enough, for a Frenchwoman, I wear completely American cosmetics,” De Ribes told Vogue. “Even my bath oil. My Parisian friends, in the land of perfume, think I’m mad to keep asking people to bring me back that from the States. But I do. Lipstick too . . . It’s the best in the world.” In other areas, she favored an approach that was simple, well executed, and efficient, using one “all-purpose” cream “to massage my feet and my scalp.”  When it came to makeup, De Ribes knew what worked, sharing that she used beige tones—a beige foundation, matching blush, and clear lip gloss over a brownish lipstick for day. In the evening, she preferred all shades of pink. “Her eye makeup is famous, especially the great upswept wings of eyeliner,” recounted the magazine, to which De Ribes confessed that she had “been fascinated with makeup and hair since she was a baby.” “I was always into Mummy’s makeup,” she said. “Before I went to bed, I experimented with it.”

The post The Secret to Jacqueline de Ribes’s Signature 1965 Updo—From the Vogue Archives appeared first on Vogue.

North West Ditches Her Ballerina Bun for Free-Flowing Curls

Solange Knowles’s Hair Takes a Dramatic Braided Turn—Just in Time for the Weekend

Wednesday, November 18, 2015

Inspired by Zoolander 2: The 10 Best Bleached-Brow Movie Moments

There’s a Crystal for That: 8 Energy-Shifting Beauty Elixirs for a Ridiculously Zen Existence

crystal beauty products


The New Age movement has slowly been making its way into the lives of mainstream New Yorkers, gradually moving east from Los Angeles, where it’s been building to a slow crescendo in recent months. In fact, these days, it’s not uncommon to hear the words “my healer said” and “your aura is glowing” drift past tables at The Polo Bar or yoga mats at downtown’s Sky Ting studio.

Last month, this beauty editor was even gifted a 2-pound amethyst stone as a thank you, which, contrary to my initial assessment, isn’t just a heavy, purple paperweight. “The demand for crystals is there and definitely growing,” says New York facialist Georgia Louise, who incorporates a rose quartz stone as a de-puffing massage tool into her signature facials. “It’s said that Cleopatra bathed with chunks of rose quartz, which is known for its intense healing and antiaging benefits.” And it’s no wonder that the Egyptian queen kept them around: In addition to their powers, the glimmering stones are a pretty embellishment on any office desk, mantle, or vanity table.

Of course, Louise isn’t the only beauty-minded expert who’s incorporating crystals into her regimen, with a new wave of skincare products harnessing their therapeutic effects. Need a little more focus at the office? Try Adorn’s Balance fragrance, made with amethyst and meant to calm an overactive mind. Experiencing a mild case of seasonal affective disorder? Wash away your winter sorrows with Wild Medicine’s Titanium Quartz Soap, which promises to “stimulate humor and enliven the chakras,” according to company cofounder Jessie Laino. For a tough day ahead or big interview, Shiffa’s Gemstone Emerald Face Oil promises to give you strength when you need it most. In other words, whatever you’re feeling, there’s a crystal for that. Above, eight beauty products that will lead you down the path to enlightenment—or at least the one to better skin.

 

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The post There’s a Crystal for That: 8 Energy-Shifting Beauty Elixirs for a Ridiculously Zen Existence appeared first on Vogue.

Could Plants Help Cure Your Seasonal Affective Disorder?

Camila Alves Takes the Natural Curl Phenomenon for a High-Shine Spin

Camilla Alves

Whether coaxed into an Afro, air-dried into fuzzy spirals, or brushed to frothy new heights, the return of statement curls has been marked by an exuberant, bigger-is-better texture.

Spotted in New York City yesterday, Camila Alves offered a sleek spin on the look with her hair falling into glossy, static-defying pieces—a style that combined all the polish of a shiny blowout with the bombshell allure of a high-volume mane. A new holiday hair prescription? Considering that a few drops of your favorite frizz fix and a gentle blast of a diffuser are all that’s needed to take your natural texture to the next level, count us in.

The post Camila Alves Takes the Natural Curl Phenomenon for a High-Shine Spin appeared first on Vogue.

Do You Need Gait-Training Boot Camp? Learning to Walk—Correctly—All Over Again

How Rooney Mara Takes the Topknot to the Dark Side

rooney mara

With her talent for blending restrained Victorian romanticism and punkish edge into a radical new elegance that’s been missing on the red carpet, it’s no surprise that Rooney Mara would imbue the ubiquitous topknot with fresh, off-kilter appeal. For an event honoring her Carol costar Cate Blanchett in Manhattan last night, the actress twisted her hair into a sleek, unfinished knot that was secured with a golden clip.

The style loosely recalled a hybrid between the quirky buns seen on the Marc Jacobs Fall 2015 runway and the bejeweled, gravity-defying ponytails that stole the season’s Prada show, offering a subversively chic alternative to the classic evening updo while showcasing Mara’s strong brows, creamy skin—and the linchpin of her darkly pretty beauty equation: bold red lips.

Go behind the scenes with Rooney Mara at Vogue’s February 2013 cover shoot:

The post How Rooney Mara Takes the Topknot to the Dark Side appeared first on Vogue.

Tuesday, November 17, 2015

A Winter Bath for Every Ailment: The Soaks That Cure Colds, Sore Muscles, and Beyond

Photographed by Mikael Jansson, Vogue, July 2014

“There must be quite a few things a hot bath won’t cure, but I don’t know many of them,” Sylvia Plath wrote in The Bell Jar. Decades later, in parts of the world where water flows freely, her words still resonate. This is the time of year we sit on our bathtub’s ledge, reach for our faucets, settle the knobs at a temperature just below piping, and plug the drain. Whatever has coaxed us to the bath—a chill down the spine, a tickle in the throat, a muscular ache—the water, and what we add to it, is the secret to recovery.

The healing powers of a bath are rooted in the mere ritual of drawing one and the warmth of the water, both of which are near infallible solutions for “stress, muscle relaxation, and improving joint stiffness,” says the medical director of the Atlanta Center for Holistic and Integrative Medicine, Tasneem Bhatia, M.D. From there, specific goals can be tailored to suit your needs, with beauty brands mixing up soaks that offer everything from a relaxing digital detox to a submersion de-bloating experience.

The key to the cure-all is choosing the right ingredients. For this, we asked Bhatia and Manhattan dermatologist Gervaise Gerstner to guide us through bath time’s most potent elixirs.

The post A Winter Bath for Every Ailment: The Soaks That Cure Colds, Sore Muscles, and Beyond appeared first on Vogue.

The Bombshell Bob: Jennifer Lawrence Puts a Sultry Spin on the Ubiquitous Chop

jennifer lawrence hair

Though The Hunger Games’s Katniss Everdeen may be known for her braided chestnut mane, Jennifer Lawrence has become an authority on shoulder-grazing blonde. Our December cover girl put a refreshingly raw spin on the sought-after style in Los Angeles last night at the premiere of The Hunger Games: Mockingjay, Part 2 with her shorn, rumpled lengths parted deeply to the side. Paired with her bold red lip, the look could have read as classic Hollywood glamour were it not for her windswept, carelessly wavy texture.

The unruly volume gave a modern bombshell quality to the now-ubiquitous chop, which the actress furthered with lush lashes, glimmering bronze shadow, and tawny skin. Aside from—once again—tempting us to schedule an impromptu cut with our salons, Lawrence’s latest take on the bob serves as a welcome reminder that a blast of salt spray and a swirl of bronzer will serve you just as well in winter as it did this summer—just add lipstick.

 

Watch Jennifer Lawrence nail the awkward interview.

The post The Bombshell Bob: Jennifer Lawrence Puts a Sultry Spin on the Ubiquitous Chop appeared first on Vogue.

What Does Charlie Sheen’s New Normal Look Like? The Reality of Living With HIV Right Now

irving penn pills

“It’s a hard three letters to absorb,” Charlie Sheen said to Matt Lauer on the Today show this morning, announcing that he is HIV positive. What’s more, he revealed, he has paid millions of dollars in extortion to blackmailers in the four years he has had the diagnosis. But while the disease—often transmitted by unprotected sex and needle sharing—is still freighted with stigma, Sheen’s prognosis is infinitely better than it would have been during HIV’s earlier days.

When Magic Johnson announced in 1991 at age 32 that he had the virus and was stepping down from the Los Angeles Lakers, his fans went into mourning. The country was still reeling from the devastating AIDS crisis of the 1980s that claimed legions of victims, including Keith Haring, Liberace, and Perry Ellis. AZT, the first major drug treatment for HIV—familiar to anybody who saw Dallas Buyers Club—hit the market in 1987. It was a toxic compound that carried serious side effects and had limited efficacy; early patients were routinely told that the medicine would buy them an extra year of life.

The reality for anybody with HIV/AIDS today is that the virus is effectively a manageable, chronic disease rather than a death sentence. There are currently 1.2 million people with HIV in the United States, with 50,000 new infections reported each year. (At its height in the ’80s, 130,000 new cases arose annually.) The big breakthrough in treatment came in 1996, when combination therapy, known as highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART), was approved. “The treatment is extremely effective,” says Kenneth Mayer, M.D., a professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School and the medical research director of the Fenway Institute, Fenway Health, Boston. Mayer has been involved in the field since the beginning of the AIDS epidemic. “You can be on this pill the rest of your life and your life expectancy would be comparable to people who aren’t HIV positive.”

What is it, exactly? Essentially, doctors have found around 30 medicines that suppress the virus. Rather than taking one medication, such as AZT, patients go on a regimen of three substances (which come in a single daily pill) tailored to their individual medical history. HAART is less toxic, presents fewer side effects, and, most important, is far more successful at suppressing the virus than any single agent. Recent studies also show that when patients are on combination therapy, the likelihood of transmission is minimal—even through unprotected sex. Because of this, doctors recommend that patients start treatment as soon as HIV is detected.

There is no cure for HIV in sight—though a new study shows that medications taken to prevent infection in high-risk people are extremely successful: During a year-long trial of pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP), only 2 out of 400 people became infected—and those two subjects didn’t take the medication every day as instructed.

“In the early ’80s, the median survival was a year to a year and a half,” says Anthony Fauci, M.D., director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases. “Today you can predict that a 25-year-old person would live an additional 50 years.”

His advice to Sheen? “Plenty of rest, exercise, maintain a good diet. Just keep healthy.”

The science is on Sheen’s side. Magic Johnson turned 56 in August.

The post What Does Charlie Sheen’s New Normal Look Like? The Reality of Living With HIV Right Now appeared first on Vogue.

Introducing the New York Salon Where Models and Fashion Editors Head for an Under-the-Radar Cut

Why You Should Start Your Post-Thanksgiving Detox Now

thanksgiving

Thanksgiving may be a food-lover’s dream, but that bliss so often turns to regret in the five weeks of parties that follow. So it goes for me: Each holiday season, a devil-may-care approach to gorging on sweetcakes and wine in December lands me in an ineffective, guilt-riddled cleanse come January. Which is why this year, I set out to find a better way to undo the damage (or avoid it entirely) than a cold-turkey New Year’s resolution: This year, I would start my post-Thanksgiving detox before the feasting even started.

The pre-festive cleanse, as it’s called, is about building healthy habits and being proactive, instead of punishing yourself unfairly later, and according to New York nutritionist Dana James, is a well-kept industry secret—the CAP Beauty and Sakara Life girls are all fans. “You start to prime your brain, so that by the time Thanksgiving comes around, it’s simply a meal,” she says. “When you’ve established good eating habits, it’s much easier to say, No, I’m going to have one dessert—not five.” James tells me that it takes just seven days to see the effects, and last week, I put that theory to the test—could the pre-festive cleanse change the way I eat this Thanksgiving?

Her plan is more generous than most: No dairy, gluten, or sugar, sure, and a diet that’s 75 percent plants, 25 percent protein (think lemon sole with arugula salad and pink grapefruit with coconut sugar), but surprisingly, caffeine is allowed, as are two glasses of alcohol per week. Even so, the holidays are tough; at the Vogue.com offices, gifted buttercream cupcakes and chocolates spill across the tables almost daily. On Tuesday, I successfully decline one slice of frosted funfetti cake—but when a second cake strikes that same day, I cannot refuse (it’s bad luck!).

So, I try adding cold-pressed juices to help curb the cravings—not a juice cleanse, mind, but a more balanced, supplementary approach. “Adding nutrient-rich items like cold-pressed juices to your daily routine in the days leading up to Thanksgiving can help people stay on track during the holidays,” says Hayden Slater, cofounder of Pressed Juicery. This idea is gaining traction—Juice Press is launching two holiday-themed cleanses next week—and stopping by Pressed’s brand new Noho shop, I grab bottles of Greens 1.5 and activated charcoal water with lemon, lavender, and honey to stave off sweets. It helps. But after succumbing to a tray of free Ladurée macarons two days later—let’s just say a few too many—I go back to James for advice.

It turns out that fitness, too, is key. “If you’re doing an urban cleanse, you want to sweat, so that might mean a powerful vinyasa class,” James says. “Or, ahead of the holidays, you may want to try something more restorative.” On Sunday morning, I head to Soho, where the sound of Tibetan singing bowls echoes through the high-beamed ceilings of Twisted Trunk Yoga’s loft space. It is dark, save for a strand of Christmas tree lights, wound about a brass statue of a dancing Shiva, its pedestal dotted with quartz crystals. At the hour’s end, there’s a serene, seven-minute savasana, and I lay comfortably swaddled in a blue wool blanket, as candles flicker and Twisted Trunk cofounder Dana Covello leads us through a series of mantras.

Much like James, Covello generally sees an uptick in interest around this time of year. “It’s the best time to start a consistent practice,” she says. “The statistics on New Year’s resolutions are so abysmal—why not start now and make it a life resolution?” At Twisted Trunk, a tantric philosophy is key to helping visitors become more attuned with their bodies and better equipped to deal with holiday stress. “There’s no question that yoga gives me that practice in pausing before I act,” she says. I, too, leave the studio that day with renewed focus.

From there, things get a bit easier: I reach more readily for veggies, eat fewer sweets, and feel better all around. Sure, there are slip-ups, like too much wine over the weekend. But for that, James has one last word of advice: “Forgive yourself. Most of the time, we sit in a feeling of shame and say, ‘Oh, I’ve blown it, so I’m going to keep eating and drinking.’ The next day, just start back on the plan—you don’t need to do anything more than that.”

Whether it’s the morning vinyasa or all the green juice talking, things suddenly click—even if I go all-out on Thanksgiving, I now know that I have the power to snap back to form the next day. And who knows: By the time the night’s feast rolls around, I might even be fine with having just one dessert. Okay, maybe two, or possibly three—but definitely less than five. I’d call that progress.

The post Why You Should Start Your Post-Thanksgiving Detox Now appeared first on Vogue.

Introducing the New York Salon Where Models and Fashion Editors Head for an Under-the-Radar Cut

The Best Beauty Looks: Week of November 16, 2015

Monday, November 16, 2015

My Trip to a Georgian Sulfur Bath: Taking the Ultimate Skin-Softening Soak

The Ultimate Gym Bag Beauty Kit: 7 Cult Trainers Share Their Staples

fitness beauty products

With barre class rivaling brunch as a viable social activity and the steady rise of the workout selfie on Instagram, it’s safe to say your workout look has never been more visible. As beautiful as you may feel après-burn, there are a few simple steps you can take to look that way, too. According to seven of the country’s most sought-after trainers, whether you’re gearing up for calorie-blasting dance cardio or spine-lengthening yoga, the curl of an eyelash, the spritz of an energizing face mist, or a dab of the right hand cream can make all the difference in your post-workout confidence. Here, we asked seven of our favorite pros to share the beauty products that round out their gym bags and keep them looking fresh.

The post The Ultimate Gym Bag Beauty Kit: 7 Cult Trainers Share Their Staples appeared first on Vogue.

Beyoncé Lightens Up With a Supercharged Shade of Blonde

beyonce

If the season’s first chill has you pining for a darker, warmer hair color, you may want to reconsider: Spotted on Instagram, Beyoncé’s freshly lightened shade is enough to inspire a 180-degree turn toward a new supercharged take on blonde. With her caramel waves given an icy new finish and a high-impact makeup concept to match, the singer made a dramatic beauty statement: Her vampish red mouth and kohl-rimmed eyes channeled pure Old Hollywood allure. A sign Queen Bey might have a few more makeup transformations in store before the year is up? If other recent double-process converts are any indication, the answer can only be yes.

Beyoncé made a video at the September issue cover shoot:

The post Beyoncé Lightens Up With a Supercharged Shade of Blonde appeared first on Vogue.

How Chrissy Teigen Takes the Topknot From Street Style Staple to Easy Evening Updo

Sunday, November 15, 2015

Upgrade Your Weekend Waves: Alessandra Ambrosio, Gigi Hadid, and More Embrace the Fedora

Gigi Hadid

Even if the dropping temperatures signal the onset of winter, let’s not forget that we still have a few gorgeous weeks where the chic still trumps the functional. Read: Before you brave the next Polar Vortex with beanies and puffy parkas, why not take a cue from the street style set and upgrade your weekend waves with the structured elegance of a fedora?

It’s a pairing that signals the off-duty Victoria’s Secret Angel in the fall as much as messy topknots do in the summer: Alessandra Ambrosio, Elsa Hosk, and Devon Windsor were spotted in Manhattan this week with their windblown strands tucked under wide-brimmed hats, while Gigi Hadid finished her bombshell waves with a Nick Fouquet topper. Meanwhile, Kate Hudson lent the look a rocker touch with bleached-out tendrils and chain embellishments. But if your Sunday routine entails a shiny post-brunch blowout, look no further than Penélope Cruz for inspiration: Her sharp navy number and glossy mane oozed the kind of continental polish that promises to kick off the workweek on the right note.

The post Upgrade Your Weekend Waves: Alessandra Ambrosio, Gigi Hadid, and More Embrace the Fedora appeared first on Vogue.

The 10 Best Beauty Instagrams of the Week: Jessica Alba, Jared Leto, and More

Natalia Vodianova

Amid the snaps of autumn-hued landscapes and inspired takes on layering that filled our feeds, the most notable beauty Instagrams of the week revolved around fitness—after all, a reminder to ensure bodies stay sculpted in the face of comforter-clinging temperatures is always welcome. Model Izabel Goulart showed us how to train like an Angel while prepping for the Victoria’s Secret Fashion Show, strengthening and toning her signature stems with her runway-worthy mane pulled back in a full, swingy ponytail. Ophélie Guillermand took to the streets of Miami for a sunny day jog, while Nadja Bender celebrated a never-ending summer on the sandy shores of Turks and Caicos.

Some chose to lean into the seasonal change, including Jared Leto, who debuted a fresh dye job as red as the fall foliage, and Jessica Alba, who opted for an equally crimson pout to offset her bold brows and subtle smoky eye. Taking it further still, Kendall Jenner’s recent look has us contemplating a full-on metamorphosis: The model may have taken a cue from Daisy Buchanan for a 1920s-themed party, trading in her raven hair for a strawberry blonde crop, but the momentary mustache was entirely modern Movember.

The post The 10 Best Beauty Instagrams of the Week: Jessica Alba, Jared Leto, and More appeared first on Vogue.

Saturday, November 14, 2015

The Best Base Coats and Top Coats: What Makes a Manicure Go the Extra Mile

raymond meier vogue may 2003

The cool-girl, anything-goes approach to beauty is gloriously low-maintenance in every way but one: Keeping your nails in perfect condition is no easy feat. “The poor things are exposed!” says Ji Baek, the New York City–based founder of Rescue Beauty Lounge nail color, with a laugh. Riffling through your bag for house keys leads to chips; dousing on hand sanitizer to ward off that office-wide cold dulls shine. Same goes for pedicures, whether you’re digging your toes in the sand during a weekend in Miami or finding bliss (and smudged polish) in upward-facing dog pose. Factor in hard-to-pop seltzer cans, errant roller bags, and Net-a-Porter deliveries you impatiently rip into, and you might as well kiss your manicure-pedicure goodbye.

Well, almost. Thanks to a new crop of breakthrough base coats and top coats, your nail color may be poised to stick around for a few more days or even weeks. From break-proof rubberized textures to UV-protective formulas, we’ve rounded up the best of them—along with a few key tips from the pros. Here, our guide to a truly indestructible polish job.

Prep
Before picking up a bottle of base coat, swipe a cotton pad dipped in alcohol or non-acetone polish remover over your nail bed to remove traces of hand lotion or natural oils. “If you have any residue on your nails, the polish will just peel off,” explains pro manicurist Jin Soon Choi. Baek has gone one step further, bottling her own formula known as Base Coat Prep. The quick-drying, leave-on polish provides an instant matte surface when swept across the nail, which helps the base coat adhere. “It’s dummy-proof,” she explains.

Polish
Sheer, neon bright, glitter-bombed: There are nail lacquers to match every mood—or It bag. The key is to allow ample drying time between coats, particularly for darker, pigment-rich shades. “I always do pinkie to pinkie,” says Baek of working her way from the edge of one hand to the other before starting all over again. “It takes about five to eight minutes, and that’s about the right time to do another coat.” For a true no-budge hold, Orly’s Bonder sports a rubberized texture that acts like double-stick tape for your color.

Protect
Not only does the perfect top coat steel your polish against everyday wear, it also delivers gloss in abundance. Dolce & Gabbana’s High Shine top lacquer boasts a near-reflective finish. Still other formulas, like Dior’s Gel Top Coat and Guerlain’s Le Top Coat Gel, strive to capture the vinyl-like effect of a long-wear gel manicure—minus the cumbersome application. Manicurist Deborah Lippmann’s Addicted to Speed Top Coat also does double duty, reducing water penetration to the nail plate while helping a manicure to dry on fast-forward. She suggests applying it every three days to refresh shine, while Baek offers a different tip aimed at longevity: “A day after your manicure, you want to generously bless your cuticles with a really great cream,” she says. “It means three weeks before you’ll need another pedicure.”

The post The Best Base Coats and Top Coats: What Makes a Manicure Go the Extra Mile appeared first on Vogue.

Why Geek-Chic Glasses Call for a Brand-New Beauty Equation

Emily Ratajkowski

With contacts and Lasik all but eliminating the need for prescription lenses, it’s no surprise that glasses have gone from necessary, perfunctory accessory to gleefully off-kilter model favorite—with a brand-new beauty equation to match. In fact, forget about eye-defining shadow trickery or heaps of mascara: If the Insta set is any indication, it’s all about tapping into a youthful charm with clean skin and barely there makeup.

Nadja Bender channeled an appealingly bookish minimalism by pairing her black frames with a dab of lip balm and hair that was pinned back into a schoolgirl style, while Willow Smith offset her graphic pair with her trademark dreads pushed back with a terry headband. Also keeping things natural, Kendall Jenner channeled a young Ali MacGraw with delicate tortoiseshell frames that didn’t get in the way of her brushed brows—offering an uncanny twinning moment with Emily Ratajkowski that extended to their matching suede jackets. But it was Danish newcomer Frederikke Sofie, who has clearly fallen for the bespectacled beauties who stole the Spring Gucci show, posting a selfie with oversize aviators that lent her naked eyes and Nordic brows a delicate ’70s edge. Above, five reasons why the right set of frames—and minimal makeup—is all you need for the perfect amalgam of geek and chic.

The post Why Geek-Chic Glasses Call for a Brand-New Beauty Equation appeared first on Vogue.

Friday, November 13, 2015

How to Master the Graceful Fall à la Jennifer Lawrence

The Seven-Day Haircut Rule: Why Your Boyfriend Should Never Get a Trim Right Before Thanksgiving Weekend

Could Pregnancy Affect Your Risk of Breast Cancer? Here’s What You Need to Know

irving penn vogue may 1993

At 32 years old and six months postpartum, Amanda Boswell, a wellness coordinator from Denver, felt as though she had finally struck the elusive women-can-have-it-all balance. It was early 2014, and Boswell, an effervescent brunette with a swingy bob and a fondness for Tory Burch flats, had recently returned to work after the birth of her first child, a son named Court. Like many of her friends, she had waited to start a family until her career was firmly launched. Now she was delighted to find herself settling into the rhythms of motherhood while her career hummed steadily along.

But that delicate equilibrium was upended one evening in January 2014 when she discovered a lump the size of a walnut in her left breast. Given her situation, she wasn’t concerned: She was young and fit from going to the gym three times a week, and she had no family history of breast cancer. A week earlier, she had weaned Court and so assumed the lump was a clogged milk duct. But three months later, she was diagnosed with stage III, triple-negative breast cancer, an aggressive form of the disease that does not respond to hormone therapies. What triggered Boswell’s cancer? Her pregnancy, most likely.

Boswell is among the women whose disease comes under the category of pregnancy-associated breast cancer, or PABC, a phenomenon that includes any diagnosis during pregnancy or up to approximately five years after childbirth. (Some experts limit the definition to one year postpartum; others think it may even extend up to a decade.) Though only a small fraction of the childbearing population is affected—experts estimate that about 12,000 women in the U.S. are diagnosed with postpartum breast cancer each year—PABC affects almost half of the women under age 45 who develop breast cancer, and the mortality rate is staggering: Women diagnosed within five years of their last childbirth were almost three times more likely to die than other similarly aged breast cancer patients who had not given birth.

From gestational diabetes to postpartum depression, new and expectant mothers have long faced elevated health risks, but the idea that pregnancy itself, a condition acknowledged to provide some protection against cancer, may actually spark the disease is an especially cruel twist. However nonsensical PABC may seem, science offers an explanation in that breast cancer is, for the most part, a disease of aging. According to Pepper Schedin, Ph.D., codirector of the Young Women’s Breast Cancer Translational Program at the University of Colorado Cancer Center, “We have really compelling evidence that it takes breast cancer 10 to 20 years to develop.” In other words, older mothers are more likely to have undetected mutations, and some experts think that pregnancy may simply speed up the process of them developing into cancer. “It’s not like the pregnancy window caused your cancer—it just made it visible,” says Schedin.

As the average age of childbearing increases (first births to U.S. women age 35 and over rose ninefold between 1970 and 2012), a growing number of women are being diagnosed with the disease. While American tumor registries don’t collect detailed data on women’s reproductive cycles, reports from countries with more extensive record-keeping point to a proliferation of PABC: A 2009 study examining breast cancer in Swedish women ages 15 to 44 found that the risk of having a breast cancer detected during pregnancy and within two years of delivery rose 56 percent between 1989 and 2009, while the risk of breast cancer among women of reproductive age with no recent birth went up only 16 percent. Without such records stateside, experts at the leading cancer facilities in the U.S. can cite a rise only from anecdotal evidence. “We are seeing pregnancy and cancer intersecting more often, especially as IVF and other reproductive technologies are making pregnancy in women’s late 30s and early 40s more common,” says Jennifer Keating Litton, MD, an oncologist at MD Anderson Cancer Center in Houston. (There is no known causality between IVF and breast cancer.)

The relationship between pregnancy and cancer is a complicated one. On the one hand, pregnancy after 30 slightly raises a woman’s risk of developing the disease for about a decade after giving birth. Yet having a baby before the age of 30 is linked with a lowered incidence of breast cancer post-menopause, when it is most likely to occur. On the whole, says Virginia Borges, MD, MMSC, Schedin’s codirector at the University of Colorado Cancer Center, evidence is weighted in favor of pregnancy. “Hands down, pregnancy is ultimately protective against breast cancer for the majority of women at risk, but there is this subset for which pregnancy is not protective and is probably on some level causative.”

Researchers are still trying to understand the physiological factors specific to pregnancy that cause PABC, but one thought is that a fetus might compromise the immune system, creating an environment that allows a baby, an infection, or a cancer to grow. Then there are increased levels of estrogen and progesterone during pregnancy; both hormones have been proven to promote cancer growth. Another risky stage is involution, when the breast returns to its pre-lactation state after weaning (or directly after pregnancy if nursing doesn’t occur). The process’s risks remain five years or more postpartum, according to Borges and Schedin. Their studies have shown that involution has properties of inflammation that may explain why metastasis is more likely to occur.

Another danger common to PABC is delayed diagnosis, since breast lumps in postpartum women are often thought, by both women and their doctors, to be mastitis (an infection of the breast that results in pain or swelling) or benign changes in breast tissue. In June 2014, Alexa Goins Hu, a 37-year-old stay-at-home mom in Framingham, Massachusetts, found that her right breast had become engorged after six months of nursing her youngest daughter, Vivienne. “It didn’t feel like there was a strange lump,” she says. “It just seemed like my breast was extra full.” When she contacted her ob-gyn’s office, the doctor on call said it was likely a clogged duct and suggested warm compresses and other remedies. But the discomfort returned two months later, so Hu had a mammogram and ultrasound. In a matter of days, she was diagnosed with breast cancer. “I was shocked,” she recalls. “I was 36.”

In assessing the effects associated with delaying childbirth, doctors are wary of fearmongering. Relatively speaking, the chance of a PABC diagnosis is actually quite rare: Less than 1 percent of new moms each year will be diagnosed with the disease. And yet, the facts still merit thoughtful consideration—especially because, according to experts, the best defense against PABC may have everything to do with a heightened awareness of the issue. “People should continue having pregnancies, but be vigilant about symptoms and report to your doctor immediately any lumps, bumps, or concerning symptoms in your breasts or under arms,” says Ann Partridge, MD, founder and director of the Program for Young Women With Breast Cancer at the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute in Boston. Monthly self-breast exams remain a powerful tool, as does a proactive approach. Partridge counsels women to exercise regularly and maintain a healthy body weight throughout their lives. She also advises drinking in moderation (no more than one glass of wine, or the equivalent, per day) and avoiding exposure to exogenous estrogen, which is found in hormone replacement therapy and can also be found in some pesticide-treated produce and hormone-fed meat. As Schedin stresses, a balanced diet and overall lifestyle “can significantly reduce your chance of getting breast cancer and can help your body fight back when challenged.”

For those like Boswell, who had her left breast removed in September 2014, followed by several months of radiation therapy, PABC is a life-changing reality—but one that, caught early, can be faced with hope. Today she is cancer-free and her risk of recurrence is slim. She feels optimistic about the future and plans to have more children. Now two and a half, Court, all blue eyes and blond hair, is walking and talking. And though PABC presented her life with an unexpected twist, Boswell has managed to find the silver lining in the experience. “Cancer was terrible, but it made me appreciate being a mom so much more,” she says. “I would do it all again for my son.”

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Is Lip Gloss Back? Drew Barrymore Makes the Case for a High-Shine Mouth

Thursday, November 12, 2015

20 Vogue Editors on the Winter Beauty Essentials They Can’t Live Without

Mikael Jansson vogue september 2014

’Tis the season of wintry transitions: Out comes the heavy down comforter, and away go the filmy tanks and tees. So, too, it goes with your beauty routine, as refreshing facial mists and light tinted moisturizers are swapped out in favor of richer creams and hydrating hair masks. What better way to survive the cold, after all—or at least distract from it—than by reaching for a truly sensational, seasonal splurge? Here, 20 Vogue editors share the winter beauty essentials they can’t live without, from a vitamin C–infused eye gel to a warming oil that smells like Christmas.

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11 Times Jennifer Lawrence Reinvented the Bob: The Incredible Range of a Chin-Length Chop

jennifer lawrence hair

 

Her alter ego Katniss Everdeen’s clean skin and fuzzy side braid may have earned Jennifer Lawrence a permanent spot in the action babe hall of fame, but it wasn’t until The Hunger Games star chopped off her long blonde hair two years ago that she hit her real-life beauty stride.

Brimming with easy, wash-and-go appeal, her trademark chin-length bob took the actress from fresh-faced starlet to fine-boned Dior muse and proved remarkably versatile, whether worn in a half-up style that showcased her thick highlights and darker roots or coaxed into a voluminous updo. It’s a style the actress returned to after a brief stint with extensions this summer—this time around in a solid shade of almost-platinum that, as anyone who has experienced the face-brightening thrill of a double-process blonde can attest to, has electrified her entire look. Slicked into a clean side part, woven into a wispy Grecian wreath (yes, it can be done), or teased to kittenish heights, it seems Lawrence has unlocked the secret behind the bob’s legions of devotees: The possibilities are endless.

Just in time for Vogue’s December issue, here are 11 times our cover girl reinvented fashion’s favorite haircut.

 

Watch Jennifer Lawrence nail the awkward interview.

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Bordeaux Is the New Black: 5 Eye-Opening Mascaras That Are Anything but Basic

bordeaux mascara


A number of things come to mind when you think of Bordeaux. A beautiful destination in France? Yes. A dry, medium-bodied red wine? Check. A game-changing mascara? Well . . . not so much. But if you’re looking to switch up your look this season, you may want to think again—because a swipe of rich burgundy pigment on the lashes is turning into winter’s biggest trend.

With the holidays fast approaching and a full schedule of after-work parties and events on the horizon, a day-to-night beauty look that makes life simpler is key. “If you don’t have a lot of time and want to give the illusion that you put effort into your face, try a colored mascara,” says makeup artist Jenna Menard, who recommends applying three or more coats to really bring the shade to life, and wearing it with a hint of black eyeliner. Unlike a neon bright cobalt or primary yellow shade, she adds, “Burgundy mascara is so subtle—it’s a great alternative for softening your overall look.”

The idea of applying mascara in a color other than black may initially be intimidating, but a recent test-drive around the Vogue offices confirmed that it’s virtually foolproof and only slightly noticeable (in the best way possible) when you blink. From Clinique’s Chubby Lash in Portly Plum to YSL’s Volume Effet Faux Cils Shocking Mascara in low-key Black Burgundy, here are five shades worth dipping into this season.

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Rihanna Launches Her Own Beauty Agency: 10 Statement Looks That Prove She’s a Natural for the Job

rihanna beauty

With a handful of sold-out designer capsule collaborations under her belt—including last month’s Puma collection—and her own forthcoming makeup line in the works, it’s safe to say that Rihanna has honed her entrepreneurial chops. Now the singer is radically rethinking the celebrity-as-lifestyle-brand equation with her own styling and beauty agency, Fr8me.

It’s unchartered territory for a pop star, but if anyone understands the transformative power of high-impact hair and makeup, it’s fashion’s favorite beauty chameleon. After all, this is a woman who has demonstrated the ability to slip from one persona into another, only to discard it before it becomes a signature look: One moment she’s treading the Dior red carpet in ladylike curls and pastel makeup, the next she’s back to blue lipstick and a messy topknot. And while she’s the undisputed queen of the statement mouth, her hair quick-changes are just as extreme. This year alone, we’ve seen her experiment with constellations of bobby pins, frothy natural curls, and atomic red extensions.

With her agency’s new in-house squad of stylists, including hairstylists Marcia Hamilton and Patricia Morales and makeup artist Mylah Morales, it’s safe to say we’ll see a few more radical reinventions before the year is up. Above, 10 recent high-impact looks that prove RiRi is a natural for the job.

 

André Leon Talley talks to Rihanna at the 2015 Met Gala:

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8 It Girls Weigh In on the Ultimate Drugstore Beauty Haul

SZA

Personal style is an art of assemblage. In the way the most treasured and well-worn pieces in your closet share a common thread of utility and allure, if not a price tag, the items on your shower shelves or inside your makeup bag can come from practically anywhere, and at any cost, so long as you can rely on them. In fact, as a quick survey of some of today’s most stylish women will tell you, the nearest drugstore is fully stocked with life-altering creams, lipsticks, shampoos, and cleansers. “I’m a huge drugstore buyer!” says Fivestory owner Claire Distenfeld, who rounds out a routine of Sisley, NARS, and Laura Mercier with John Frieda, Maybelline, and Goody. From the curling iron SZA swears by to the matte lipstick Karley Sciortino proclaims “the best,” we asked eight of our favorite It girls to reveal their drugstore beauty hauls.

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Wednesday, November 11, 2015

5 Fantastic Fitness Escapes for People Who Hate Winter

Patrick Demarchelier vogue january 2010

A brisk Central Park run, snowy Maine hike, or scenic shoreline ride along Lake Michigan are all equally challenging winter workouts, but why not reinvigorate your muscles in a sun-soaked destination that doubles as the backdrop for your next vacation? Napa Valley, the Caribbean, and the Dominican Republic are rife with fitness retreats that offer heart-pounding uphill hikes, seaside vinyasas, and adrenaline-fueled obstacle courses that will warm up tight ligaments and chase away the early rumblings of seasonal affective disorder. Days start with multiple quad-burning, tricep-strengthening, body-toning workouts led by the likes of The Class’s Taryn Toomey or S10 founder Stephen Cheuk, and end with cooldown sessions that include jogging past rows of grapevines or stretching on the palm-lined sand. Here are five winter retreats where the temperatures may be mild, but the workouts are inspiringly intense.

S10 in Nosara Beach
Adventure addicts seeking strength training that incorporates rocks, logs, and mud are making the trek to S10 Costa Rica, a newly launched retreat situated on 25 acres bordering Nosara Beach. S10 founder Stephen Cheuk has installed outdoor squat racks, devised an obstacle course, and put together a schedule of weight-intensive workouts (read: lots of kettlebells) paired up with evening sprints or tire-flipping. The focus here is on training the same muscle groups twice a day in a 12-hour window to strengthen and condition them before real fatigue sets in. When it does, you can rest up in one of the 20 villas on the property with chef-curated meals (giving you fuel to burn) and fill the hours between training sessions with massages, snorkeling, surfing, zip-lining, or swimming.

The Class in Playa Grande
Balmy Dominican Republic beaches are drawing those addicted to releasing tension, stress, and everyday emotions during two-hour cathartic sessions of The Class with founder Taryn Toomey, followed by afternoons filled with lower-body-focused yin yoga led by Heather Lilleston. The focus here is on breathing, shaking out arms and legs, and springing off the floor to build strong, lean muscle, all while ensconced at the Celerie Kemble–designed French colonial bungalows of the Playa Grande Beach Club. The palm tree–lined coast and poolside cabanas provide a place for quiet meditation once toxins have been flushed out and endorphins are firing.

Hiking in Napa Valley
Trails lined with massive Douglas fir trees beneath Northern California’s Mayacamas Mountains seem made for heart rate–boosting interval training. Naturally, Meadowood Napa Valley’s 90-minute Eco-Fitness classes include stops along the uphill paths for shoulder presses, bicep curls, skip jumps, and sprints. Cooldowns can be held on the meditative spiral (a circular labyrinth designed for quiet contemplation) before booking a suite at the newly opened Meadowood Spa for a stress-relieving hot-stone massage and black-walnut scrub paired with a vegetable-based dish from the spa’s new culinary menu. Between sessions, we’d suggest curling up in one of the resort’s cozy private cottages or biking down the Silverado Trail to taste antioxidant-rich cabernets at nearby wineries.

YogaWorks in Peru’s Sacred Valley
Verdant Incan agricultural terraces surround Peru’s lush Sacred Valley, where rigorous morning vinyasa classes led by California-based instructor Nicolette David are followed by afternoon restorative sessions that keep limbs feeling loose. David focuses on creating an uninterrupted flow from one asana to the next with Pranayama breathing workshops and inversion classes at this YogaWorks getaway held at the waterfall-adjacent Sach’a Munay Retreat & Yoga Center. Once mats are stowed, local guides lead tours to pre-Incan salt mines, Andean textile spinners, and a celebratory Despacho ceremony for meditative reflection and gratitude as the New Year arrives.

Mile High Run Club in St. Lucia
Caribbean coastal bluffs with picturesque views of the Atlantic offer a lower-impact option for toning hamstrings and training calf muscles during workouts devised by coaches from New York’s Mile High Run Club. Strength-building challenges take place on Cap Maison’s secluded beach, cliff-top tropical garden, and shaded deck. And runners can log endurance-boosting miles on St. Lucia’s undulating trails—a refreshing contrast from the usual repetitive treadmill work. Such a setting may even inspire new race goals for the New Year, sparked by nightcaps of locally distilled rum as the sun sets over the Cap Maison resort.

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Gugu Mbatha-Raw’s Instant Shortcut to After-Dark Beauty

How to Get Rid of Dark Spots: From Supercharged Lasers to Topical Retin-A

kate moss


Now that your beachside bathing suits have been tucked away in favor of cozy fireside knits, your skin can finally take a much-needed break from the sun. After months of UV exposure, discolorations in the form of freckles, dark spots, or scars may suddenly be visible. Once spotted, NYC-based skin care expert Dangene says, the earlier you seek treatment, the better. In general, even tiny spots “will keep growing bigger,” she explains—meaning the sooner you tackle the problem, the less intervention will be required.

But first, start by seeking a professional opinion. “Brown spots are complicated,” says Miami-based dermatologist Dr. Jill Waibel, M.D., who explains that the key to treating discoloration successfully is to know what you’re dealing with. To avoid complications, she stresses the importance of consulting a doctor first. “You don’t want to use a laser on a melanoma,” she warns of properly diagnosing a potentially dangerous dark mark before taking action.

Once you’ve established that an offending freckle doesn’t present a health risk, it’s time to form a plan of attack. Here, Dangene and Waibel share their tried-and-true strategies for getting rid of dark spots, from the best at-home topical treatments to the most effective in-office lasers.

BRIGHTEN UP WITH A HIGH TECH SERUM
Over-the-counter and prescription skin-brightening lotions target thin, surface-level spots including melasma and sun-induced hyperpigmentation. “The most common ingredient is hydroquinone which bleaches but does not remove spots,” says Waibel, which means that, with enough UV exposure, they will likely reappear. That being said, she estimates that topical treatments can eradicate fifty percent of the offending marks. Both Waibel and Dangene recommend Retin-A, in particular, because in addition to exfoliating away minor discolorations, the derm-approved ingredient also helps to prevent future dark spots through a photoprotective antioxidant. Essentially, says Waibel, “The sooner you start using Retin-A, the better.” Apply it at night, since it may induce a heightened risk of sun sensitivity. Or, if you prefer, consider the season’s new serums, spiked with everything From encapsulated Vitamin C to gentle retexturizing acids (see our slideshow below).

GO FOR A POWER PEEL
For up to medium-depth spot removal, chemical peels including trichloroacetic acid (TCA) and glycolic acid peels superficially injure the skin to provoke a wound-healing response that expels dark pigment. For newish sun spots on very pale complexions, says Dangene, who offers the treatments at her Institute of Skinovation clinic in Manhattan, “we can eliminate the whole problem in a single TCA treatment,” but most clients can expect to schedule an initial series of three to four appointments, and, for maintenance, another one to two each year. Waibel tells clients to anticipate clearing up seventy percent of face discolorations and to make special pains to avoid the sun post-procedure, but she does not recommend peels for addressing marks on the body, due to thinner skin and fewer sweat and oil glands to help with healing. At home, milder daily peels can be executed with glycolic acid pads like Topix Glycolix Gly-Sal Pads. “It’s like exercising at the gym,” says Waibel of the need to be consistent with your regimen. “You can’t use them once a year and expect results.”

INVEST IN A LASER SERIES
With “the right doctor and the right treatment,” Waibel says lasers can be extremely effective in treating even difficult discolorations. With their far-reaching wave-lengths, they penetrate the skin, heating up targeted brown spots, and destroying them by causing the darkened skin to flake and fall off following the treatment. Waibel recommends one to two sessions of intense pulsed light (IPL) or photodynamic therapy to treat the affected area, asking darker skin tones to seek out board-certified dermatologists or plastic surgeons for such procedures due to heightened risks of scarring if performed incorrectly. “Within five days, your skin will look brand-new,” she says.

STOCK UP ON SUNSCREEN
If you’re careful about limiting your sun exposure, “you will never have a brown spot [to begin with],” says Dangene. Regular sunscreen application and reasonable skin coverage in strong sunlight will help to ward off future discolorations. Waibel also suggests a preventative daily routine that includes applying a broad-spectrum sunscreen in SPF 30 or higher in the morning over a skin tone–evening, antioxidant rich serum like SkinCeuticals C E Ferulic or a similarly corrective serum—things will certainly look brighter.

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