Sunday, January 31, 2016

The Best Supercharged Eye Creams for a Cold-Weather Fix

skin creams

When the temperatures dip and skin starts to dry up, the eye area is always the first to show it. Fortunately, a host of new high-tech, targeted formulas are specifically designed to defend delicate orbital skin against winter’s harsh climate. The wide-awake glow they impart—whether or not you’ve had a good night’s sleep—is the icing on the cake.

Among the most hardworking new offerings this season is Healgel’s eye gel, formulated with two types of hyaluronic acid to lock in moisture and arnica to reduce inflammation and puffiness. Another cold-weather favorite is La Prairie’s Cellular Swiss Ice Crystal Eye Cream, formulated with plants harvested from the Swiss Alps, where they withstand severe altitude and icy winds. Looking to banish dark circles and moisturize? Reach for Shiseido’s Glow Revival Eye Treatment, whose unique angled applicator helps refine skin’s texture while also providing a punch of vitamin C to fight dullness. Here are our favorite eye creams to stock up on now—and reapply all winter long.

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How Models are Turning a Cozy Scarf Into the Ultimate Hair Accessory

Sara Sampaio

Half the fun of having long hair in the winter is that bundled-up feeling you get when you let your hair spill over a cashmere turtleneck or a furry collar. It’s a cold-weather beauty statement that models have been taking to even cozier heights on Instagram lately with the help of oversize scarves.

Sasha Luss wore one to rework her bedhead into a wispy faux bob that promised to get even better with a little wind-whipped tousle, while Sara Sampaio offset her brunette blowout with snow-bunny whites. Meanwhile, Paige Reifler wrapped her wispy waves in a thick knit, offering a twinning moment with Blanca Padilla—and one more example of why static is not the enemy.

The post How Models are Turning a Cozy Scarf Into the Ultimate Hair Accessory appeared first on Vogue.

The 10 Best Beauty Instagrams of the Week: Lily Aldridge, Lupita Nyong’o, and More

caroline de maigret

From sleek and glamorous to refreshingly pared down, this week’s best beauty-centric Instagrams offered inspiration in a variety of guises. Actress Annabelle Dexter Jones caught her own eye in a well-lit powder room, and who could blame her? Her blunt, golden blonde chop and classic red pout are the stuff of timeless beauty daydreams. Lily Donaldson paired covert hand signals with slicked-back lengths, smoky eyes, and oversize hoop earrings, while Natasha Poly opted for a similarly polished flick of black eyeliner, her glossy blonde tucked artfully behind her ears.

Elsewhere, Lupita Nyong’o took a selfie starring her plum-stained S.W.A.K—via blotting paper—and a smooth, buttery complexion. In a more relaxed camp, model Melodie Monrose jetted to Stockholm for a bit of pampering and shared a snap featuring endless toned limbs, and a fluffy terry-cloth robe and matching head wrap. Lily Aldridge found restoration in a tropical float, eliciting far-fetched reveries of forthcoming summer vacations and the accompanying beauty benefits.

Meanwhile, Parisian Caroline de Maigret and her laid-back aesthetic were right at home on the beaches of Barcelona, where a smile, oversize shades, and a mussed, French girl mane made her the effortless envy of passersby. And creative director Alisa Ueno proposed an innovative alternative to dry shampoo: Just add glitter!

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Saturday, January 30, 2016

How Queen Latifah Put the Anytime, Anyplace Workout to the Test at the SAG Awards Tonight

The 10 Best Beauty Moments at the SAG Awards 2016

Saoirse Ronan

The 2016 SAG Awards are a forecast of which films will carry their awards season momentum on to the Oscars. So, too, it goes for the striking looks on the red carpet, which hint at the beauty trends we’ll be seeing again in a few short weeks.

Simple statements prevailed tonight, allowing attendees to showcase their elegant floor-skimming dresses and, more importantly, the women who were wearing them. Case in point: Alicia Vikander’s glimmering Louis Vuitton sequin sheath was offset by her preternaturally glowing skin and pin-straight hair. Elsewhere, Amanda Peet made the case for the red carpet ponytail with an easy updo that complemented her minimal white slip, as did Rooney Mara in a high slicked-back version that went with her gothic Valentino gown.

As always, there were noteworthy exceptions to the rule. Saoirse Ronan put a modern update on a ’90s beauty staple with a dusting of powder pink eyeshadow that was cheekily matched to her Michael Kors Collection dress, and Naomi Watts turned to the eternal appeal of the bold red lip. But it was Kiernan Shipka’s flawless bare face and Marisa Tomei’s shining auburn waves that captured our hearts—a reminder that no matter your red carpet philosophy, true beauty is ageless.

The post The 10 Best Beauty Moments at the SAG Awards 2016 appeared first on Vogue.

Why We Loved Kate and Rooney Mara’s Sisters Beauty Moment at the SAG Awards

kate and rooney mara

Kate and Rooney Mara may be cut from the same cloth genetically, but the New York–born sisters claim independence when it comes to their beauty looks. Nowhere was it more apparent than tonight’s SAG Awards, where the duo arrived together in coordinating low-slung Valentino gowns (an unplanned result of sartorial telepathy).

But the similarities ended at those luminous complexions. Where sworn minimalist Rooney opted for barely there makeup and a slick, shoulder-grazing ponytail—given a signature hint of quirk with a double elastic fastening—romantic Kate wore a texture-driven pixie and a moody smoky eye. Because when it comes to red carpet beauty, what’s better than a sibling foil to highlight your personal style?

 

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How Amanda Peet Turned the World’s Simplest Beauty Statement Into a Red Carpet Win at the SAGs

amanda peet sag awards red carpet 2016

The unspoken beauty code at tonight’s Screen Actors Guild Awards seemed to be preternaturally glowing skin, a feature that actress Amanda Peet showed off to great effect when she turned up on the red carpet with husband David Benioff. Wearing a simple white slip dress, the Togetherness star played up her dewy complexion with glittering earrings, bold brows, nude makeup, and one unexpected final detail: a center-parted ponytail with a hint of polished bounce at the ends. The laid-back updo, finished with a few face-framing wisps, may be the ultimate show of confidence. Because for a true red carpet pro, the best beauty move is to be yourself.

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5 Humidifiers That Will Fix Dry Skin Forever (And Look Good, Too)

humidifiers

Don’t let the fact that it’s almost the first week of February fool you: Winter is here and far from over, which means our yearly battle with dry, chalky skin remains on the top of our beauty checklist. Looking beyond gentle cleansers and hydrating creams, there’s a simple solution to dry air that can help keep your complexion glowing and seasonal colds at bay: the smartly designed humidifier. These days, there’s a charming model for every occasion, so whether you’re driving home from the office or spending the night at your significant other’s, a flawless face is guaranteed.

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8 Breakthrough Face Masks That Brighten, Hydrate, and Fill

face masks

Whether as a supplement to an unexpected snow-day beauty staycation or a part of your everyday skin-care routine, face masks—in their many forms—are beauty’s proverbial cherry on top. And a new generation of products is designed to offer targeted, seriously unique skin solutions. Dark spots and dullness? Lay Colbert MD’s Illumino Anti-Aging Brightening Mask over your face and watch as the mesh layer delivers regenerative swiftlet nest extract—literally edible bird nests formed from the saliva of a swiftlet, which is similar to a swallow, the essence of which is considered a youth tonic in traditional Chinese medicine—and a cocktail of helpful acids. Tony Moly Age-Defying Snail Hydro-Gel Face Mask Sheet relies on the power of snail mucin (are we sensing a theme?) to soften and moisturize skin, while Korean beauty brand Manefit offers a collagen-infused gel option to boost elasticity. And for those seeking to avoid the serial-killer look, traditionally applied masks are also experiencing a renaissance: Needles No More by Dr. Brandt Skincare is a brush-on, leave-on option that instantly fills lines and levels skin, and Glamglow Gravity Mud morphs from white to a metallic chrome concoction as it firms, making it just as fun to apply as it is to peel off. Above, eight face masks that do more.

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The Beauty Statement That Goes From Saturday Night to Sunday Brunch: Jessica Alba, Lily James, and More

jessica alba

A head of staticky flyaways may be one of winter’s most underrated pleasures, but when you’re resisting the siren call of Netflix and chill for a night out, a festive upgrade is in order.

Before you break out the hot rollers, consider a slightly more polished take on wash-and-go waves. Jessica Alba and Lily James were spotted this week with their shoulder-sweeping layers falling into smooth pieces, telegraphing an easy elegance that calls for little more than switching out your surf spray for a few drops of shine serum—and some absentminded hair twirling as your strands dry.

Meanwhile, Kate Bosworth took things a step further with the help of a few flicks of a curling iron. Even Clémence Poésy celebrated her fresh apricot dye job with a groomed take on slept-in French girl hair. Above, four reasons to give bedhead the night off.

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Friday, January 29, 2016

5 Things You Need From L.A.’s Addictive New Healing Spa and Fashion Boutique

5 Definitively Chic Manicure Shades—And the Fingerless Gloves to Match

fingerless gloves

There’s good reason why a fresh manicure is the beauty staple of otherwise low-maintenance women: Something unmistakable happens when you get a new coat of polish. Set against the flash of paint on your fingertips, colors around you come into sharper relief—which is why it’s always a disappointment when those nails disappear into gloves for much of winter. Gone is the glamour, not to mention the usual nimble-fingered ease with an iPhone, a Metrocard, or a pot of lip balm.

Enter the fingerless glove, beloved by Karl Lagerfeld and the moto set, not to mention eminently practical types. We’ve rounded up five covetable pairs—including cashmere gloves with fox-fur pompoms and a traffic-stopping Chanel duo—that are as much hand-warmers as they are peep shows for coordinating statement polishes. Stopping by the manicurist mid-snowstorm? Slip on your gloves before the painting starts. Consider this your new, more dexterous winter game plan.

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It’s a Walk-Off! Cara Delevingne and Derek Zoolander Try the Ultimate Weekend Workout

Why Sailor Moon Is the Ultimate Beauty Icon: Decoding Her Signature Look

Newcomer Kiersey Clemons Is 2016’s Breakout Hair Chameleon

kiersey clemons

Actress Kiersey Clemons has one of those faces—the kind with features so memorable that it offers a solid starting point for nearly any hairstyle imaginable. And the newcomer—who, after appearing on Amazon’s Transparent and starring alongside Zoë Kravitz in the much-lauded film Dope, will have a role in Neighbors 2—has already shown an unusual degree of willingness to switch it up. Her lit-from-within glow, doe-eyed gaze, and full pout provide an ideal canvas for her ever-changing look, pairing well with bleached, shaggy bangs; chin-grazing chops; ’20s-inspired coifs; and fuzzy pixie cuts—all of which she’s worked within the past year. Clemons was spotted at Sundance last week rocking a stylized Afro, a ’do she wore as if she’d been honing it for years, but thanks to Instagram, we know better. We’re looking forward to seeing what the metamorphic beauty muse comes up with next.

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Can You Bottle French Girl Beauty? Oui!

Constance Jablonski

What is it about the phrase “French girl” that makes the pulse quicken? Just saying it conjures images of Françoise Hardy smiling on a scooter, the ends of her blunt cut catching the breeze; Anna Karina pouting behind a crisp black cat-eye; and Brigitte Bardot whispering to honorary Frenchie Jane Birkin behind tangles of slept-in second-day waves. Or perhaps it’s the nation’s modern-day muses who incite envy—lipstick painted onto the pillowy lips of Léa Seydoux and Anais Mali, the effortless sun-kissed highlights of Caroline de Maigret and Constance Jablonski. It all adds up to an alluring je ne sais quoi—but what if you could actually bottle it?

That seems to be the question beauty brands had in mind when they created a new wave of soaps, serums, and balms designed to capture the essence of la vie Française. And they have. A skin-care routine of French Girl Organics’s smoothing face exfoliator, Odacité’s rose geranium–scented A Winter in Paris serum, and Lancôme’s tightening French Lift cream will deliver the kind of sculpted complexion that renders makeup unnecessary. Beyond a gamine glow, It’s Skin’s confectionary-inspired lip balm lets the flavor of macarons linger on lips, while the enveloping scent of Wary Meyers’s lemon verbena soap is almost as patriotic as its red, white, and blue stripes. Here are six products that can take you from Francophile to true Parisian with the flip of a lid.

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Sienna Miller Steps Out in the New Hair Color of the Season

Smoothies in Winter? 3 Healthy Seasonal Recipes for Cold-Weather Wellness

smoothie

From April to October, my Vitamix can’t catch a break. The crush of bursting-ripe berries—strawberries, blackberries, then dusty, sweet blueberries!—along with the season’s creamy mangoes and juicy peaches inspire months of frosty, fulfilling smoothies. But then the cold hits, and suddenly a drink tart with pineapple and last month’s frozen berries feels all wrong.

Though summer has staked its claim on the smoothie, winter is a perfect time to reconsider your go-to ingredients—and look outside the freezer for fresh fruits in season now. Instagram’s wellness authorities are embracing the bounty of healthful produce that winter has to offer: Lily Kunin brightens up winter with a creamy citrus-persimmon smoothie. Cinnamon adds heat to Maria Marlowe’s fig and almond butter smoothie. And Portuguese home cook Joana Limão serves her Baked Apple and Turmeric Smoothie warm. Made with all seasonal ingredients, these smoothies make even a snow day taste sweet.

 

Persimmon Citrus Smoothie

Instagram: Cleanfooddirtycity

Ingredients:
3/4 cup coconut or cashew milk
1 very ripe persimmon, flesh scooped out
1/2 valencia orange, peeled and cut into pieces
1 tsp. coconut oil or coconut butter
1 T gluten-free rolled oats
1 tsp. freshly grated ginger
1/2 tsp. freshly grated turmeric

Instructions: Blend all ingredients together until smooth.

 

Cinnamon Fig Smoothie

Instagram: maria_marlowe

Ingredients:
1 cup of water
1 T almond butter
1 pear (bosc or bartlett), cored
3 T hemp seeds
3 fresh or dried figs
1/2-inch-to-1-inch piece of ginger
1/4 tsp. ground cinnamon

Instructions: Blend all ingredients together until smooth.

 

Baked Apple and Turmeric Smoothie

Instagram: Joanamlimao

Ingredients:
1 2-inch-long piece of turmeric root
2 tart apples
Juice of 1/2 lemon
1 tsp. rice syrup (optional)
1 cup purified water
1/4 cup oat flakes
1 tsp. almond butter
1/2-inch-long piece of ginger root
Pumpkin seeds, to sprinkle

Instructions:
1. Preheat oven to 375 degrees.

2. Cut apples in pieces, peel on, and lay them on a cookie sheet. Add turmeric, lemon juice, and rice syrup, if using. Roast for 25–30 minutes or until lightly golden.

3. Put everything in a blender. Add in water, oats, almond butter, and ginger, and blend until smooth. Add more or less water to taste.

4. Sprinkle with pumpkin seeds and enjoy while still warm.

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Thursday, January 28, 2016

Is Your Skin Sensitive or Just Acting Like It? 11 Miracle Treatments for a Happy Face

Meet Pedro Roman, the Model Making the Case for the Extreme Man Bun

How Jeanne Damas Takes a French Girl Beauty Statement From Day to Night

The Life-Changing Magic of Healthy Desk Snacks: 5 Ways to Stock Up Now

3 Instant Bun Upgrades: Olivia Palermo, Emily Ratajkowski, and More

Olivia Palermo

 

Serving as both a preemptive strike against winter frizz and an ingeniously simple strategy for putting off shampoo one more day, the low knot with a neat center part has all but replaced the messy bun as the street style statement of the moment.

And while off-duty models have long embraced slick iterations of the style, front row regulars like Olivia Palermo are putting their own spin on the look. Spotted at Valentino in Paris yesterday, the photographer favorite upgraded her glossy bun with two slim braids. Trading in hair oil for a blast of shine spray, Emily Ratajkowski offered a ’70s-inspired take with her smooth strands covering her ears in Los Angeles, and Natalie Portman offered a sense of romance with her long waves twisted into a soft updo that left out a few face-framing tendrils. Here, three ways to take an easy twist to the next level.

 

73 things you didn’t know about Emily Ratajkowski:

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Barbie Gets a Body Makeover! Introducing Tall, Curvy, and Petite

12 Times Gwyneth Paltrow Sparked ’90s Hair Envy

gwyneth paltrow

Long before she became a lifestyle guru by way of her website, Goop, espousing the benefits of the Tracy Anderson Method and popularizing catchphrases like “conscious uncoupling,” Gwyneth Paltrow was an up-and-coming actress and paparazzi darling. Bursting onto the ’90s Hollywood scene with her insouciant slouch and gangly elegance, it was her cool blonde beauty—along with her talent—that made her an instant hit.

Indeed, if present-day Gwyneth’s look is distinguished by the equally remarkable skin and foolproof power blowout that have become her signatures, her 20-something self was still deep in an experimental phase—especially when it came to her hair. Tearing through a lineup of early-decade signatures, from extreme side tendrils to floppy knots, she was the poster child for undone It-girl lengths.

The mid-’90s brought films like Emma and Se7en—in which Paltrow starred alongside her soon-to-be boyfriend Brad Pitt—and a slew of quirky updos that made her blonde lengths all the more memorable. Sliding Doors introduced Paltrow to the power of the pixie cut, a look that had her twinning with both Pitt and Paltrow’s dark-haired counterpart, Winona Ryder.

The actress eventually indulged in a brief fling with brunette before reclaiming her golden girl status at the end of the decade. In 1999, Paltrow took home an Academy Award for her role in Shakespeare in Love sporting a sleek, blonde knot at the nape of her swanlike neck—and inspired an entirely new, cultish definition of red carpet minimalism. Here, a look back at her best throwback ’90s beauty moments.

The post 12 Times Gwyneth Paltrow Sparked ’90s Hair Envy appeared first on Vogue.

Wednesday, January 27, 2016

Is Climate Change Messing With Your Skin? 14 Fixes for Unpredictable Weather

Greasepaint Eyes! Violet Lips! Gilded Crowns! 6 Looks We Loved From the Paris Couture Shows

dior

For beauty looks that stray appealingly off the beaten path, the Paris couture shows strike a rare balance between the highly conceptual and the transcendentally beautiful. This season’s above-the-neck additions offered unexpected takes on a few well-loved trends—from a delineated new slash of black eyeliner at Chanel to the vivid lips at Maison Margiela. Here are the six runway directives we’ll be making uniquely ours in the coming months.

The post Greasepaint Eyes! Violet Lips! Gilded Crowns! 6 Looks We Loved From the Paris Couture Shows appeared first on Vogue.

Iggy Azalea Thinks Pink! Her Front Row Hair Transformation at Paris Couture Week

Test-Driving the Cleanse That Gwyneth Paltrow and Naomi Campbell Keep Coming Back To

eric boman vogue april 2015

A confession: I have a touch of antipathy toward people who cleanse and feel the need to talk about it—constantly explaining all the things they can’t do because they are on a cleanse, the dietary restrictions that come with being on a cleanse, and how good they feel after they finish a cleanse. It’s not that I begrudge friends and acquaintances the detox experience; periodically eliminating inflammatory foods and beverages to jump-start sluggish body systems is a great idea. I just don’t need to hear about every turn on your personal path to physical enlightenment.

Now. Let me tell you all about my cleanse and how great it made me feel.

I became acquainted with Dr. Alejandro Junger’s six-year-old Clean program last November over lunch with a friend whose skin was glowing while mine was . . . not. Overworked and overtired after a stressful 2015, I had been failing at the self-care targets of getting adequate exercise, eating well, and falling asleep in bed (as opposed to on the couch). My friend credited her dewy complexion—and positive attitude—to the 21-day cleanse that she was on, and that she keeps coming back to. It was her second time on the Clean program, which prescribes two mineral-rich rice protein smoothie packets a day (in the morning and at night), accompanied by one meal of cleanse-approved foods for lunch and three pills—a digestive enzyme, a berberine supplement, and a silymarin supplement—post-consumption. The clear-skinned, energetic, and slender results have made A-listers like Naomi Campbell dedicated fans.

With a staggering number of hope-in-a-juice-bottle cleanses now on the market, it’s telling that Clean has remained a big part of the conversation. Gwyneth Paltrow even invites Goop readers to follow the program along with her at the beginning of every year. “It’s classic for a reason, because it works,” says Junger. A Uruguayan-born doctor and functional medicine practitioner, he developed the program in 2001 as a way to eliminate gut-clogging, mucus-forming foods from the body in order to naturally improve energy levels, brain function, and skin quality. While weight management is a happy side effect, the Clean program, unlike many cleanses, emphasizes real food, vital nutrients, and a long-term shift toward healthy eating habits rather than a short-term shock to the system.

I ordered my own $425 kit after going full glutton on Thanksgiving. At the outset, I appreciated the twice-daily routine of blending a single packet of Cleanse Shake in Chocolate (go for the mixed kit; there is a time and a place for the Vanilla flavor) and a cup of almond or coconut milk with a handful of leafy greens, fresh or frozen fruit (no bananas, strawberries, oranges, or grapes), a tablespoon of almond butter, and a drip of coconut nectar (no processed sugar, honey, agave, or maple syrup). On particularly hungry days, I’d throw in some avocado, which creates a thick, mousselike texture.

But I didn’t really have a lot of hungry days. The smoothies were surprisingly satiating and incredibly efficient (you can shake up a packet with eight ounces of water or nut milk if you’re not blender-adjacent); finding lunch options that included lean proteins (no red meat, pork, or eggs), fresh vegetables (no nightshades or potatoes), and good-for-you grains (quinoa or brown, black, or red rice) was never a problem. (For realists with dinner plans, you can also swap your lunch meal with your evening shake.)

Making the program that much easier is the fact that there are wellness coaches available via phone or email to help with the post-cleanse “reentry process” and on days when coffee, sugar, wine, and booze sing their siren call loudest. “The hardest part is not drinking socially,” admits Hannah Bronfman, a DJ and the founder of HBFIT.com, who just completed her first Clean program and is already gearing up for another go because of the “flat tummy” and energy burst it afforded her. “I started to also understand the difference between being hungry and being thirsty,” she continues, “which is awesome, because half the time I was actually thirsty! Who knew?”

I felt similarly—not to mention lighter, happier, more alert, and less irritable. By the second week, I started skipping my daily applications of Clé de Peau concealer. That’s how good my skin looked.

I was even a little disappointed when Christmas rolled around and I ran out of shakes. But hopefully, it was just the beginning of a new year of better choices—one that has already been marked by a reunion with my herbalist. I did fall asleep on the couch last night—but not before I drank my customized herbal tincture and took my supplements.

The post Test-Driving the Cleanse That Gwyneth Paltrow and Naomi Campbell Keep Coming Back To appeared first on Vogue.

How Kate Hudson Takes Après-Ski Beauty From the Slopes to the City in One Step

Hello, Hair Triplets! Kendall Jenner and Gigi Hadid Recruit a New Model Member to the Slick-Knot Squad

6 Skin-Care Products Every Woman Should Be Using Before She’s 30

Beth Ditto on Why Makeup Is the Heart of Feminism—and There’s No Such Thing as Ugly

Beth Ditto

Gossip front woman Beth Ditto discovered makeup as the ultimate tool of self-expression through the punk-feminist Riot Grrrl movement. Now, with YouTube tutorials, Instagram influencers, and select spring shows encouraging women to reacquaint themselves with the transformational power of cosmetics, her boundary-pushing battle cry is gaining ground. Following turns on Marc Jacobs’s spring runway and in Alexander Wang’s fall DoSomething campaign, Ditto shares her thoughts on the enduring art of embellishment.

Some people can draw, some people can sew, but putting on makeup has always been my jam. I used to say that if things went off a cliff with singing, I’d go straight to cosmetology school! I think it comes from being a child of the eighties. I grew up in a dry county in Arkansas, and there were a lot of Church of Christ influences, which were strong enough that the local cable company stopped carrying MTV after only two years. My mom was a young rock mom, though, so there was always music in the house, and I have lasting images of Cyndi Lauper and Michael Jackson, of Madonna and Human League and Boy George—all these artists who looked as incredible and outrageous as they sounded. I used to spend hours drawing on the Madonna mole, and dyeing my hair with Kool-Aid mixed with some kind of creamy base, like Noxzema. (Turns out just pouring it over your head doesn’t work.) It was a wild time of pure pop culture. Video was new, and everything felt full of energy and experimental. In some ways, my visual sense is still a little stuck in this two-year MTV time capsule.

When I was in fourth grade, my mother ordered some navy and plum liquid felt-tip eyeliner pens from Avon—which was très fancy for us—and I’ve basically had to have my eyes done ever since. When I play a show, I put on MAC’s Liquidlast Liner in Point Black and center everything else around it. I can’t say enough good things about that product. It just doesn’t budge. I’m not the kind of singer who stays in one place, so it’s all about industrial-strength staying power for me. Onstage and in everyday life, I don’t wear a lot of foundation or blush, and I don’t get into all of the online tutorials about contouring, either.

But I do think it’s important that those videos are being made—that you can be in a small town in the middle of nowhere and find out how to do a perfect Cleopatra eye. There are so many incredible artists out there who are sharing their work online, from absolute, bow-down geniuses like Pat McGrath to mind-blowing Instagram wizards like Lyle Reimer. It all helps reinforce the idea that makeup is a tool for transformation, of really limitless self-reinvention that lets you try out identities and ideas. You can just wash off what doesn’t work and start over.

As a teenager, I fought this idea because I thought femininity, and that kind of femininity in particular, was giving in to the man. So I would put makeup on in secret and then take it all off before I left the house. I was going through my radical-feminist phase, which followed my Boy George phase (and my sixties, Patty Duke bouffant–and–cat’s eye phase). Then I discovered the Riot Grrrl movement, and that really changed everything for me. Girls were picking and choosing pieces of “female” fashion and twisting them: lipstick and baby doll dresses paired with dirty Converse and a skateboard; a cute pageboy haircut and a child’s barrette with hairy armpits and a guitar. I stopped seeing makeup, shaved legs, and dresses as the enemy. They aren’t imperatives of being female; they’re part of a costume that people of any gender can choose to wear or not. Artists I love, like Siouxsie Sioux and Patti Smith, have such radically different ways of embodying femininity, but they’re both amazing punk women. The true heart of feminism isn’t about meeting other people’s expectations around your body or your gender. It’s about putting on so much MAC Point Black and L’Oréal Voluminous Butterfly Mascara from the drugstore that it’s almost a joke if that’s what makes you feel comfortable.

To say that reactions to the way I look can be negative is an understatement. But for the most part I own it, and I always have. I’ve had a strong self-identity since I was fairly young because, being a big person, I had to learn early on that what people say about you, and how they treat you, really says more about them than it does about you. So I got good at staying ahead with punch lines, and I got bold about taking up space. That’s part of the reason I was overjoyed to be a part of Marc Jacobs’s spring show. I’m never one to shy away from attention, but what really spoke volumes when I teetered my way through the aisles of New York’s Ziegfeld Theater in François Nars’s clumpy, spidery lashes was seeing Kim Gordon and Bette Midler in the audience—two people who are both so important in their own genres, and who are so different, but also the same in that they’re not conventional. It gave me such a boost because I truly believe that beauty isn’t just about being beautiful. It’s about being interesting. I follow the runways, but I can be just as inspired by a kid at the mall, or an old picture, like Greta Garbo and her incredibly thin eyebrows, or Priscilla Presley, back in the day when she married Elvis. She had the best brows. I pluck mine so thin you can’t tell if I have any at all, which lets me draw them back on however I want. It’s the coolest look, I think. When I see someone with no eyebrows, all I see is how much more room they have for eye shadow.

That ability, to have a vision and stand by it, is why my makeup artist, Andrew Gallimore, and I got on like a house on fire when we met eight years ago in London. He was doing my makeup for a friend’s birthday party, and I knew I had met the man who would draw on my face forever. The party was Marie Antoinette–themed, and I sat right down and let this total stranger transform me into a flawless powdered doughnut. Then, right before we left for the party, we both blacked out our teeth with my tube of Point Black, and that sealed the deal for me. We’ve been inseparable ever since.

The reward of full-on makeup does come with some risk. Once, on tour in Germany, Andrew painted my eyes gold, and they started to burn like they’d been blasted with pepper spray in the middle of a live television show. They were running like faucets, and all I could do was put on a pair of shades. And there I was, wearing sunglasses indoors during an interview like some kind of rock caricature. But instead of feeling pretentious and obnoxious, I just decided to feel like a chic beatnik and not care what anybody else thought. I learned I couldn’t wear that kind of eye pigment again, but it didn’t stop me from experimenting. Because no-makeup makeup is not my thing. It’s not that I feel naked, or ugly with my natural brows, bare lids, and unpainted lips; I just don’t feel dressed. That’s the old Southern woman in me. Besides, I don’t believe in ugly anyway. I like to take words and filter them through context: Gaudy, plain, ugly—they all serve a purpose for painting a picture. It’s up to you to interpret them because beauty is relative.

 

Hair: Shay Ashual; Makeup: Aaron de Mey
Fashion Editor: Sara Moonves

The post Beth Ditto on Why Makeup Is the Heart of Feminism—and There’s No Such Thing as Ugly appeared first on Vogue.

Tuesday, January 26, 2016

Out, Dark Spots! The 10 Best Brightening Products for Winter Skin

dark spots

There’s nothing quite so photogenic as a pristine canvas, be it a deserted city street post-blizzard or—camera flipped around—a snow-bunny selfie revealing otherworldly skin. But for all but the most hermetic among us, now is the time when that vacation glow has faded and a certain seasonal pallor sets in, laying bare all the sins of beach days and boat rides past—that is, sun spots.

Fortunately, winter also happens to be the right time to correct them. Bundled up and cooped up, most of us are keeping our UV exposure—which triggers the skin to overproduce melanin—to a minimum, so the ingredients have a chance to work undisturbed. Cold-weather hibernation is also an excuse to layer up: socks, sweater, serum, mask (and come March, Charlotte Tilbury’s new Magic Foundation, with a super-charged form of vitamin C that’s been shown to minimize hyperpigmentation). Here is some inspiration for a retooled skin-care regimen designed to lighten discoloration, even the complexion, and reveal a new kind of lit-from-within glow. Just think: There are brighter days ahead.

 

The Serums

 

Whether formulated with ultra-gentle acids to encourage cell turnover (like Glytone Enhance Brightening Complex, out in March) or with patented brightening technology to help lift stubborn spots (Shiseido White Lucent MicroTargeting Spot Corrector), these concentrated treatments are your first course of action.

 

The Masks

 

Think of these add-on treatments as a built-in partner for your Netflix account: You can unwind while the active ingredients get to work. Depending on your preferences, slather on one from a jar (like GlamGlow’s potent FlashMud) or drape a Korean-style sheet mask over your face (Dr. Jart+ Dermask Micro Jet Brightening Solution is made from ultra-fine microfibers).

The post Out, Dark Spots! The 10 Best Brightening Products for Winter Skin appeared first on Vogue.

In Defense of the Stripper Nail: Why Acrylics Are 2016’s Boldest Beauty Statement

The Britney Body Is Back! 6 Times the Princess of Pop Served Up Gymspiration

Here’s Everything You Need to Know About the Zika Travel Warnings

zika virus

When Annie Lin, founder of the mom- and baby-products shop A Little Bundle, posted a beach photo on Instagram last week with a caption about her decision to cancel her upcoming trip to Tulum, Mexico, with her husband, the sympathy poured in—as did suggestions for alternate destinations. One of her followers recommended that Lin, who is 26 weeks pregnant, look into the Virgin Islands, and another suggested Turks and Caicos, two locations that are not associated with the mosquito-borne Zika virus. “We are in the same boat,” chimed in somebody else. The next comment: “Same here! We were supposed to babymoon in Tulum in April :(

With the CDC’s latest advisory warning pregnant women against traveling to some 20 countries with Zika outbreaks—including popular destinations such as Mexico and Puerto Rico—the epidemic has edged out nearly every other anxiety that expecting mothers must grapple with today. Zika has been associated with a steep rise in microcephaly, a neurological condition where babies are born with shrunken heads. The outbreak is most dire in Brazil, where nearly 4,000 cases were reported last year. It affects more than those who are already pregnant: The Brazilian government is urging women to hold off pregnancy, as are authorities in Colombia, Jamaica, El Salvador, and Ecuador. Meanwhile, the CDC has urged women who are considering getting pregnant to consult doctors before visiting the countries in the travel advisory.

The outbreak, more terrifying by the day, has led to no small amount of chaos and uncertainty. We spoke with two experts to find out what we’re really meant to make of the news, and whether we need to put our travel plans on hold.

Are people blowing Zika out of proportion?
TRISH PERL, M.D., professor of medicine specializing in infectious diseases at Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine: Sadly, no. The numbers are staggering—cases in Brazil have risen 20-fold over the past year.

Are those of us who stay stateside sure to be safe?
TP: We know the mosquito carrying the virus can live in the southern part of the U.S. and maybe even pretty far north—definitely as far as the Washington, D.C. area.

So what does this mean for those traveling to a place like Florida?
TP: People need to be careful around areas where there are mosquitoes. This time of year in Florida there’s probably not as many as in the summer, but women need to be thoughtful and take precautions against mosquitoes. Maybe this is the time to go skiing.

Are we absolutely sure that Zika causes microcephaly?
TP: No, but the association is very worrisome. We don’t have cause and effect yet; now there’s just a strong association. It’s like lung cancer and smoking: There was a little while before we had absolute proof that one caused the other.

Is there a treatment or vaccine?
JOEL D. ERNST, M.D., division director of infectious diseases and immunology and a professor of medicine at NYU Langone Medical Center: Not yet. We have a lot of knowledge that we think is applicable—for instance, we know that Zika is related to other viruses we’ve seen before, yet we’re only beginning to appreciate how complicated this is. Vaccine-making, at its simplest, is a process that involves careful testing—and in this case, testing of pregnant women, which further complicates things. It could take three of four years, and that’s a best-case scenario. We’re definitely not talking a few months.

What are the common symptoms?
JE: The typical ones are fever, joint pains, and rash, often with a headache; the symptoms usually last for under a week.

What if you’re not pregnant and planning on going to the Olympics in Rio this summer?
JE: Avoid becoming pregnant during your time attending and shortly afterward. I can’t say exactly how long after; it’s still unknown how long the virus persists after the symptoms abate. We don’t know whether once you’re over the virus, it’s risk-free or there’s some persistence and risk of passing it to a baby.

The post Here’s Everything You Need to Know About the Zika Travel Warnings appeared first on Vogue.

How to Make Your Own Dry Shampoo—From the New Book That’s Becoming Our Natural Beauty Obsession

Are You a Chanel Twist or a Dior Bun? The Beauty Gauntlet Has Been Thrown!

Dakota Johnson Puts Winter’s Boldest Beauty Trend to the Test

dakota johnson

With the exception of punkish cat-eyes and unplucked power brows—and, of course, Pat McGrath’s exuberant homage to club-kid makeup—few ’80s beauty trends have inspired much let’s-try-this-at-home nostalgia lately.

But leave it to Dakota Johnson to prove that a touch of glam rock is more wearable than you’d think. The actress was spotted in New York last night with a slash of peach blush blended all the way up her cheekbones, a bold look that was finished off with a dab of highlighter. Wraparound eyeliner and a fire engine red manicure intensified the look, while a soft pink lip stain kept things modern. A new way to brighten a dark winter night? With David Bowie still on our collective minds (and Spotify streams), why not?

 

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

The post Dakota Johnson Puts Winter’s Boldest Beauty Trend to the Test appeared first on Vogue.

The 10 Best Beauty Looks: Week of January 25, 2016

Monday, January 25, 2016

Would You Date Harry Styles? The Case for Collar-Grazing Man Hair

Watch Supermodel Brad Kroenig Try a Trampoline Cardio Workout—With His Mini-Me’s

jump life video

 

On a second-floor studio in Tribeca, just steps from a snow-drenched Canal Street, Hudson and Jameson Kroenig are having a walk-off. Dressed in shrunken-down Y-3 jogger pants and a Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles tee, respectively, the siblings, ages 7 and 4, stride confidently across the room, before collapsing into fits of adorable laughter (though what else would you expect from two Chanel regulars, whose father, Brad Kroenig, remains one of the industry’s top models?).

The Kroenigs are here to vet JumpLife, a trampoline-based workout class designed for kids and their parents to get fit together. Featuring a hexagonal jump pad with a single handlebar for stability, the studio throws back not only to childhood jump sessions, but also to the ’80s Jane Fonda moment, when working out was actually fun. As the little Kroenigs leap onto their trampolines and begin bouncing with seemingly limitless energy, Brad works up a sweat through a vigorous series of jump squats, pendulum kicks, and sprints, guided by instructor Tiffany Sparks.

Once the smooth dancehall beat of Justin Bieber’s “Sorry” comes on, the lights go down, a disco-fueled rave ensues, and the Kroenigs dance till they drop. “This looked a lot easier online. We should get one for the house,” Brad says to his boys. “No, we should get three!” Jameson chimes in. Out of the mouths of babes.

JumpLife
404 Broadway
Manhattan, New York 10013
212.966.2604

The post Watch Supermodel Brad Kroenig Try a Trampoline Cardio Workout—With His Mini-Me’s appeared first on Vogue.

Is Bleached Hair the Secret Star of Men’s Fashion Week? 8 Pics Worth Taking to Your Colorist

Kim Kardashian West and Chrissy Teigen Join the Pro-Pregnancy Body Conversation

chrissy teigen

In a world where post-baby body workouts and cleanses rule headlines, it’s refreshing to hear women steer the conversation toward the beauty of the pregnant body—something Kim Kardashian West and Chrissy Teigen have been publicly discussing of late. In addition to tweeting back and forth about the trials of #momlife, including inconvenient feeding times and what it feels like when a few hours of solitude unexpectedly fall into your lap, they’ve also recently been documented sharing wardrobe advice on how to better showcase the baby bump.

“I always wanted to be the person who showed off the bump because it looks beautiful and I think you should embrace it,” Teigen said in a recent interview. For inspiration, she turns to Kardashian West: “I love seeing that belly of hers and I know Kanye does, too—we’re lucky to be with men who find pregnancy sexy.” No stranger to the pregnant silhouette, Kardashian West has never been afraid to highlight her expecting shape, from her infamous Givenchy rose gown at the 2013 Met Gala to a news-making sheer black lace dress also designed by Riccardo Tisci last September and a number of elastic looks from her husband’s line, Yeezy. Naturally, she shared one piece of advice with Teigen (who has also been taking a bombshell approach to her new shape): “Go stretchy.” That kind of pro-pregnancy body positivity is worth getting on board with—because what’s worth hiding about the miracle of life?

The post Kim Kardashian West and Chrissy Teigen Join the Pro-Pregnancy Body Conversation appeared first on Vogue.

6 Lily-Rose Depp Instagrams That Are Fueling Our Beauty Crush

lily-rose depp

When you’re the daughter of an iconic French pop star and a Hollywood heartthrob, it’s safe to say that good genes are all but guaranteed. But while Lily-Rose Depp has inherited Vanessa Paradis’s wide-set eyes and Johnny Depp’s chiseled cheekbones, her knack for selfie-ready hair upgrades and makeup quick-changes amounts to a signature beauty look that’s all her own.

One glance at her Instagram and you can see why the up-and-coming actress’s chameleonic range has helped win her several future film roles and more than a million followers. One moment she’s channeling Lolita with heart-shaped sunglasses and an easy half-up ponytail; the next, she’s all Parisian cool with a flatironed bob and red lipstick. And just yesterday, Depp worked the Sundance circuit with a simple ribbon-adorned ponytail, only to take smoked sapphire eyeshadow and baby doll lashes down the red carpet. Above, five Insta-moments that prove she’s a beauty muse worth following.

The post 6 Lily-Rose Depp Instagrams That Are Fueling Our Beauty Crush appeared first on Vogue.

Zendaya’s New “Neverland” Video Has the Quick-Change Hair Transformation on Lockdown

Why Rosie Huntington-Whiteley’s Smoky Eye Makeover Is Straight From the Supermodel Playbook

Evan Rachel Wood on Tilda Swinton, HBO’s Westworld, and How to Know When You’ve Found The One

evan rachel wood

It’s hard to predict what Evan Rachel Wood will do next. The chameleonic actress has been tapped to play a shoplifting 13-year-old, a temperamental opera singer, and a woman living in a future where artificial intelligence blends in seamlessly with the real world for HBO’s forthcoming series Westworld—this all from a girl who calls music her first love. When she’s not filming a critically acclaimed series or groundbreaking movie, she might be found singing “Wrecking Ball” at the top of her lungs to friends in her basement karaoke lounge, writing, spending time with her 2-and-a-half-year-old son, or finding other means of “staying creative on my own terms.” It’s this pioneering spirit that has won her a role as the face of Gucci Guilty Eau, a lilac-, lychee-, and musk-spiked fragrance she describes as giving the wearer “a strong sense of self, confidence, and independence,” descriptors she could very well apply to herself. To find out more about what’s next for the 28-year-old actress, we hopped on a call with Wood to talk about the importance of applying perfume straight to the skin, why she’ll be shaving her head when she’s 50, and how to tell when you’ve found the one.

How do you like to put on perfume?
I spray it into the air and walk into it. I think it’s good to put it on bare skin when your pores are still open [like after the shower], so it’s on your clothes, but it’s also [still there] if clothes aren’t in the equation. I think the senses ignite imagination. It can help make memories—you leave your mark with someone a little more prominently when you have a signature scent. The original Gucci Guilty is a bold, daring, take-control-of-the-situation vibe. And now, it’s evolved into a more romantic scent—ethereal and soft and sexy, but still grounded. I feel naked when I leave the house without it.

What else do you make sure to do before you leave the house?
Mascara is another thing, if I forget to put it on, I’m like: Man, that was a good day, but it would have been great if I had had mascara! I love CoverGirl’s volumizing, non-clumping mascara. That’s essential to me. Eyes are just as important as scent [when it comes to] sensuality. I like to accentuate them a bit. When the lights are low, a smoky eye is a good way to draw people in.

Do you have a trick for the perfect smoky eye?
I’ve been really into using an emerald green pencil, then taking a brush or sponge and smudging it [to] soften it up. I wait to apply any makeup under my eyes [until] I do my [eyeliner] first. Then you can clean up the line and make it really perfect.

You also wear a bold lip a lot—how do you maintain it?
When I do a really bold lip, I notice that when I try to line it really perfectly on the [edge of] my mouth, it runs. If I put it inside the line, it will then bleed to the edge and not get really crazy. I learned that by trial and error. I love all the NARS shades, and they have really long wear. My makeup artist gave one to me.

What else have you learned on set?
I loved Mildred [Pierce]—the old glamour and getting to wear the costumes and the hair. I got really into mastering the Clara Bow lip for a while, which is just drawing a heart on your mouth and not bringing your lipstick to the edge. I also loved Running With Scissors. [They had me in] peacock eyeshadow, blue mascara, and hot pants. I probably kept wearing that blue mascara. [But the most important thing I’ve learned on set] is not to splash water directly on your face [when you’re washing it] or in the shower. It can disturb your pH. Instead, I get facial sponges or use a hot towel to loosen all of my makeup and my pores. I put it in the microwave with eucalyptus [oil to heat it up]. Then use the towel as gently as possible. Don’t be in a hurry to get your makeup off. I use [a cleanser] from Acure [Organics] that’s less harsh. But if I’m on set and don’t have it, I’ll use olive oil and a hot towel. I’ll call the kitchen at the hotel and say, “Hey, you don’t have any olive oil, do you?”

Your skin is pristine. Tell us about your routine.
I have to change up my routine every year because my skin gets used to it. I will find a miracle product for a while, and then my skin adapts and it won’t work anymore. [Right now] I wear La Roche-Posay [Anthelios] SPF 60 every day, and I always use St. Ives collagen-booster moisturizer. It smells great, and it helps your skin not lose elasticity. There’s an awesome tinted moisturizer by Stila that gives you just enough coverage—it warms you up and gives you a sheen and helps nourish your skin. The less you do, the better.

Do you ever do skin treatments?
If I’m home alone not doing anything, I watch Friends and I make my own masks. Manuka honey is really amazing for sensitive, acne-prone skin. I put it all over my face with cinnamon—that gives it a more pasty quality. You look like you just stuck your head in chocolate pudding. If I have something weird on my face, like Mario Badescu spot treatment, you either love me or you don’t. [laughs] If someone can love you with stuff on your face, then you’ve found [The One].

Who are your beauty icons?
I love [David] Bowie. I’ve always loved androgynous glam-rock looks. And I feel a weird kinship with Tilda Swinton—she’s tall and pale and hasn’t conformed. She’s like a female Bowie. She’s my inspiration—her and Annie Lennox and Patti Smith. I want to be rocking suits and shaving my head and dyeing [my hair] orange when I’m 50.

The post Evan Rachel Wood on Tilda Swinton, HBO’s Westworld, and How to Know When You’ve Found The One appeared first on Vogue.

Meet the French Girl (And Rock-Star Daughter) Whose Hair Transformations Are an Instagram Hit

Didi Stone Olomidé

The runways of Paris couture week are all about celebrating highly individual, and at times totally transformative, beauty looks—an approach mirrored by a new generation of French social media stars with ever-evolving, experimental coifs. Lately, local girls have been clicking “like” on the Instagram feed of Didi-Stone Olomidé, the 16-year-old daughter of legendary Congolese singer Koffi Olomidé, whose most recent hit is an ode to the selfie called—what else?—“Selfie.” True to that legacy, Didi-Stone has mastered the art of the auto-portrait—and much to the delight of her 26,000 followers, she switches up her hair look every one to two weeks, from piece-y Afros to slicked-back ponytails to chic head wraps. Here, she shares the details of her beauty routine and her secret to the perfect selfie.

How she gets inspired:

“I like Rihanna a lot, because she is never afraid of trying new and unconventional things when it comes to her hair. Sometimes I will see a model in a magazine and I will try her hairstyle, but in a different way or with a different color. I just like to experiment.”

Her favorite hairstyle:

Bantu knots—they’re fresh, original, and super-pretty.”

Her hair-care routine:

“I rarely do my hair alone. I have a woman who comes to my home to do my mom’s hair and mine. In our culture, this is nothing fancy—some hairstyles can take a very long time, so it is more convenient to do it at home. I don’t use chemicals or extensions. I wash my hair once a week, mostly using Creme of Nature shampoo and conditioner.”

Why she switches up her look:

“I feel it is more interesting. People see you differently—it makes you intriguing, mysterious.”

How to snap the perfect selfie:

“Find the perfect light, be playful with your eyes, and try to stay natural.”

The post Meet the French Girl (And Rock-Star Daughter) Whose Hair Transformations Are an Instagram Hit appeared first on Vogue.

Sunday, January 24, 2016

Are Jessica Alba’s Fuzzy Waves Twinning With Her Sweater?

The 10 Best Beauty Instagrams of the Week: Karlie Kloss, Caroline Trentini, and More

James Pecis

Knots, twists, down-to-there lengths, and freshly chopped bobs—whether on the runway, in the ring, or amid some serious outdoor scenery, this week’s best beauty Instagrams were all about striking signature hairstyles.

Laura Bailey put up her dukes during a boxing session, her trademark, waist-skimming blonde lengths tied back in a ponytail that made the accompanying hashtag—#fightlikeagirl—seem like a goal worth aspiring to. Jeneil Williams hid her mane beneath a black beanie for her insanely challenging workout (there were weighted chains involved), while Karlie Kloss relied on a glossy topknot as she stretched her endless limbs for a ballet-inspired session.

Elsewhere, model Fei Fei Sun showed off a temporary chop reminiscent of Natalie Portman in Léon: The Professional, which she paired with exaggerated cat-eye liner and glowing, porcelain skin. A backstage snap from Dorothee Schumacher’s Fall show during Berlin Fashion Week demonstrated the power of an unexpected updo, cinched with a pretty bow. And Caroline Trentini combed back her icy blonde lengths as she gazed at the horizon, a just-visible baby bump serving as the photo’s focus—and offering a serene reminder that with January comes a wealth of new beginnings.

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

Saturday, January 23, 2016

Why Lip Oil Is the Next-Level Cure for Chapped Lips

lip oils

Recently, before heading to the airport for a transatlantic flight, I grabbed a rogue bottle of Clarins Instant Light Lip Comfort Oil from my desk as an afterthought and stuck it into my coat pocket. Mid-flight, I woke, parched, pout dry to the point of splitting. I searched for my favorite balm, which was not in my carry-on. Remembering the oil, I reached into my pocket and applied it. Its rabbit-foot applicator moved over my lips, soothing on contact. The fragrance was a quietly warming vanilla. And the oil was thick enough to feel familiar to a balm-wearer like myself, but thin enough to nearly instantly absorb into my skin. A few gulps of water later, I drifted back to sleep, the dryness of my lips a forgotten discomfort. When I woke again on landing, they were perfectly smooth—which meant the oil had worked faster, and lasted longer, than the balm I usually rely on. This was the moment I converted to lip oil.

On the ground, I handed the little golden bottle to my sister and said, “Try this. It feels amazing. It’s better than the best lip balm.” She looked at me skeptically, applied it, and said, “Wow, you’re not overselling this.” And I will do the same for you: As the East Coast braces for a lip-chapping blizzard, why not add one of the following oils to your shopping list—or stock up on one for every coat pocket? I, for one, won’t leave home without it.

The post Why Lip Oil Is the Next-Level Cure for Chapped Lips appeared first on Vogue.

Do You Have Winter Blonde Addiction? How Dakota Johnson and More Lighten Up Gradually

Dakota Johnson

While it may be true that every woman should go platinum on a whim at least once in her life, there’s something to be said for gradually dialing up the bleach until you’ve achieved your perfect shade of blonde.

It’s a stealth strategy that Dakota Johnson has made her own. The actress was recently spotted with her current brunette shade brightened with the kind of subtle highlights that feel like a ray of sunshine during the colder months.

And she’s not alone: Amber Heard has supercharged her sandy blonde over the past few months with the help of thick, hand-painted pieces, while Emma Roberts found out firsthand that a short crop can easily handle a minor peroxide job and even benefits from the added texture.

Meanwhile, Kiernan Shipka’s new buttery shade is fueling our dark-brows-with-blonde-hair obsession and Saoirse Ronan’s cool-toned waves provide a winning halo effect just in time for awards season.

Above, seven case studies in the art of lightening up in steady increments.

The post Do You Have Winter Blonde Addiction? How Dakota Johnson and More Lighten Up Gradually appeared first on Vogue.

Friday, January 22, 2016

12 Ways to Turn a Snow Day Into an Instant Beauty Staycation

Photographed by Annie Leibovitz, Vogue, April 2010

If Winter Storm Jonas’s oncoming frozen flurries and transportation standstills have you homebound this weekend, take it as a welcome excuse to chill out and treat yourself to a day of indulgences—specifically those of the hair, skin, and nail variety. A snowy day presents a guilt-free opportunity to focus on the more time-consuming elements of your beauty routine. From layering on multiple face and hair masks, to sneaking in an at-home workout or overhauling your makeup bag, our Vogue editors share their methods for transforming a blizzard into a beauty holiday.

The post 12 Ways to Turn a Snow Day Into an Instant Beauty Staycation appeared first on Vogue.

Is Cutting Your Own Bangs a Recipe for Disaster—Or a Bold Stroke of Genius?

bang trim

“Should I get bangs?”—that is the eternal question. It also explains why we were transfixed by a one-minute clip that’s fast becoming a Facebook phenomenon this week: A young girl clipping her fringe shorter . . . and shorter . . . and shorter, until only a few choppy bits remained. More than 5 million people have now watched the botched bang trim, thanks in part to the universal experience it represents—one that left several Vogue editors flashing back to their own horrible hair days.

Vogue.com Fashion News Writer Liana Satenstein vividly recalls giving her blunt bangs a fresh jagged edge at age 5, then being immediately rushed to the salon. “It was already heinous, then they looked even more heinous,” she says. “I still have PTSD from it.” Associate Photo Editor Samantha Adler is also familiar with an overly choppy edge. “I know many people are capable of trimming their own bangs, but I am 100 percent not,” she says. “When I tried to cut them as a kid, it basically looked like that—which is why I go to Fringe for trims now.”

In a way, Adler and Satenstein concede, the girl’s look is surprisingly of-the-moment: an unconventional style that celebrates individuality. Think a baby Kiki Willems on the Saint Laurent runway, if Willems were to smear lipstick (or chocolate?) artfully around her mouth. Which got us thinking: Could the key to a model-off-duty transformation actually require taking the scissors into your own hands? The verdict may still be out, but if you are going to attempt it, here’s a little advice: Start slow and snip vertically—you want to lose heft, not height—and above all, own it. That little girl certainly does.

The post Is Cutting Your Own Bangs a Recipe for Disaster—Or a Bold Stroke of Genius? appeared first on Vogue.

6 Healthy Habits That Will Change Your Life, From Arcade Fire’s Sarah Neufeld

What’s the One Beauty Product You Need With You in an Alien Invasion?

alien invasion products

Today, The 5th Wave arrives in theaters, signaling the start of yet another postapocalyptic film series—this time with aliens. Starring Chloë Grace Moretz, who shoulders a rifle and bounds through deserted forests and towns decimated by a deadly series of alien attacks, the Hunger Games–style survivalist narrative left us pondering an age-old question: What’s the one beauty product you would take with you if the world was ending tomorrow? Think of it as a desert-island situation, only the stakes are higher. Would you go the practical route with a tube of antibacterial Neosporin? Or splurge on a $1,115 jar of La Prairie face cream for one last hurrah? From a magic concealer to a utilitarian nail file, 18 Vogue editors share the one beauty product they’d snag to survive the apocalypse in style.

 

The post What’s the One Beauty Product You Need With You in an Alien Invasion? appeared first on Vogue.

Introducing the French Girl’s Beauty Antidote to Cabin Fever

Paris! Britney! Posh! Here’s to the Kitson Beauty Codes That Fueled an Era

Paris Hilton and Nicole Richie

As Kitson sells its final novelty mugs and pithy sweatshirts, preparing for the close of its roster of West Coast boutiques, we remember a time when shopping at the L.A. house of expensive kitsch truly meant something. The year was 2007. Sunglasses were big, preferably wraparound; waistlines were empire; spaghetti was a kind of strap; and the It bag was a furry chihuahua.

This was the year the final episodes of The O.C. (a TV drama about four well-to-do California teens who cured boredom with makeouts and shopping sprees) and The Simple Life (a reality show about two well-to-do California 20-somethings who cured boredom with makeouts and shopping sprees) would air. It was also the year we officially met the Kardashians. According to the unspoken rules of the cultural zeitgest, with enough excess, you, too, could become a celebrity and have whatever you wanted.

And if you were a celebrity, everything you wanted was at Robertson Boulevard’s Kitson. There was no better place to be famous, if that’s what you were looking for. This was a store where they literally rolled out the red carpet for celebrities who arrived ready to sort through piles of jeans, Juicy Couture track suits, and bedazzled T-shirts featuring their faces. Store hours weren’t something you had to worry about if, say, you were Britney Spears and you had the sudden urge for a new camouflage hat at 2 in the morning (anecdote based on real events). An open-floor plan, floor-to-ceiling windows, and clear glass doors invited the paparazzi and your throngs of fans to document your every move and purchase. This meant that shopping was an event worth breaking out your curling iron for. And they did.

For Lindsay Lohan, Nicole Richie, and Paris Hilton, strength, it seemed, came in numbers. Golden, Barbie-blonde hair and its matching extensions were given the ringlet treatment for even a quick bikini run, and only starlets who were secure with their staying power dared to veer on the side of brunette (see Victoria Beckham, Kim Kardashian, and Britney Spears).

If a pair of Dior sunnies deemed eye makeup an afterthought, it rendered a heavy application of nude lip gloss absolutely necessary. And everyone could agree that nothing looked better with those pale blue shopping bags than a uniform tawny spray tan. In honor of this store’s seminal mark on beauty, here we remember what it looked like to shop at Kitson.

 

The post Paris! Britney! Posh! Here’s to the Kitson Beauty Codes That Fueled an Era appeared first on Vogue.

Why Swearing Off the Snooze Button Is the Secret to Better Sleep

Thursday, January 21, 2016

7 Beauty Ideas We Loved From the Pre-Fall 2016 Collections

Sonia Rykiel

As the Pre-Fall 2016 collections begin to wind down, it’s time to take stock of the groundbreaking beauty ideas that designers have dreamt up so far. Pre-Fall is a transitional season, one that tends to veer away from traditional runway codes for a playful celebration of hair and makeup. Whether that means the smudged smoky eye at Chanel or a poetic cluster of bobby pins at Maison Margiela, or Sonia Rykiel’s refreshing alternative to platinum dye, the results left us with several clever propositions to consider in the weeks ahead. Here are seven inspired looks to take for a test run this month, before the Fall 2016 shows finally arrive.

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There’s Something Different About Kendall Jenner Today

10 Organic German Beauty Products to Stock Up On—And Sneak Past Customs Stateside

7 Surprising Herbs and Spices You Should Be Eating—And Why

James Wojcik vogue september 2006

The conversation about food is changing. Now that the forks-over-knives, Green Kitchen set have become comfortable trading phrases like “I’m craving blueberries” for “I’m craving antioxidants,” or “Greek yogurt” for “good bacteria,” and the vegetarian diet has become nearly universal, the herbs and spices once used to distract omnivores from a meat-free experience are suddenly taking center stage with their own unique wellness benefits. “Herbs and spices are the future of healthy vegetarian cooking,” says nutritionist Mikaela Reuben, who often has cinnamon or dandelion greens in mind when she designs recipes for clients like Owen Wilson, Woody Harrelson, and Ben Stiller, and works backward from there. “Why serve just a carrot when I can add nutrients and flavor with a blend of spices?,” she explains. “It’s a no-brainer.”

She’s not alone. In Manhattan, spices are sharing shelf space with beauty products at health-minded destinations like Chinatown’s new Dimes Market and the West Village’s CAP Beauty, where Sun Potion’s cultish blue bottles of chlorella and He Shou Wu can be found between Dr. Alkaitis face masks and Odacité serums. Aside from adding a kick to your oatmeal or providing your salad with a brave new flavor profile, there is a lot to be gained internally from spicing up your diet. Here, Reuben recommends seven herbs and spices that boast anti-inflammatory and immunity- and circulatory-boosting effects. Healthy eating has never sounded more appetizing.

1. CINNAMON:
Reuben recommends sprinkling cinnamon into your smoothie, cup of coffee, or onto a banana in the morning to kick-start your circulatory system, add antioxidants, and help regulate your blood sugar for the rest of the day.

2. CILANTRO:
Among her favorite herbs, cilantro often finds its way onto her plate at dinner for its chelating capabilities. “It binds and mobilizes toxins and heavy metals in the body and pulls them out,” detoxifying before the day is through.

3. CUMIN:
A digestive system booster, cumin aids in the “proper elimination of toxins” and the body’s ability to absorb nutrients. Since digestive issues are linked to weight retention and mood, you can think of this spice as a happy, slimming addition with a delicious flavor.

4. CAYENNE:
So many cleanses involve cayenne because, according to Reuben, it heats the body from the inside and stimulates the lymph pathways. “Depending on the dosage, it can lead to sweating, which is involved with purifying the systems.” On extra-cold days, she adds it to her tea to shake the shivers.

5. PARSLEY
Reuben refers to this commonplace refrigerator item as “a vitamin and mineral powerhouse,” that also acts as a natural diuretic.

6.  TURMERIC
“Use liberally” are the directives Reuben has for what she calls “the mightiest spice you will find in your cupboard.” With an impressive ORAC rating, turmeric’s active component, curcumin, helps to prevent the formation of free radicals in the body, battles the ones that have already developed, and supports the liver’s detoxifying abilities. Pro tip? Use it with black pepper, which increases the body’s ability to absorb turmeric.

7. FENNEL
This perennial herb is a “well-known digestive aid” that has a soothing effect on the gastrointestinal tract and a high-fiber content.

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7 Hair Accessories That Will Make You Rethink That Elastic Band on Your Wrist

no more hair ties

Everyone loves a good hair tie. It’s easy to use and—most of the time—conveniently located right on your wrist. A quick motion and the handy accessory can transform your hair into an effortless topknot. (See Justin Bieber’s recent Instagram while on vacation with Hailey Baldwin as evidence.) But let’s be honest, they’re not the most stylish of fashion statements. In fact, a quick walk around the Vogue office revealed that 7 out of 10 women had one or even two black bands on their wrist, potentially undercutting the look created by Saint Laurent booties and crisp white shirts.

This writer is not one to judge: I have waist-length hair and can almost always be seen with a black band on my arm. But lately, it seems to me that my hair accessory of choice is in need of a serious makeover. That’s why this year I resolve to banish the scrappy elastic and opt for a beautiful (and effortless!) barrette or hair clip instead. From a Lucite ponytail holder to whimsical, emoji-inspired pins, here are seven alternatives to the boring elastic. Who’s with me?

 

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The Best Sundance Film Festival Makeunders, From Amanda Seyfried to Kristen Stewart

Amanda Seyfried

The 2016 Sundance Film Festival kicks off today, and stars from Chloë Sevigny to Zoë Kravitz are preparing to take Park City, Utah, by storm. And with its backdrop of snowcapped mountains and schedule packed with indie films, the 11-day event requires attendees to rethink their big-event beauty approach. Judging by recent standouts, it’s the simple makeunder that rules: rumpled hat hair, wind-stung cheeks, and slightly smudged liner, a low-key look that contrasts sharply with typical Hollywood red carpet codes.

Take Amanda Seyfried, for instance, who traded her usual polished Marcel waves and bronzed smoky eyes for loose wash-and-go hair and dark shades, or last year’s breakout actress Kiersey Clemons, who eschewed eye-catching teal shadow for clean, glowing skin. For their part, Diane Kruger, Elizabeth Olsen, and Suki Waterhouse all exchanged their shimmering blonde blowouts for black knitted ski caps, an elevated take on alpine beauty. But the most universal Sundance statement, spotted on Kristen Stewart, Margot Robbie, and more, was a utilitarian slick of protective balm in place of a bold statement lip—practical yet perfect in every way.

 

See why Amanda Seyfried’s dog Finn is the ultimate best friend:

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You Need These 6 Vogueing GIFs in Your Life

Zendaya Is the New Face of CoverGirl! 13 Insta Reasons She’s a Natural for the Job

Zendaya

Less than a year after her dreadlocked turn at the Academy Awards marked one of 2015’s most-talked-about red carpet moments (and inspired her own Barbie mini-me), Zendaya has gone from a fresh face to watch to the kind of chameleonic beauty phenomenon that sparks trends with a snap of a selfie.

Today, the former Disney star, singer, and actress celebrates another crossover success as the latest face of CoverGirl. It’s a natural fit for the 19-year-old, whose Instagram is a testament to the transformative power of makeup that regularly inspires the close to 20 million followers to move beyond their beauty comfort zone. Pulling off high-beam skin, artfully smoked lids, and bold fuchsia lips with equal finesse—along with a parade of shape-shifting hairstyles to match—in Zendaya’s hands, even statement makeup can feel effortless. Here, her 13 Insta beauty hits that prove she’s ready for the job.

 

André Leon Talley talks to Zendaya and Fausto Puglisi on the Met Gala red carpet:

The post Zendaya Is the New Face of CoverGirl! 13 Insta Reasons She’s a Natural for the Job appeared first on Vogue.

Behati Prinsloo’s Secret for Avoiding a Mid-Winter Skin Crisis

Wednesday, January 20, 2016

Working Out With My Virtual Boyfriend: A Japanese Fitness App Arrives Stateside

The 10 Best Face Creams to Save Dry Winter Skin

cold weather face creams

Jack Frost has officially arrived in much of the country, bringing with him the type of cold that chills bones, chatters teeth, and saps moisture from otherwise well-tended skin. Fortunately, a class of rich, emollient cold-weather creams is here to help. New formulas are all about breathing life back into drained faces—BareMinerals Bare Haven Essential Moisturizing Soft Cream utilizes peptides, ceramides, and amino acids to soften skin and enhance the natural glow hiding beneath the redness, while Shiseido Bio-Performance Glow Revival Cream evens tone and imparts the type of dewy, supple texture that we usually have to wait until spring to experience. Dealing with cracked skin, dry patches, or chapping? We suggest reaching for tried-and-true cult favorites: Egyptian Magic’s simple medley of bee by-products and olive oil is always reliable, as is Elizabeth Arden Eight Hour Cream Skin Protectant, which is basically magic in a bottle. Here, our 10 favorite creams for winter’s deep-freeze days.

The post The 10 Best Face Creams to Save Dry Winter Skin appeared first on Vogue.

Karlie Kloss Revisits Her Career-Making Bob—For a Day

karlie kloss

Considering that Karlie Kloss launched a million bobs when she chopped off her long hair a few years ago, it’s hardly surprising that she might feel nostalgic for the haircut that took her from model-of-the-minute to all-star with staying power.

Spotted in New York City today, the student and budding coder caused us to do a double take: Her shoulder-length layers were tucked into her turtleneck, creating a faux chin-length chop. It’s a beauty moment made for an icy day, with the built-in benefit of providing a makeshift scarf. Because when you’re juggling NYU classes and a career that shows no signs of slowing down, efficiency is everything.

 

Taylor Swift vs. Karlie Kloss—Who’s the best best friend?

The post Karlie Kloss Revisits Her Career-Making Bob—For a Day appeared first on Vogue.

Margot Robbie Is Almost Unrecognizable in the New Suicide Squad Trailer

Meet Instagram’s Far-Out Beauty Guru The Hoodwitch—And Her Mystical Manicures

Adriana Lima’s Day-to-Night Winter Hair Trick

The 6 Anti-Aging Products That Gwyneth Paltrow Swears By: Introducing Goop Skin Care

Tuesday, January 19, 2016

How Kim Kardashian West Gets Away With Washing Her Hair Twice a Week

kim kardashian hair

Between daily blow-drying to avoid frozen strands and the moisture-depleting radiators in homes and offices, our hair barely survives the cold. Kim Kardashian West understands the struggle. “Keeping your hair shiny and soft in the winter can be difficult!” she recently wrote on her website. Since heat styling and hot water are known enemies of moisture retention, avoiding both is an easy solution. For her part, Kardashian West explains that she keeps her lengths healthy and hydrated by only shampooing twice a week using gentle formulas like Leonor Greyl Repairing Shampoo. Between washes, additional moisture can be imparted through at-home masks (Kardashian West reaches for Rodin Luxury Hair Oil and Carol’s Daughter Monoi Repairing Hair Mask, among others) and frizz-fighting styling creams. At the very least, we’ll take her example as an excuse to avoid wet hair in subfreezing temperatures.

 

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

The post How Kim Kardashian West Gets Away With Washing Her Hair Twice a Week appeared first on Vogue.

5 Pop Stars We Wish Were Making a Workout Video This Month

The Center Part Is Back! The ’90s Hair Statement Takes Milan

How to Hula-Hoop Your Way to Better Abs With Victoria’s Secret Model Maria Borges

hula hoop

 

Welcome to Vogue.com’s series of January throwback workouts: exercise classes that conjure the fun of the playground and will help re-energize your fitness routine in the new year, making your resolutions that much easier to keep. First up? A frenetic Hula-Hooping session with Victoria’s Secret model Maria Borges, who dropped by the Art of Fitness in Astoria, Queens, for a private lesson. With the help of trainer Jule Jo Ramirez, who leads the studio’s weekly waist-hooping class, the Angolan model swiveled her hips, shifting the colorful rings from her neck to her waist for a vigorous cardio workout that kept her core engaged for one hour. “It’s not easy!” Borges says—but once you get the swing of things, it’s pure child’s play.

On Borges: Outdoor Voices Athena crop bra in deep sea, $50, outdoorvoices.com; Outdoor Voices Gradient legging in navy/deep sea/merlot, $89, outdoorvoices.com; Reebok classic nylon sneakers in team navy/platinum, $55, reebok.com

The Art of Fitness Hula-Hoop class, $15 per single class, pilatesinastoria.com

The post How to Hula-Hoop Your Way to Better Abs With Victoria’s Secret Model Maria Borges appeared first on Vogue.

The 10 Best Beauty Looks: Week of January 18, 2016

Do You Really Need a Neck Cream? 10 Game-Changing Products That Add Up to Yes

atrick Demarchelier vogue may 2006


With Spring 2016—the season of the slip dress—just around the corner, it’s time to extend your skincare resolutions’ reach beyond the face. The neck is just as vulnerable (if not more) to lines and sun spots, and a new crop of products are designed specifically for its delicate—and age-revealing—skin. Whether it’s a retinol-spiked emulsion that absorbs quickly into thin, delicate skin or a paraben-free cream with a cocktail of line-filling ingredients, safeguarding your décolletage has never been simpler. Above, 10 options to help take your antiaging routine to the next level.

 

The post Do You Really Need a Neck Cream? 10 Game-Changing Products That Add Up to Yes appeared first on Vogue.

Introducing the 5 New Lipsticks That Are About to Take Over Your Makeup Bag

5 Times Justin Bieber Reminded Us to Get Our Beauty Sleep

justin bieber

If you’ve ever found yourself wishing you could fall asleep absolutely anywhere, take a cue from Justin Bieber. The fresh-faced singer has documented his every vacation move on Instagram in recent weeks, including his proclivity for sneaking in a midday nap.

Whether he’s resting photogenically in his Calvins; cuddling with his kid brother, Jaxon; or—a little suspension of disbelief, people—snoozing on the slopes, it seems the Biebs appreciates that a round of shut-eye is as much of an antidote to the winter blues as a luminous bleach-blond dye job (or, as the case may be, a few million Insta hearts). Above, his five best odes to the power of beauty sleep.

 

Watch Justin Bieber and Olivier Rousteing get ready for the Met Gala:

The post 5 Times Justin Bieber Reminded Us to Get Our Beauty Sleep appeared first on Vogue.

Monday, January 18, 2016

Watch Irene Kim’s Tokyo Beauty Adventure: From Hot Springs to Harajuku Face Masks

irene kim

 

“Here we go to Tokyo!” So begins Irene Kim’s travel diary, which captures her four-day sojourn to Japan last month—a much-needed vacation for the Korean model, packed with deeply restorative beauty rituals. Making a beeline from the airport to Konansou, a quiet onsen on the shores of Lake Kawaguchi near Mt. Fuji, Kim spent her days soaking in hot springs and her nights sitting on tatami mats and digging into delicate kaiseki dishes. “There are so many minerals in the water, and my skin felt detoxed and so refreshed after,” says Kim—though her stash of Innisfree dollar sheet masks certainly helped. Elsewhere, a quick walk through Shinjuku and Harajuku yielded plenty of novel finds, from taiyaki street snacks to a rather cheeky geisha-inspired mask that made an appearance on the flight back home. “It was my first time in Japan, but it definitely won’t be my last!” she says, making this no sayonara—just bai bai for now.

The post Watch Irene Kim’s Tokyo Beauty Adventure: From Hot Springs to Harajuku Face Masks appeared first on Vogue.