Thursday, December 31, 2015

6 Game-Changing Manicure Kits—Just in Time for Engagement Season

Jamie Hince and Kate Moss

There’s a reason people look forward to the holidays: Whether they mean discovering a statement coat under the tree or solidifying a resolution, the last days of December tend to be life changing. Especially since, statistically speaking, those in serious relationships are most likely to receive a certain sparkling accessory in the time around the new year. This is engagement season, and part of celebrating that newly betrothed bliss is sharing the news—along with an intimate view of your left hand—with your nearest and dearest.

Keeping the conversation on the happy announcement—and away from the state of your hands—calls for neutral, picture-perfect nails. And winter’s latest launches are all but guaranteed to provide a foolproof manicure—no salon visit necessary. Deborah Lippmann starts at the source, with a four-piece set of balms and exfoliants to correct the state of your cuticles, while Rubis’s leather-bound stainless-steel tweezers, scissors, clippers, and file will execute any necessary grooming in style.

Zoya’s Naked Manicure kit has a nude-polish option for every yen, from a range of color-correcting bases to both a velvet matte topcoat and one with patent-leather shine. Made a polish mishap? Don’t sweat it. That’s exactly what manicurist Madeline Poole had in mind when she created the short, angled Clean Up Brush as part of Sally Hansen’s nail art tool kit. After that step, all you have to do is say yes.

The post 6 Game-Changing Manicure Kits—Just in Time for Engagement Season appeared first on Vogue.

Who’s Your New Year’s Eve Beauty Spirit Animal? 13 Vogue Editors on Their Party Inspirations

demi moore

With New Year’s Eve comes champagne, confetti—and the opportunity for a fresh start. Which raises the question: On a night when all things glitzy and dramatic are readily embraced, which beauty look will you choose to personify the “New Year, New Me” mantra? We suggest channeling a New Year’s Eve spirit animal—a person or concept to aesthetically inspire your 2016 transformation. Will you watch the ball drop through eyes painted with high-impact pigments inspired by Pat McGrath’s palette, or weave hair into a crown of intricate plaits worthy of a modern-day Renaissance woman? From runway looks to striking celebrities to a sad but spirited clown, 13 Vogue editors reveal their NYE beauty muses.

The post Who’s Your New Year’s Eve Beauty Spirit Animal? 13 Vogue Editors on Their Party Inspirations appeared first on Vogue.

Wednesday, December 30, 2015

13 New Year’s Eve Beauty Ideas From the Spring 2016 Runways

sonia rykiel spring 2016

Full disclosure: I have been wearing the same New Year’s Eve party look for the past four years. It involves neither statement lipstick nor eyeliner, just two single paillettes that I have gotten very good at cutting into half-moons, dabbing with Duo lash glue, and centering underneath my lower lash line. The reflective element makes it seem as though I’ve just emerged from a glistening pool—which is exactly what Pat McGrath was thinking when she dreamed up the embellishment backstage at Riccardo Tisci’s Spring 2012 Givenchy show.  This year, however, there’s ample reason to switch it up: The Spring 2016 runways are especially inspiring for hair and makeup ideas for the biggest party night of the year. From Phoebe Philo’s Sade tribute at Céline to the multicolored, in-your-face glitter at Giambattista Valli to a bounty of eyelash upgrades, there’s something for everyone in these 13 backstage moments—even the minimalists among us. (One word: Balenciaga.) Here’s to a beautiful 2016.

The post 13 New Year’s Eve Beauty Ideas From the Spring 2016 Runways appeared first on Vogue.

Inside Chile’s Most Decadent Spa and Fitness Retreat

Photographed by Patrick Demarchelier, Vogue, January 2016

Northern Chile is home to salty flats, steamy springs—and a bucolic spa set in the shadow of an active volcano. Liesl Schillinger takes in the thrill and the chill.

An hour after dawn in Chile’s northern desert, bundled against the early-morning cold in a down jacket, alpaca gloves, knit hat, and llama-sprigged scarf, I stood amid the rock-ringed El Tatio geysers—more than 14,000 feet above sea level, higher than Pikes Peak—watching plumes of geothermal spray burst from the moonscape. They steamed and hissed as they met the 20° Fahrenheit air, casting an otherworldly mist before dissolving into the vast azure sky against the awe-inspiring backdrop of the Andes Mountains. With me were a handful of other hardy guests from Tierra Atacama, the desert hotel and spa in the northern Chilean town of San Pedro de Atacama where you don’t passively receive your pampering, you earn it by hiking up dunes and scaling volcanoes, crawling through salt-cave labyrinths or clambering through river gorges. Here, fourteen hours from New York, the pleasures of spa relaxation commingle with the adrenaline rush of outdoor adventure—and the satisfaction of believing you’ve deserved your decadent downtime.

We had forgone the luxury of sleeping late in order to take the long predawn van ride to the sensational natural wonder, which must be seen first thing in the morning, while the temperature is below freezing, to show the geysers’ vapor. For an hour we walked on the stony earth’s surface, twining among the paths between the geysers, stomping our feet to keep warm, and snapping photographs—exclaiming when we spotted a vicuña on a grassy slope, or a rhea (an emu-like Andean bird) mincing across a dried-up river bed. As we ate a hearty breakfast of yogurt, cheeses, sliced meats, fresh fruit, and avocado, with cocoa as a treat, the geyser display vanished in the warming air and we piled back into the van, heading about 55 miles south and, before long, gaining 55 degrees of heat.

Our stay at Tierra Atacama is replete with appetizing choices. We begin each day by perusing three packed, enticing menus—one for a host of nearby excursions, one for the spa, and another for the marvelous on-site restaurant (studded with sin gluten options)—which allows guests to cherry-pick their adventures and their cosseting cures. The hotel itself exudes austere, ranchero simplicity, with a Cubist aesthetic that evokes late Cézanne. Built around a centuries-old cattle enclosure, where Argentine herds paused for refreshment after crossing the Andes and continuing on to the Pacific, it enfolds a rectangular compound of low, angular villas of red-stained wood, each with a terrace and a woven sunroof, enclosed by adobe walls. The landscape architect, Chile’s Teresa Moller, preserved many of the corral’s original walls, as well as the indigenous algarrobo and chañar trees—crinkle-leaved and green-limbed—whose fruit is transformed by the on-site chef, Francisco Valencia, into a delicate ice cream that tastes of maple and mochi. The rooms echo their terrestrial surroundings—large, spare, and airy, with walls and floors bearing touches of locally sourced stone and wood, textiles in desert hues, and cowhide rugs that evoke gaucho allure. I also appreciated the non-Chilean amenities of a powerful shower stocked with L’Occitane.

Since May 2015, the property has been run by a solicitous Englishman named Nicholas Russ, who has lived in Chile for fourteen years but is sensitive to the differing expectations of guests from many lands. Russ was far too discreet to specify, but one of my guides explained helpfully that Brazilian guests sometimes arrive in high heels and like to be driven to mountaintops rather than scale them themselves, whereas gung-ho Americans and Europeans prefer to sweat for their spa treatments with challenging expeditions. Guilty as charged. Each hike or climb I embarked on came with a different lively, informed, multilingual guide; but I stuck with one therapist, Yeymi, for all my spa treatments. In between my excursiones—or, as the guides’ pronunciation seemed to shorten it to my foreign ear, ’scursiones—Yeymi gently and expertly plied my skin with unguents, and we gossiped about love, children, and optimism. After sporty, slender Krasna led me and a group to the dune-peaked Moon Valley and the Mirador de Kari overlook onto the red-rock Valley of Death, guiding us across fields of metamorphic rock that jingled underfoot like wind chimes, Yeymi spoiled me with a salt scrub and a clay body mask, giving me the energy to rush off with the next vanload and see the flamingos. After knowledgeable young Pancho herded me and another group up two-and-a-half scree-filled miles along the rocky Guatin river gorge to the Puritama Hot Springs, Yeymi massaged my back with stones slicked with almond oil and essence of violet, and rebooted my chakras with native crystals for good measure. Revived, I undertook another ’scursión, scampering like a mountain goat up the volcanic ridges of the Domeyko Range, then following the mellow and friendly Thalia down the sinuous, chocolate-brown paths of the Devil’s Gorge. Yeymi bookended my stay with two soothing facials—the first to rejuvenate, the other to hydrate. “Creo que nací para hacer eso,” she confided as she massaged cool balm across my temples: “I believe I was born to do this.” I believe she was right; by the end of the week, we were taking selfies with each other.

And yet my most transporting spa moment occurred in the last two hours of my stay, when I unwound after the geysers with a solitary soak in a plein air hot tub in the hotel’s rosemary garden. Basking in the bright sun under a roof of brea branches, I lolled in skin-smoothing goat’s milk flecked with lavender and mint, admiring the snapdragons that frisked beyond the tub’s round rim and the Licancabur volcano that loomed in the distance. Leaning against the bath’s smooth pine walls, my knees rising like islands from a milk-white sea, I reached for a goblet of iced herbal tea, speared a ripe strawberry from a plate, and felt like Cleopatra enjoying her daily dairy immersion. Even though I was entirely alone, it may have been the most romantic experience of my life. The spa manager, Marcela Ortega, told me that couples often reserve Tierra Atacama’s secluded hot-tub niche at sunset for marriage proposals—with champagne instead of tea. She smiled at recalling one such candlelit engagement. “Me emocionó,” she said. It moved her; me, too.

I admit, I was primed to react strongly to Chile. The country has held a romantic fascination for me ever since it captured my attention in the first year of the millennium, when I acquired a tall, serene, horse-riding Chilean-Danish boyfriend. A nature-loving businessman from Santiago, he taught me Spanish by accident but steeped me in the magic of his nation’s treasures intentionally. Though not talkative, he liked to recite poems by Neruda. Once, seized by patriotic fervor, he made me laugh by belting out the country’s anthem, “Puro, Chile.” Before meeting this Chileno, however, whenever I heard the word Chile, I’d thought of Pinochet, Portillo, and Patagonia. But he showed me photographs of his national terrain that I half-doubted were real: flamingos flocking at salty pools; stark peaks—terra cotta, gray, or white—rising from parched earth like the plates on a stegosaurus’s back; cactus-spiked cliffs; rushing cataracts. After we (amicably) parted ways, whenever I heard his country mentioned, I thought only: Where were those flamingos, and where was that Tatooine topography—and would I ever get to see them, now that we’d said adios?

Then chance took me to the Atacama Desert, the mystical habitat that had so beguiled me. The driest non-polar spot on the globe, high and clear-skied, it has gorges, canyons, dunes, and salt flats that stretch taut beneath the Andean altiplano. Atacama has long been popular with vigorous South Americans and backpackers, who like to rough it or stay in modest hotels and hostels, scaling rugged crags, hiking up volcanoes and dunes, and soothing their muscles in mountaintop mineral springs. Lately, however, it has lured farther-flung admirers: astronomers from many continents, who have thronged here since the early aughts, when an international consortium of scientists began building the billion-dollar ALMA observatory, whose radio telescope rises three miles above sea level and produces images ten times clearer than the Hubble’s. A constellation of boutique hotels and spas soon landed in the nearby town of San Pedro, serving the new influx of discerning travelers who come here in search of matchless vistas and authenticity in their spa treatments—salt, stones, crystals, and mud, drawn from Chile’s mineral resources and repurposed as scrubs, talismans, and balms to exfoliate, soothe, purify, and invigorate.

For me, another distinctive delight of the experience was the variety and sociability of my fellow thrill-and-chill-seekers. In my myriad overland journeys at Tierra Atacama, I met authors, bankers, flight controllers, and lawyers from New York, Boston, Mallorca, and São Paulo; some in their 20s, some in their 60s, all of them animated and alive to sensation. At meals in the hotel’s lodgelike restaurant and common room, at the fire pits on the terraces, or stargazing at night on the deck of the small observatory next door, picking out Orion and Gemini in the Southern Hemisphere, my companions and I bonded and shared stories like characters caught up in the same dream.
On a spa bed one afternoon, recharging after the morning’s ’scursión, I pondered the fulfilling blend I had found here of exertion and relaxation, delectably entwined. As Yeymi applied heated lava rocks—red and black and white—to my back, sensing just where to press to relieve my tingling muscles, I decided I preferred rocks on me to me on rocks. And yet, in the Atacama Desert, you wouldn’t want one without the other.

The post Inside Chile’s Most Decadent Spa and Fitness Retreat appeared first on Vogue.

Tuesday, December 29, 2015

Gigi Hadid’s Fuzzy Ponytail Proves Winter Static Is a Secret Beauty Ally

gigi hadid

If the steady stream of surfside vacation selfies on Instagram has you pining for the sunny joy of a head of salty tendrils, consider Gigi Hadid living proof that appealingly tousled texture need not require a trip to warmer climes.

The model was spotted strolling through Aspen, Colorado, yesterday with her rumpled waves raked back into a high ponytail that felt even cozier thanks to a halo of face-framing flyaways. It’s the kind of sweater-weather style that actually benefits from bone-dry air (or a wind-whipped black-diamond run)—and offers yet another argument for embracing winter static while you plot your next seaside escape.

 

Go inside Gigi Hadid’s boxing workout:

The post Gigi Hadid’s Fuzzy Ponytail Proves Winter Static Is a Secret Beauty Ally appeared first on Vogue.

Skip Carrying a Clutch This New Year’s Eve: 3 Beauty Essentials to Stash in Your Pocket Instead

bag free new years eve

So it’s New Year’s Eve, and you’re going to a fabulous party. Amid all the accompanying pomp and glitter (and champagne), the last thing you want to worry about is the whereabouts of the clutch you put down over in that dark corner 20 minutes ago. The solution? This year, eliminate the stress of accessories and go bagless.

If you’re not accessorizing, it makes sense to amp up your makeup game. It’s the perfect night to experiment with a flashy—and trendy­—wash of gold on your lids or an unusual lip. Of course, touch-ups can be tricky when you don’t have a makeup arsenal tucked away in your bag. But if you prioritize carefully, you’ll have no problem making it through the night gorgeously. Stick to one beauty statement (eyes, lips, or signature scent) and bring your tool of choice with you in a coat pocket (or in his coat pocket).

For inspiration, we asked three stylish women—actress Nathalie Emmanuel, model Maria Borges, and stylist Pernille Teisbaek—what they would bring with them to ring in the New Year unencumbered.

The post Skip Carrying a Clutch This New Year’s Eve: 3 Beauty Essentials to Stash in Your Pocket Instead appeared first on Vogue.

It Was a Big Year in Beauty: Here’s to the 11 Trends That Defined 2015

Hannah Bronfman

It’s amazing how quickly a year can pass—weren’t we just ringing in 2015? But when you consider all that has happened in the past 12 months, there are plenty of major beauty milestones to celebrate. In fact, 2015 may be remembered as the year that we broadened our collective definition of the word. From the runways to the streets, women dropped uniform cookie-cutter blowouts in favor of their liberating natural texture, or ditched hair altogether for graphic buzz cuts. All it took was one look at a silver-haired Joan Didion in Céline’s Spring campaign or Joni Mitchell as the face of Saint Laurent to remind us that age, brains, and a pioneering spirit will always be powerfully attractive. Elsewhere, Caitlyn Jenner’s striking Vanity Fair cover—along with her honesty, grace, and bravery over the course of her public transition—moved the collective needle when it came to challenging traditional notions of beauty. From septuagenarians to workout selfies, here is what mattered in 2015.

 

The post It Was a Big Year in Beauty: Here’s to the 11 Trends That Defined 2015 appeared first on Vogue.

The 10 Best Beauty Looks: Week of December 28, 2015

Monday, December 28, 2015

Is Perfect Posture the New Six-Pack? 3 Ways to Straighten Up

better posture

A ribbed sweater at Loewe, slashed below the collarbone. A white bolero blouse at Proenza Schouler dripping off both arms. If the Spring 2016 collections are any indication, the shoulder is the new décolletage. And much like the crop top and toned abs before it, the shoulder-baring piece brings with it a new yen: for perfect posture and the strong, straight neck and shoulders that come with it.

Acquiring the season’s most coveted pieces before they sell out will be easier than striking and holding the regal pose they require—particularly for people like myself, who spend a lot of time in front of screens. Over the years my own posture has taken on a sort of hunched resting state—with an alarmingly crooked neck. But with party season in full swing and off-the-shoulder frocks in my future, I decided it was high time I straightened myself out.

The Pilates Class

First on the list is New York Pilates’s new Soho studio, a bright white space scattered with calming  quartz crystals and potted succulents, for a private Reformer II class. Here I will attempt to fix what founder Heather Andersen refers to as “the Instagram pose”—the forward head and shoulders position common to users scrolling through the app—by building strength in my upper back and core. “It’s not a situation where you have to think about standing straight,” says Andersen. “[Pilates builds] this structure that holds you up.”

And with that I’m sent into the studio with trainer Katherine Williams for a full-body workout focused on shoulder stability. As Williams guides me through the seemingly simple exercises, I focus on stretching my chest open and squeezing my shoulder blades together, which she tells me to sink down my back “rather than letting them creep up like [you’re] sitting at a desk.” Miraculously, it works: With Williams’s gentle prompting, I become more conscious of my shoulders tensing forward and drop them during class and in the hours that follow.

The Massage

Before leaving, Andersen tells me that it’s important to stretch out my muscles before I begin strengthening them, particularly in the chest. “Once you address the tightness, your posture can change rapidly,” she says, suggesting a visit to see a massage therapist. At Haven’s new Soho spa, I meet Wanda McMonagle, who specializes in The Geek Massage, a 60-minute treatment that targets the upper back, neck, shoulders, and chest—areas affected by long hours in front of the computer. “We do a lot of these, what with everyone hunched over their desks all day,” she says. “Half of the city is walking around like Quasimodo, if you get my drift.”

After a quick evaluation, McMonagle declares me the New York normal in terms of muscle tension. “That snap, crackle, pop, those are the knots,” she says, driving a tennis-ball-like device into my shoulder blade. “The knots are adhesions that build up and push your shoulder forward, so by removing them, you improve your posture.” Next comes a series of deep chest and shoulder stretches, followed by a hot towel to relax the muscles. I feel incredibly loose. “We have to get you in here once a month, and we’ll sort you out,” she says. No arguments here.

The Posture Tracker

To carry my practice beyond the studio and massage table, I turn to Lumo Lift, a wearable posture tracker that senses when your body slouches forward and vibrates sharply in response. Though the company launched its first device two years ago—the Lumo Back, which focused on the lower back—last year’s Lumo Lift is a gadget that clips just below the collarbone. By tracking your upper torso, “[It] helps you create positive muscle memory to re-elongate your back muscles and chest and get rid of that hunched-over look,” says cofounder Monisha Perkash.

A two-minute reminder is recommended, but I set the response time to instant so that the second I begin to slouch, it buzzes. At first, it’s a fun challenge and I emerge from the day with more than seven hours of excellent posture. But before long it gets irritating. When I’m stressed, it’s soothing to crouch forward—it may be wrong, but it feels natural. I scale my Lumo use back and decide to keep my own watchful eye on the curve of my spine.

Now, over a week later, I realize that I am more aware of my body. Even without the vibrations, I pull my shoulders back more, and when I look in the mirror, my neck is lifted, straighter than it was. I made a resolution: By the time spring arrives, these shoulders will be flawless—and bare.

The post Is Perfect Posture the New Six-Pack? 3 Ways to Straighten Up appeared first on Vogue.

The 5-Minute Party Face: How to Do a Quick-Change Makeup Job

holiday makeup

During the holidays, when cocktail parties get started soon after the office lights flick off, the quick change becomes something of an art form. Flats give way to heels, the overstuffed tote is downsized to a clutch—and then it’s time to examine what remains of the day’s makeup (precious little) and spin metaphorical straw into festive gold. Fortunately, with a little strategizing and an eye for chic understatement, the shift into evening glamour can be accomplished in as little time as it takes for the Uber to arrive.

“The five-minute face is a blessing because it keeps you from overthinking your makeup,” says the Los Angeles–based makeup artist Rachel Goodwin. “Remember that it’s not necessarily about perfection; it’s about finding that little special adornment that you want to pull off”—be it a high-impact lip or a touch of glitter. There’s good reason we’re drawn to shimmer this time of year, she continues: “Not only are we feeling celebratory, but it’s also about craving reflective light and wanting to sparkle in the dark.”

New York makeup artist Gucci Westman agrees that it’s an occasion for a fanciful nod to the season—a chance to “try something outside your comfort zone,” she encourages—balanced with fresh skin. Here, the pros offer tips for creating an easy, polished party face, with two variations: a bold lip with a subtle dusting of gold on the eyes, or pumped-up lashes. Either route will have you looking refreshed and ready before your ride pulls up.

 

 

Supercharge the Skin
“Your skin does get pretty sad by the end of the day, with the heaters, the air-conditioning, the change in weather,” Westman warns. The first step towards pre-party revival, then, is hydration. She gently pats on moisturizer over existing makeup, followed by a mist of SK-II’s new Mid-Day Miracle Essence, which “perks you up!” she says. Goodwin’s secret weapon is Babor’s liquid collagen capsules, which come in tiny glass vials. “[The formula] is a water base, so it gives that plumpness and lushness without being heavy on the skin,” she says. “They’re miracles.”

Clean Up and Cover Up
To fix end-of-day mascara and liner that have gone rogue, dab a Q-Tip with foundation or concealer to lift any wayward marks. “That way, you don’t disturb the rest of the makeup, and you keep the liner where it’s working,” advises Goodwin. Then touch up elsewhere with concealer only as needed, says Westman (her pick: Clé de Peau’s cult formula), adding, “You want to look like you have beautiful skin, but you don’t want to see any of the labor.”

Brighten Up the Cheeks
To bring a little life back into your face, both makeup artists swear by cream blush. “The warmth of your fingers gives this really nice integration into the skin,” says Goodwin, who singles out Rituel de Fille’s coral-tone Delirium shade for special praise. “It’s immediate; it gives you that freshness right back—like you went home and maybe took a disco nap!” Or, in a pinch, pop a little lip color onto the cheeks, Westman suggests. “That’s what real girls do.”

For subtle hits of shine (along the cheekbones, down the bridge of the nose, at the inner corners of the eyes), Westman reaches for Burberry’s creamy Fresh Glow highlighter. Or dab on RMS Beauty’s coconut oil–infused Living Luminizer, which lends a “radiant, glowing effect, especially in low light,” says Goodwin.

Try a Bold Lip and Gold-Flecked Eye
What else is a statement scarlet lip if not “the little black dress of makeup,” as Goodwin puts it? “It’s my French-girl approach to the whole thing,” says the devotee of Chanel’s “epic” color selection (Rouge Coco’s Gabrielle, for one; Rouge Allure’s Coromandel is another favorite). Longevity and precision are chief concerns, so Goodwin fills in the entire lip with pencil before slicking on lipstick and blotting. “When you’re wearing red, it’s important to get the shape perfect,” she cautions. “A full minute out of your five is going to be getting that cupid’s bow right!”

To finish off the look, Westman pairs it with a hint of shimmery cream shadow in a warm metallic shade. “I’m so into gold and red. It’s so pretty, so chic,” she says. Or apply a thin coat of Urban Decay’s liquid glitter liner above the lashes and blend onto the eyelid with your finger for a super-sheer veil, says Goodwin. Her verdict: “Absolutely elegant, as long as it’s kept very minimalist. When you blink your eyes, you see little flecks of gold glitter.”

Or, Skip the Lip and Focus on the Lashes
Plan B: Bring all the attention to your eyes with a triple coat of mascara for a doll-like effect. Westman recently test-drove a peacock blue shade by Chanel, paired with little more than lip balm. “Think layers and layers and layers of mascara. Really pretty!” she says. Or stick with a classic shade that’s “black and inky and lush” in place of time-consuming false lashes, Goodwin suggests—after all, the party awaits.

 

Ruffles! The perfect solution to holiday dressing:

The post The 5-Minute Party Face: How to Do a Quick-Change Makeup Job appeared first on Vogue.

How Rihanna Does Beach-Babe Beauty

Shoe Designer Sophia Webster’s Guide to the Perfect Party-Shoe Pedicure

party shoes

The champagne-fueled parties this week call for head-to-toe polish, from a Saint Laurent–inspired tiara (yes, you can) down to a high-shine pedicure—a requisite, according to the shoe designer Sophia Webster. As she explains by phone from London, her ideas about beauty etiquette were imparted by her grandmother Peggy. “She was always very glamorous and well turned-out, so she definitely wouldn’t have been seen without her toenails painted,” recalls Webster, herself a pro at the lightning-fast, at-home polish job. This season, when evening festivities call for attention-getting (if not entirely winter-appropriate) footwear, it’s all the more important to have your feet prepped and ready. Here, Webster talks about the perfect party shoes, her go-to polishes, the London nail spa she stops by for occasional pampering, and why glitter—in nail polish or in fashion—has timeless appeal.

On the Perfect Party Shoe:
“This time of year definitely warrants a glamorous statement heel—anything with a bit of festive sparkle, whether metallics, embellished details, or crystals,” says Webster, who is lacing up her strappy, rose-gold Delphine booties for her company holiday party. To ring in the New Year, she’s undecided between the Evangeline—“It’s got iridescent white angel wings on the back, so that would definitely be a conversation-starter”—and the black-satin Rosalind, with a crystal-encrusted beaded heel that has disco ball written all over it.

Tips for Picking a Polish Shade:
“I always work from the shoes when I’m getting ready,” she explains. “If I’m wearing black shoes, I’ll probably go for a deep red [polish]. I use a lot of Revlon nail varnish because they last for ages; they do a glittery red color called Gambling Heart. If I’m wearing metallic shoes, it’s nice to go with a nude. Wah London does a really good pearlized varnish called Oysters Delight.”

In Praise of the Speedy Pedicure:
A busy mother of a 14-month-old, Webster knows how to make every minute count—down to the on-the-fly paint job. “I’m good and I’m really fast!” she says. “Revlon does a quick-dry liquid that you put on wet nail varnish, and it instantly dries. I use that a lot. My husband’s waiting in the cab, and I’m like, ‘I need to do the nails!’” she adds with a laugh. “I don’t think there’s any excuse, really. If you were short on time, you could just paint the toes that you can see!”

When to Get the Salon Treatment:
“I don’t have much time for that, but sometimes I’ll go for a pedicure because you’ve got your phone in your hands and you can do your emails,” she says. “There’s a really good place called Cheeky, just down the road from the studio. You definitely feel a whole different sense of being pampered when you come out of there. I don’t think you can really achieve that when you’re on your own.” A bonus for the party-bound: “They can do your hair at the same time.”

Why Glitter Is Forever:
A nude pedicure might be in the cards this week for Webster, but the gel-manicure devotee has red glitter in mind for her hands. As to whether full-on sparkle has a target demographic, she sees it as an individual choice. “It’s totally timeless and ageless. I don’t think there’s a cutoff date when you can and can’t wear glitter,” she says. “My nan used to have a glitter suit that she would wear on Christmas Day. It was so cute! She would leave a trail of glitter, and then my mom would spend until the New Year Hoovering it up.”

 

Ruffles! The perfect solution to holiday dressing:

 

The post Shoe Designer Sophia Webster’s Guide to the Perfect Party-Shoe Pedicure appeared first on Vogue.

4 New Year’s Eve Beauty Looks Inspired by a Fantasy Vacation

nye beauty destinations

Despite your beauty philosophy, New Year’s Eve is all about taking a makeup risk. Even the most diehard minimalist has been known to try a well-placed dash of glitter eyeliner or break out the red lipstick in honor of the occasion. This year, whether you’re hopping a plane to a far-flung destination or holing up at home with friends, why not take beauty cues from across the globe with inspiration from your favorite vacation escape?

If the sunny disposition of a week in Fiji is your goal, spritz yourself with Malie Organics’s body oil before sliding a glittering jeweled clip into your fuzzy cloud of high-humidity beach curls. Craving a ski vacation but can’t get to St. Moritz? Apply a wash of icy, white powder shadow across your lids, embrace a flushed cheek, and throw on a favorite chill-proof fur before heading out the door. If channeling Tokyo’s vibrant pulsing energy is up your alley, all you need is a saturated swipe of Tatcha’s bold red lipstick, while Paris’s opulent grandeur calls for rigorous levels of full-on chic. No matter where you’ll be for New Year’s Eve, think of these four city-inspired makeup ideas as a blueprint for how to up the ante (and the fun) well before midnight.

 

The post 4 New Year’s Eve Beauty Looks Inspired by a Fantasy Vacation appeared first on Vogue.

Sunday, December 27, 2015

Predicting the 10 Big Beauty Trends of 2016: Statement Lips, Single Braids, and More

beauty predictions

It was the year of the half-knot, of hoverboards and pink hair—but now, with New Year’s Eve just days away, is the time to consider the bold beauty ideas that we’ll be trying next year. Our bet? That 2016 will be a year that celebrates individuality, one that calls for an unorthodox approach—think strong statement lips and daring short cuts. From shimmering blue shadow to off-kilter bangs, here are the 10 emerging trends you’ll be seeing in the months ahead.

The post Predicting the 10 Big Beauty Trends of 2016: Statement Lips, Single Braids, and More appeared first on Vogue.

The 31 Best Beauty Instagrams of 2015: Kendall Jenner, Gigi Hadid, and More

best beauty instagrams 2015

2015 is coming to a close, leaving a stream of memorable, inspiring, and transformative beauty Instagrams in its wake. Each week on Vogue.com, we share our favorite recent beauty moments as seen on the app, from behind-the-scenes runway snaps to beach-day selfies (or #belfies, as the case may be)—after all, it provides an instant glimpse into the lives of the models, makeup artists, and style influencers who pioneer beauty trends soon to be seen around the globe. And, like a well-edited beauty yearbook, a quick backward glance at our chosen photographs makes identifying the looks that defined the year as easy as a simple scroll.

All things gilded and opulent were in favor these past 12 months, a trend owed in large part to makeup artist Pat McGrath. Hairstylist Luigi Murenu captured one of McGrath’s mothlike mask creations—crafted from an ethereal medley of pearls and lace—backstage at Givenchy’s Spring 2016 show, where Murenu finished off the artfully regal look with a metallic gold headband wreathed around a slicked-back bun. McGrath continued her reign with a takeover in the Tuileries, where she dusted her newly released, high-impact fairy dust—the Pat McGrath Project in Gold 001—on the eyes of Bella Hadid, Imaan Hammam, Lily Donaldson, and more. Offbeat trendsetters like Sky Ferreira and sisters Simi and Haze found streetwise ways to embrace the sparkle on eyes and lips alike.

 

 

When it came to hair, romantic plaits and waves were defining factors this year. Brushed-out, Marcel-inspired waves saw a resurgence at Lemaire, a look mirrored in modern fashion by model Frederikke Sofie—who paired her signature peroxide mane with a pair of rounded black spectacles worthy of Woody Allen—and Fernanda Ly, whose pastel pink shade recalled a cotton-candy cloud. And braids took on new life: From Mary Charteris’s woven, paisleylike crown to Georgia May Jagger’s mini buns (an homage to Minnie Mouse) to Lisa Bonet’s baby braids, interwoven styles felt fresher than ever. And last but not least, Kendall Jenner arranged her glossy mahogany mane into a halo of hearts, resulting in the most-liked Instagram photo of all time.

From memorable manicures—Caitlyn Jenner’s sky blue thumb against a Starbucks cup was proof that a picture is worth a thousand words—to the return of Derek Zoolander, this year’s best beauty Instagrams reminded us to have fun, smile more, and think outside the box. Here’s to embracing beauty in all forms in 2016.

The post The 31 Best Beauty Instagrams of 2015: Kendall Jenner, Gigi Hadid, and More appeared first on Vogue.

Saturday, December 26, 2015

5 Standout Party Hair Ideas From the Pages of Vogue

party hair ideas

A carefully planned holiday outfit deserves special-occasion hair to match—so forgo the basic blowout this year and opt instead for a festive statement style. Sporting a jewel-encrusted minidress to your next end-of-year fete? Try out a sleek, low bun with a strong center part. Wearing a feminine, vintage-inspired blouse? We suggest a head of gorgeous waves, nonchalant enough to have been dried in the breeze. From a glittering tiara to a tousled, messy updo, here are five hair ideas from Vogue’s pages that are sure to get the party started.

 

The post 5 Standout Party Hair Ideas From the Pages of Vogue appeared first on Vogue.

Happy Hot Guy Hair Day! Celebrating Jared Leto, Kit Harington, and More

Friday, December 25, 2015

Why Glitter Nail Polish Is the Gift That Keeps On Giving

glitter nail poilsh

Sometimes the smallest gifts are the ones we appreciate the most. Why not brighten up a friend or party host’s day with a carefully chosen bottle of festive glitter nail polish? As the newest formulas prove, there’s a specific shade and shimmer for everyone on your list. Fans of subtlety will prefer a near-metallic hue like Smith & Cults’s silvery Teen Cage Riot—which evokes ice skates and crisp, starry skies—or Dior Diorific Vernis in State of Gold, an eye-catching bottled gold leaf. Chanel’s Le Top Coat Lamé Gold Sparkle Nail Coat in Rouge Noir brings an unexpected burnished twinkle to manicures, while OPI’s Ce-less-tial Is More is like pink champagne in lacquer form. Whether you skew toward multicolored confetti or classic, glimmering gold, here are our favorite glitter polishes for giving (and getting) this season.

 

The post Why Glitter Nail Polish Is the Gift That Keeps On Giving appeared first on Vogue.

21 Reasons To Break Out the Red Lipstick Tonight—Inspired By Our Favorite Movie Moments

red lipstick movie moments

Christmastime is here, and whether you’re prepping for festivities or enjoying some time at home, today is the day to test-drive a classic red lip. Though crimson pouts are a time-honored beauty tradition, there’s still always something novel about the choice, due in part to the type of daring required to truly own the look, and in part to its protean nature—a red lip takes on the individuality of each woman who wears it.

For inspiration, we recommend taking advantage of the holiday’s tradition of relaxation by re-watching a few films that helped propel the scarlet kiss to what it is today. Audrey Hepburn is transformed from bookish brunette to supermodel by way of a red lip in Funny Face, while Bond girls Eva Green and Léa Seydoux epitomize glamour in their matching pouts. And whether the color is applied with practiced nonchalance (think Madonna in Desperately Seeking Susan) or as a ritual—Mélanie Laurent’s Shoshanna paints hers on in preparation for battle in Inglourious Basterds—the look is sure to make a personal, seasonal statement. Here, our favorite iconic red lip moments in film.

The post 21 Reasons To Break Out the Red Lipstick Tonight—Inspired By Our Favorite Movie Moments appeared first on Vogue.

Thursday, December 24, 2015

Home for the Holidays With Amy Sedaris: Why a Family Spa Day Is the Secret to a Conflict-Free Christmas

amy sedaris

The holidays are filled with family time—your family, your significant other’s family, sometimes the family you make for yourself (hello, friends). Practically every holiday movie ever made recognizes the fact that this prolonged proximity can prove trying (cue questions about marriage, children, and requests for heavy lifting—not to mention the unearthing of a few long-buried hatchets). No matter your stress level, Amy Sedaris has the holiday solution for you: Give your family the gift of beauty. “I decided to make a day called Beauty and the Beach,” says Sedaris, who twice annually turns the living room of her family’s shared North Carolina seaside house into a full-blown spa, with the help of her 12-year-old niece, for an afternoon of blissfully quiet pampering. As the family skincare expert (“I’ve been obsessed with putting lotion head to toe every single day since I was 12”) explains, “I don’t really do anything when I go home—I don’t cook, so it’s my thing to contribute—and they all love it.”

Beauty and the Beach is not short in the way of indulgences—think: scenting the room with lavender essential oil mist; offering spa water with lemon, cucumber, and mint; and creating a spa menu that ranges from facials and foot soaks to “military cuts” and skin tag removal. “There are things that I know people won’t sign up for, but I like to offer new services every year,” says Sedaris. Aside from being a thoughtful avenue to treat as many as 10 housemates, Sedaris adds that it’s also just a funny way to keep busy, keep quiet, and make everyone do something she likes: “We play spa music that my little brother gets from Pandora—no words, it’s relaxing. You can hear water trickling over rocks. I like hearing people complain—[it] makes me laugh. Sometimes I’ll say, ‘Your tone of voice doesn’t go with the music.’” But more often than not, family members fall asleep while Sedaris’s sister-in-law gives foot massages and Sedaris provides a full-service facial.

The facial itself is a serious undertaking. Once she has a sibling, in-law, or family member’s significant other lying down in the chair, she starts by spraying Mario Badescu rose water on his or her skin “for whatever,” and exfoliates with a La Roche-Posay Toleriane cleanser on a Clarisonic (“I bring a fresh clean head for everyone”). Then she places or throws—depending on her mood—a hot towel over his or her face, before applying Aesop’s clarifying Primrose Facial Cleansing Masque. That’s followed by a mist of Epicuren Protein Mist Enzyme Toner and Skyn Iceland eye gels. Moisture is delivered two ways—through the Organic Pharmacy’s Rose Hip Oil, followed by Tatcha lotion, or whatever is half-empty in her New York City apartment and could stand to be cleared out. Hands are massaged with Jurlique Rose cream. Lips get a dab of Aquaphor, applied with a Q-tip.

As heavy hitting as the products are, Sedaris keeps the day light. “I constantly have to remind my sister-in-law, ‘Kathy, you’re talking about yourself again—you’re a service person, you’re not supposed to talk about yourself.’ It’s abusive,” she says with a laugh. “And then I just talk to them about their skin; it’s all bullshitting,” she adds of distilling advice like “Drink more water—it’s the solution to everything.” Or, “Take fish oil to moisturize from within.”

“Personally, I would never lay down and close my eyes in front of anyone in my family. I am shocked they let me do it,” Sedaris admits. But just a few hours later, everyone emerges a little more relaxed, a little better moisturized. “It makes everyone feel better, and I like having a job, and I like making tips. I split them with my niece and don’t give any to my sister-in law.”

The post Home for the Holidays With Amy Sedaris: Why a Family Spa Day Is the Secret to a Conflict-Free Christmas appeared first on Vogue.

Wednesday, December 23, 2015

Is Bojutsu the Next Fitness Craze? 5 Ab-Sculpting GIFs From a Star Wars Stunt Double

Kendall Jenner and Gigi Hadid Try a New Take on Twinning Hair

kendall jenner and gigi hadid

When it comes to beauty, Kendall Jenner and Gigi Hadid have been known to coordinate. Yesterday, the BFFs opted for a matching look primed for a rainy day in Los Angeles, donning easy undos and personalized aviators for a bit of incognito appeal. Jenner raked her sleek raven lengths into a high, swingy ponytail—a style that read almost retro when paired with her tawny turtleneck—while Hadid took a cue from friend Hailey Baldwin, twisting her signature blonde mane into a voluminous topknot that could easily translate to nighttime. For our part, we’ll be adding this look to our list of easily emulatable hairstyles for those forthcoming low-key, post-holiday afternoons.

 

Watch what happens when we give Kendall Jenner and Gigi Hadid a selfie stick:

The post Kendall Jenner and Gigi Hadid Try a New Take on Twinning Hair appeared first on Vogue.

8 Perfect Netflix + Face Mask Pairings for a Winter Staycation

00-netflix-masks

As the year comes to an end, we like to take these last few days in December to unwind and reflect before 2016 kicks into high gear. At the top of that list? Getting reacquainted with our sofas and making a dent in our Netflix queues. Between the best new releases and the recently added classics, there’s an indulgence for every taste. And if you can’t choose, simply let skincare—in the form of a for-your-eyes-only face mask—be your thematic guide. After all, at-home movie and TV viewing is the ultimate opportunity for a total complexion overhaul. While you kick up your feet for 88 minutes of Tangerine, color-correct your skin tone with Natura Bissé’s vitamin C–spiked formula. Or let art imitate life and cover your face in rose petals à la Mena Suvari in American Beauty with Fresh’s Rose Face Mask. Here, eight Netflix and face mask pairings that will ensure you and yours enjoy a very merry—and beautiful—winter vacation.

The post 8 Perfect Netflix + Face Mask Pairings for a Winter Staycation appeared first on Vogue.

Tuesday, December 22, 2015

Bad Hair Day? The Best Festive Accessories to Cover Up Between Cuts and Color

party hair

Champagne toasts and mistletoe kisses notwithstanding, it can be tough to feel the holiday cheer when your baby bangs have gone bad, your growing-out pixie has morphed into a mullet, or your desperately needed root touch-up can’t be booked until 2016. With hair, as in life, awkward transitional phases are inevitable. The good news, though, is that even in-between hair can be transformed into a party-ready look with the right accessories. For those without a salon-fresh, hashtaggable, as-seen-on-Jennifer-Lawrence coif, the fastest way to a statement style is to turn the focus elsewhere—in the form of sparkling clips, bands, claws, and pins. Pop in one of these accoutrements, and whatever your hair is this season, it’s definitely not nothing.

 

The post Bad Hair Day? The Best Festive Accessories to Cover Up Between Cuts and Color appeared first on Vogue.

Rosie Huntington-Whiteley Test-Drives a Holiday Party Beauty Look During Daylight Hours

Solstice Skincare: 9 Bedtime Products for the Longest Night of the Year

00-bedtime-products

Today is the winter solstice, otherwise known as the shortest day of the year—which makes tonight the longest of 2015. So in the spirit of looking well rested, rejuvenated, and ready as the New Year approaches, why not make the most of the extra-long night with an early bedtime and an array of targeted overnight treatments? Kick off the evening with a pre-REM mask—or two, if you opt for Glossier’s Mask Duo, a set of one-time-use pods that detoxify and moisturize in sequence. After that, try an overnight formula targeted to your skin’s specific needs: To even out patchiness or irregularities in tone, smear on Fresh Peony Brightening Night Treatment Mask, which utilizes an illuminating trifecta of peony, licorice root extract, and vitamin C glucoside to lighten and enliven dull skin. Koh Gen Do Oriental Plants Night Moisture Mask’s blend of jojoba ester and antiaging algae extracts makes it ideal for a hydration boost (no rinse required!), while Elizabeth Arden Ceramide Overnight Firming Mask tightens and lifts while you dream. Not in the mood for a mask? Serums, oils, and creams abound, each designed to maximize your beauty sleep and solve individual complexion woes—wrinkles, dullness, dark spots, and more—by morning. Above, nine hibernation-friendly products ideal for celebrating the solstice.

The post Solstice Skincare: 9 Bedtime Products for the Longest Night of the Year appeared first on Vogue.

The 10 Best Beauty Looks: Week of December 21, 2015

Monday, December 21, 2015

Introducing the First New Breakout Makeup Line of 2016—And the 8 Products You Need to Buy From It

4 It Girls Share Their Surprising Winter Beauty Secrets: Leandra Medine, Irene Kim, and More

winter beauty

The holidays are in full swing, winter is here, and we’ve already made our seasonal product swaps, exchanging sheer SPF for a richer night cream, and sea salt spray for a smoothing hair oil. But for novel beauty ideas that can help stave off our wintertime blues, we say: The weirder, the better! With this philosophy in mind, we asked a few of our favorite It girls to share the most clever, inventive uses for their go-to cold-weather products. From a deeply hydrating hair mask to an illusive smattering of freckles, these four beauty hacks will provide a fun diversion from the cold, until the warmer months return.

The post 4 It Girls Share Their Surprising Winter Beauty Secrets: Leandra Medine, Irene Kim, and More appeared first on Vogue.

How Hailey Baldwin Does Winter Beauty—The California Way

hailey baldwin

This weekend was the last before Christmas, which meant stores and streets alike were packed with frantic, festive shoppers on the hunt for last-minute gifts. But in California, a certain level of laid-back chic kept the frenzied nature of the chore as carefree as possible. Case in point: Hailey Baldwin’s blonde coiled topknot. The model stepped out in Malibu with her honey-blonde lengths twisted into a sleek and voluminous bun, which she paired with aviators and a thick ecru-colored choker. And while Baldwin’s look would be equally at home in the summer months, there’s something refreshing about its casual nature during this time of year—a reminder that simplifying holiday routines doesn’t have to require a sacrifice in style, but it does save a bit of precious time.

The post How Hailey Baldwin Does Winter Beauty—The California Way appeared first on Vogue.

Dakota Johnson’s Makeup Artist on How to Make Red Lipstick Last All Night Long

dakota red lip

With holiday party season in full swing, there’s nothing like a bold red lip to get you in a merry mood. But how to keep that cherry red lipstick in place—and away from your teeth—through multiple sips of champagne? We asked the makeup artist behind Dakota Johnson’s look, Pati Dubroff, to share her step-by-step method for achieving the perfect bold pout—and making it last until the party’s over.

Step one: Prime the lips. “Prepping with a light balm is important but needs to be done in advance,” says Dubroff, who suggests letting the balm absorb to properly moisturize the skin before applying any color. If lips are feeling a little dry, try buffing the flakes away with a toothbrush and a lip scrub, like Fresh’s Sugar Lip Polish. Once lips are clean and excess balm has been wiped away, “apply a base coat of color straight from the tube to the center of the lip,” Dubroff says, and “press lightly with your finger to distribute over the whole area.” Then, to hold the color in place, define the lips with a lip pencil of the same shade.

Next, add another layer of lipstick, then blot with tissue to help remove leftover pigment. To make the look last even longer, continue this process a few times to ensure that the color is pressed and locked into the skin. Finish off with a light dusting of loose powder applied with a small brush along the edges of the lips to guarantee a flake-free look that won’t budge—even through mistletoe kisses.

 

For Dakota Johnson, a minute is never “just a minute”:

The post Dakota Johnson’s Makeup Artist on How to Make Red Lipstick Last All Night Long appeared first on Vogue.

Sunday, December 20, 2015

3 Hair Upgrades for a Last-Minute Shopping Marathon: Chrissy Teigen, Alexa Chung, and More

Alexa Chung

Ah, the holidays. Show us a woman who hasn’t spent the weekend before Christmas on an emergency gift-finding mission, and we’ll show you the world’s most forward-thinking online shopper. Should you fall into the last-minute camp, however, a simple hairstyle that can provide a modicum of polish during a marathon day of errands can turn a hectic afternoon into an artfully pulled-together moment.

For Chrissy Teigen, this meant a trusty formula of head-to-toe black taken to the next level with a thick topknot, while Rooney Mara got her shoulder-grazing waves up and out of the way with a half-up bun. Meanwhile, Alexa Chung offered living proof of the chic safety net that comes courtesy of a chin-length chop: Treated to a rolled-out-of-bed texture or falling into air-dried pieces, it’s the cut that’s always a beautiful mess. Above, three ways to hit the stores in style—no elaborate pre-game beauty routine required.

The post 3 Hair Upgrades for a Last-Minute Shopping Marathon: Chrissy Teigen, Alexa Chung, and More appeared first on Vogue.

The 10 Best Beauty Instagrams of the Week: Karlie Kloss, North West, and More

karlie kloss

With the holidays in full swing, this week’s best beauty Instagrams celebrate all things festive: think snowy excursions, seasonally inspired makeup, quality time with family, and plenty of relaxation. Hanneli Mustaparta took a pause amid the snowcapped mountains of Gstaad, Switzerland, lifting her boarding goggles to reveal a complexion as fresh as the fallen snow. In another hemisphere, the Victoria’s Secret Angels headed to St. Barth’s to shoot a forthcoming project and indulge in plenty of off-duty downtime: Newly minted Angel Stella Maxwell and veteran Candice Swanepoel played at Bond girls, each clad in somehow sexy scuba gear and slicked-back blonde ponytails, and after the sun made its descent, Behati Prinsloo and surprise guest Joe Jonas struck a meditative pose in coordinating red towels.

Prima ballerina Dorothée Gilbert enjoyed her Sunday stretch routine in the company of a tiny imitator, while Kim Kardashian West’s own mini-me, North, relied on ballet slipper–pink faux fur, an opulent choker, and on-trend plaits to demonstrate her appreciation of dance. Makeup artist Kristin Gallegos decorated Alexa Chung’s lids with a pigmented silver worthy of an extraterrestrial, which, along with a luminescent pink lip, is definitely in the running for our own New Year’s Eve looks.

But it was Karlie Kloss’s spirited look that provided inspiration for Christmas morning—great skin and a candy cane–red mouth seem ideal for every yuletide activity, from unwrapping gifts to stints under the mistletoe.

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

Saturday, December 19, 2015

The Beauty Product You Should Be Applying More Often Than Lip Balm This Winter

cuticle creams

We’ve all been there: Just hours after you get a perfect, party-ready manicure, one nail snaps, ruining the whole hand. Do you run back to the salon for a fix, or file it yourself and risk an uneven nail and peeling polish? Well, what if you could skip the breakage altogether this winter? We turned to nail expert Deborah Lippmann for advice.

“When the weather dips, nails need extra hydration, just like your skin,” says Lippmann. “Strong nails begin at the cuticle; applying an oil to your cuticles daily will help grow healthy nails and prevent cracking.” In addition, Lippmann advises clients to use a softening cream and to push back the skin using a metal tool once a week.

At the office, keep a bottle of cuticle oil, like Essie’s Apricot Cuticle Oil, close by, and let the product soak in while you type away at your computer. Stow a pen, like Sally Hansen’s 18K Gold Cuticle Eraser, in your bag for on-the-go moisturizing. And before bed, try something a bit heavier, like Dior’s richly emollient, cult-classic Crème Abricot Nail Cream, for the ultimate in beauty sleep for your fingers.

Above, the best cuticle products to keep nails strong all winter long.

The post The Beauty Product You Should Be Applying More Often Than Lip Balm This Winter appeared first on Vogue.

Why Kate Hudson’s Rainy-Day Beauty Look Is the Off-Duty Look to Beat

Friday, December 18, 2015

Can You Get Thicker Hair In an Instant? Introducing the New Split-Second Party Fix

hair extensions

From Gisele’s windswept waves to Solange’s brushed-out natural curls, beautiful hair spans a wide spectrum of striking cuts and color. But generally speaking, it’s rich, full-bodied, and thick. Especially in winter, when humidity drops and hat-head sets in, more is more is more.

So, what’s the secret to envy-inducing body? Some women are born with it, of course, while others swear by fish oil, biotin, or coconut oil. But on a visit with hairstylist Harry Josh, who works with Victoria’s Secret bombshells, he gives it to me straight. “It’s all smoke and mirrors!” he says. “Some girls have a ton of hair—Lily Aldridge has a ponytail like that—but to really create dramatic, glamorous, finished hair, we add even more.” Josh says that a new type of partial extension is sweeping the red carpet: a style that’s hidden beneath existing layers and matched exactly to your head, so that it doesn’t add length—only thickness.

Recently, walk-in bars like RPZL in New York City’s Flatiron District, Los Angeles’s Just Extensions, and Locks & Mane in Toronto have been making extensions more accessible—like blowouts before them. And according to Josh, it’s custom-made, removable lengths that do the trick best. “You literally plop them in, and have instant thick hair for the night, then take them out and you’re good to go,” he says. “It’s a Hollywood secret and an innovative way of doing this type of process.” One insider source for the technique is Kennaland, tucked away on a quiet stretch in Greenpoint, Brooklyn, whose off-menu salon services include a bespoke set of clip-on extensions customized to your cut and color.

“A lot of people want that length for events, but we have started to see more people asking for thickness,” says Kennaland stylist Amy Bradbury. “The clips make it super-easy; a lot of people don’t realize how easy.” After I relax into a plush ‘60s barbershop chair, Bradbury lifts seven extensions that she carefully color-matched, measured, and hand-sewed in-house, a process that took two weeks. “We’ll cut them to the length of your hair and keep the look you have now, but make it look fuller and thicker,” she says, sectioning off my strands, then teasing the roots to give the clips better grip.

As Bradbury begins combing through tangles, I try to remember what it was like to have thick hair. Growing up, it took two hours to trim my locks and razor them thin; I needed three strong elastics for ponytails. Then, last year, I noticed that I’d shed roughly two-thirds of it, and panic set in. I started to pop Viviscal twice a day, which I learned helps not only with length, but with fullness. I visited hairstylist Tim Rogers, who sheared a few inches to craft a blunt edge, and used Living Proof‘s Full product line, formulated with special thickening molecules by MIT scientists. I obsessively pored over stray patches of scalp. Extensions, though, had seemed too high-maintenance, too intimidating—but these clip-ons were different.

After trimming the ends to blend them, Bradbury stands back and hands me a mirror. Unexpectedly, I see myself at 16—only better. “It’s subtle, but makes a huge impact,” Bradbury says. I leave Kennaland with a spring in my step—it’s a reverse 13 Going on 30. A few hours later, at a friend’s holiday party, my hair becomes the night’s hot topic. “It looks different, but I can’t say how,” one says. “Tell me your secrets.”

Later, I head out to meet my boyfriend for dinner, and he whispers three little words I’ve been dying to hear: “You look younger.” I’m sold. After all, why have less hair, when you can have more?

The post Can You Get Thicker Hair In an Instant? Introducing the New Split-Second Party Fix appeared first on Vogue.

7 Giftable Fragrances That Won’t Disappoint, From French Perfumer Dominique Ropion

Jane Birkin or Jerry Hall: Who’s Your Holiday Beauty Avatar?

Thursday, December 17, 2015

I Did It All for the Wookiee: 24 Hours of Love, Lightsabers, and Star Wars in New York City

star_wars_holding

 

“I met this guy.” So begins Leia’s epic New York adventure, which sees the Star Wars space princess come down to Earth for the day—and promptly fall in love with a dashing young Wookiee. Starring model Andreea Diaconu, the whirlwind affair takes our heroine on a romantic spin around the city (including an interlude with a lightsaber workout and a selfie-stick break in the park) before heading back to her white-winged Oculus pad, which is a bit of a fixer-upper—not that her new boyfriend cares. From an impromptu swing dance session to a game of urban leap frog, by the time it’s all over, there’s no question you’d do it all for the Wookiee, too.

 

Director: Cass Bird
Fashion Editor: Jorden Bickham
With thanks to New York Jedi, Ultrasabers, and Matt Clevy, Mpire Comedy

 

On Diaconu (Look 1): J.W.Anderson printed puff sleeve blouse, $1,095, for information: maxfieldla.com; J.W.Anderson elasticated cuff trousers, $630, Dover Street Market, NYC, 646.837.7750; Giuseppe Zanotti design white nappa cowboy leather boots, $1,250, for information; giuseppezanotti.com
(Look 2): Louis Vuitton small stripes georgette embroidered blouse, $4,000, for information: louisvuitton.com; Louis Vuitton light viscose skirt, $2,900, for information: louisvuitton.com; Tees by Tina long-sleeve mock neck, $58, teesbytina.com; Alpha Industries MA-1 slim-fit flight jacket, $140, alphaindustires.com; Yeezy 950 boots, $631, mytheresa.com

(Look 3): Paco Rabanne mixed matte napa and nylon sleeveless dress, $7,090, for information: barneys.com;
Tees by Tina long-sleeve mock neck, $58, teesbytina.com; Obermeyer Bond II pants in white, $200, obermeyer.com; Giuseppe Zanotti design white nappa cowboy leather boots, $1,250, for information; giuseppezanotti.com

On the Wookiee: Dickies basic coverall, $32, dickies.com

 

The post I Did It All for the Wookiee: 24 Hours of Love, Lightsabers, and Star Wars in New York City appeared first on Vogue.

The Ultimate Star Wars Workout: Watch Model Andreea Diaconu’s Body-Sculpting Lightsaber Skills

How to Get Princess Leia Buns in 6 Easy GIFs

The 17 Best Movie Beauty Moments of the Year: From Fifty Shades of Grey to Star Wars

sisters

Though this year’s most memorable movies span genre, place, and time, the aesthetics that defined some of our favorite characters seemed to fit squarely in the present. Whether recent trends were merely hinted at or fully embraced, we saw a lot of ourselves (and our Instagram feeds) mirrored on the silver screen, making this year’s best cinematic beauty moments a fitting ode to 2015.

Fifty Shades of Grey hit theaters in early February, drawing crowds of fans and skeptics, who, if they’re anything like us, were instantly won over by Dakota Johnson’s fresh face, bold brows, rose-tinted lips, and slightly tousled layers; her Anastasia Steele was the poster girl for this year’s no-makeup makeup look. Old Hollywood glamour found form in Carol and Spectre, with both Cate Blanchett and Léa Seydoux embracing the perfectly coiffed blonde chops and classic red lips that defined the era. The Black Panthers: Vanguard of the Revolution utilized archival footage of the iconic Afro style—a look that has undergone something of a renaissance this year.

Marion Cotillard’s Lady Macbeth sported a gilded headband, a trend seen on this year’s runways, while Rooney Mara recalled the Resort collections in Pan, her otherwise clean complexion adorned with a wash of pink eyeshadow. Charlize Theron as Furiosa in Mad Max: Fury Road provided Halloween costume inspiration by way of truly unique makeup and badass, girl-power attitude. The Wolfpack and Mustang demonstrated the power of youthful beauty in numbers, with the Wolfpack’s Angulo brothers sporting identical dark, swingy, waist-grazing manes (some of which are chopped off as acts of rebellion). And with Star Wars: The Force Awakens making its debut tomorrow, newcomer Daisy Ridley’s textured ponytail, freckled face, and power stance are sure to inspire a new wave of Force-seeking fans. Here, our 17 favorite cinematic beauty moments of 2015.

The post The 17 Best Movie Beauty Moments of the Year: From Fifty Shades of Grey to Star Wars appeared first on Vogue.

How Drew Barrymore Takes the Edge off Pale Winter Skin

Cara Delevingne and St. Vincent Take Twinning Beauty Looks to the Next Level

Cara Delevingne

Having turned matching ponytails and supersize topknots into a sister act, Cara Delevingne raised the bar on the twinning phenomenon for a night out in London yesterday. The model turned actress was snapped leaving Scala nightclub with her girlfriend, Annie Clark, aka St. Vincent, sporting head-to-toe black outfits—and matching bright crimson pouts. A new date night beauty logic? Looks like the couple who gets ready together, stays together.

 

Cara Delevingne takes us on a tour of her home away from home aka Hogwarts:

The post Cara Delevingne and St. Vincent Take Twinning Beauty Looks to the Next Level appeared first on Vogue.

Wednesday, December 16, 2015

Lupita Nyong’o Wears a Metallic Blue Lip to the Star Wars London Premiere

lupita blue lips

Though rebel pilots, Stormtroopers, and droids all rolled down the red carpet at tonight’s London premiere of Star Wars: The Force Awakens, it was actress Lupita Nyong’o who smartly channeled the sci-fi spirit with a bold slick of metallic blue lipstick. Keeping her skin quite bare and glowing, the unconventional color lent Nyong’o’s look a futuristic edge that played tribute to Maz Kanata, the alien space pirate she portrays in the film, while her sculptural hi-top fade haircut, wrapped in black net, helped push the outré shade into new territory. Consider it further proof that an out-of-the-box lip is the simplest way to make a high-impact statement, whether you’re on the red carpet in London; in a galaxy far, far away; or anywhere in between.

 

 

Lupita Nyong’o on Star Wars, Shakespeare, and secret talents:

The post Lupita Nyong’o Wears a Metallic Blue Lip to the Star Wars London Premiere appeared first on Vogue.

Is Daisy Ridley’s Star Wars Hair Making Its Way From the Big Screen to the Street?

Daisy Ridley

It was nearly four decades ago, in a galaxy far, far away, that Princess Leia first pulled her hood back to reveal two buns, tightly coiled around her ears—and set a serious expectation for high-impact hair in the world of Star Wars. This week, 10 years after the last film premiered, Star Wars: The Force Awakens will finally set the stage for a new statement-making look: Three messy knots down the back of the head, worn by Daisy Ridley’s desert scavenger, Rey.

Rey’s triple bun is the latest evolution in Star Wars hair history—after Leia’s twin buns and Padmé’s black Kabuki wig—and it puts a surprisingly modern spin on interstellar style. And so we wondered: Like the Katniss Everdeen braid and the Mad Max buzz cut before it, could the Star Wars triple bun become the next cinematic hairstyle with crossover appeal to hit the streets?

To find out, I head to Bumble and Bumble’s downtown salon, where editorial hairstylist Tiffani Patchett has agreed to help bring the look to life. “It’s a little more modern, a little more wearable than Princess Leia’s,” she says as she rakes my hair back from the temples and starts dousing it with product—Bumble and Bumble Prep, Styling Creme, and Thickening Spray—to craft enough volume and hold.

 

 

A messy, lived-in feel is key, Patchett explains. “She’s out in the elements, her hair is all over the place, so we’re going to need a dry, matte texture,” she says. Dividing my hair into sections and tugging the highest one flush against the scalp, Patchett anchors the top bun just below the curve of my skull and secures it with an elastic and hairpin. The center knot is placed squarely beneath the first and curled into an open loop, and once the bottom bun is arranged, hanging low by the nape of my neck, the mood shifts sharply. “That totally changed the look,” Patchett says. “It took it into sci-fi territory, but those wispy bits are so Valentino.”

Back at the office, the triple bun is a hit. “I like it!” a colleague tells me, noting that the undone feel is what makes it appear modern. Patchett agrees: “It’s totally runway, and I can see girls doing different versions with that texture.” Inspecting the finished product, there’s no doubt that it’s fantastic, a sculptural sci-fi creation—but I’m surprised by how universal it feels. The knots are a little bit punk, giving the look a polished-in-the-front, party-in-the-back vibe. But they’re also windswept, dreamlike, and oddly romantic—like something hairstylist Guido Palau might dream up for the runway—and by sporting them, I become, in my mind, a playful space renegade, ready for anything. Here’s to one Star Wars hairstyle that’s truly out of this world.

The post Is Daisy Ridley’s Star Wars Hair Making Its Way From the Big Screen to the Street? appeared first on Vogue.

The Enlightenment Workout: Inside the New 3-Hour Cult Class

three hour workout

When I bumped into yoga instructor Kevin Courtney in the stairwell of Kula Yoga five minutes before our workshop was to begin, he engulfed me in a colossal hug and said, “I can’t wait to see what happens to you in there.” There was a sagelike, prophetic quality to his words, and as I unrolled my mat on the studio floor and scanned the hard-bodied, turmeric juice–swilling crowd, I wondered whether I was in for some sort of psychic breakdown.

The Bridge, as his new class is called, is the creation of Courtney, a yoga teacher, and Chinese medicine doctor and Qi Gong instructor Thomas Droge. The pair share a man-of-the-woods aesthetic (think: topknotted hair and button-down shirts as exercise clothing) and have been teaching in separate rooms at Kula in Tribeca for 19 years combined. Now they’re tackling body, mind, and spirit together, with a hybrid practice that bridges (get it?) their disciplines.

“The Bridge takes what yoga does and makes it even more dynamic and potent,” Droge told me a few days prior to the event. We were sitting on blankets and blocks on the floor of the yoga studio—he lotus-legged and erect-shouldered, his tight-hipped visitor positioned rather more awkwardly. “If yoga is a straight line, Qi Gong is a spiral,” Courtney added, his brown eyes growing wide. “It has raised my yoga practice to a whole new dimension.”

A central focus of Taoism, the Eastern religion to which Qi Gong is closely linked, is the relationship between earth, body, and heaven. When we master these connections, the wisdom goes, we can see more clearly and lead more harmonious lives. This trichotomy is the focus of the Bridge, for which Courtney and Droge have concocted a trio of three-day weekends spread out over nine months—each retreat focused on one of the pillars—building up to a total spiritual reboot. But those of us who don’t have the time, yet still crave a taste of the “kernel of awakeness” that Droge describes, can sign up for a one-off workshop. (Warning: They sell out quickly.)

The first portion of the evening resembled an excellent yoga class—vigorous, yet alignment-oriented enough—with Courtney leading vinyasa sequences while an electric violinist-cum-DJ named Haana stood over a black MacBook making sonic stardust. We spent 10 minutes on a moving meditation in which we ever-so-slowly rotated our Warrior One poses 180 degrees. As we shifted, Droge talked to us about encountering new aspects of ourselves, and Courtney told us to think of removing the boulders that sit in our life path and prevent us from walking effortlessly. But it wasn’t until Droge took over and I found myself jumping up and down on my mat and screaming “Huh!” for 15 minutes that I knew I’d alighted in a new realm. (I would later learn that we were chanting “Heng!” which translates to “sacrifice” or “let go.”)

The instructors seamlessly took turns leading the class as we alternated between yoga sequences and standing portions in which we worked to hold our “rooster feet,” “monkey back,” and “eagle shoulders.” “Find the quiet in the movement,” Droge instructed us over the trippy music. “Find the stillness in the subway car at rush hour.” A musky heat took hold of the room, and participants let loose all manner of roars and sighs and chirps. I glanced at my neighbor’s watch and saw that nearly two hours had passed. Wow. Even more surprising: I wasn’t craving my iPhone. Soon I was absorbed in tracing the reflection of the moon in the imaginary lake by my feet, then scooping up a handful of moon water and offering it to the heavens. My mind never finds complete stillness in yoga class, but the mental ticker tape—What should I make for dinner when I get home? Did I respond to my neighbor’s text about her trampoline party?—was on its dimmest setting.

Droge raised the lights after the final savasana and nobody budged—except for a couple now stroking each other’s backs. “You’ll want to pay close attention to everything that happens to you over the next few days,” Courtney said. “You might notice changes in the way you feel and communicate, so pay attention.”

I returned home feeling aglow, if not wholly transformed. The following morning, though, the effect of the class was made clear as my son and I were walking to school. His thermos exploded inside the backpack that I’d slung over my shoulder, drenching half of my skirt in water. I was sopping wet and uncomfortably cold, and my burgundy skirt was suddenly the worst kind of ombré. The timing couldn’t have been less propitious: I had a staff-wide meeting in the office that morning and the Vogue holiday party that night, but my normally reflexive irritation couldn’t be bothered to flare up. My reaction was more of a mental shrug, and I quickly picked up my conversation with my son about whale blubber.

Stillness at rush hour: highly recommended.

The next New York workshop of the Bridge will take place at Kula on March 20. The first of the weekend intensives is at Kripalu in Lenox, Massachusetts, April 15–17. For more information, visit thebridgepractice.com.

The post The Enlightenment Workout: Inside the New 3-Hour Cult Class appeared first on Vogue.

How Alessandra Ambrosio, Chanel Iman, and More Lend Holiday Hair a Bohemian Touch

The 12 Breakout Beauty Stars Who Defined 2015: Zendaya, Emily Ratajkowski, and More

breakout stars

For a certain kind of media-savvy beauty, 2015 was the year where a stroll down the red carpet—or the runway or sidewalk—provided a fresh opportunity to parlay a carefully crafted beauty signature into a career-making asset. Over the past 12 months, we’ve watched former teen queens blaze their way to fashion’s forefront, models shoot to fame mid-show, and fresh faces electrify the beauty landscape—all of them sure to offer a wellspring of hair and makeup inspiration in the new year ahead. But first, here’s a salute to the year’s breakout beauty stars.

The post The 12 Breakout Beauty Stars Who Defined 2015: Zendaya, Emily Ratajkowski, and More appeared first on Vogue.

Tuesday, December 15, 2015

In Honor of Tom Ford’s Sold-Out Drake Lipstick, 11 Vogue Editors Imagine Their Dream Man–Inspired Shade

drake

If you’re reading this, it’s too late—Tom Ford’s Drake lipstick sold out within minutes of yesterday’s Net-a-Porter debut. This comes as no surprise, as the unique shimmery mauve shade will translate seamlessly from office to cocktails and dancing with those girls Drake has never seen before, but we have to wonder how much of the success is owed to the actual hue and not the man himself. Are dream man–inspired lipsticks the next big thing? Probably not, but around the Vogue offices, ideas abound. From Tom Hardy to Walter Matthau, eleven Vogue editors share imagined shades based on their favorite male icons.

The post In Honor of Tom Ford’s Sold-Out Drake Lipstick, 11 Vogue Editors Imagine Their Dream Man–Inspired Shade appeared first on Vogue.

The Placenta Pill Phenomenon: Behind Kim Kardashian West’s Post-Pregnancy Health Obsession

kim kardashian

New mother Kim Kardashian West has traded in her energy drinks: She revealed in a post on her app that she has been ingesting her placenta in tablet form since giving birth on December 5 to her son, Saint, as a way to fend off the baby blues. She claims the organ pills give her a “surge of energy” and make her “feel really healthy and good.”

Nearly all nonhuman primates and mammals eat their placentas after birth, and now the practice is having a moment in the realm of humans. First adopted in ancient Chinese remedies, placenta-eating has fans in January Jones and Gaby Hoffmann, and has won over the Oeuf crib–buying, babymooning set. “In L.A. it’s sort of like having a birth doula; everybody does it,” says Vogue’s West Coast contributing editor Lawren Howell, who had placenta pills made after the births of her 2-year-old daughter and 4-year-old son. “They definitely helped me feel stronger.”

Capsules are the most popular form of placenta consumption; a placenta is typically one-sixth to one-fifth of the baby’s weight and will yield somewhere between 80 and 120 pills. When a new mother hires an encapsulation service, the company will send somebody to the hospital to collect the organ before dehydrating and pulverizing it.

Jennifer Mayer, who owns Brooklyn Placenta Services, has encapsulated an estimated 650 placentas over the past five years. “When I went into business, it was the crunchy crowd who was calling me,” says the former birth doula. “Now I’m getting so many calls, my side business has become my full-time job.”

Some women, however, opt to eat the organ dried and blended into a smoothie, or even raw. The latter practice has raised concern among some doctors, like New York ob-gyn Aren Gottlieb, M.D., who says many of her patients have ignored her advice and gone ahead with it anyway. “There’s so little known about it, but it’s not sterile and there’s definitely an infectious risk if eaten raw,” she says.

In all its forms, the practice has won over its share of true believers. “They are my favorite things in the world,” says Melissa Wood, a Manhattan-based model whose son, Benjamin, was born four months ago, of her capsules. “I call them my happy pills.”

Debatable, but then, so are those neon energy drinks.

 

Go behind-the-scenes at the cover shoot with Kim Kardashian, Kanye West, and baby North:

The post The Placenta Pill Phenomenon: Behind Kim Kardashian West’s Post-Pregnancy Health Obsession appeared first on Vogue.