Tuesday, July 7, 2015

6 Summer Bridal Beauty Tips To Avoid A Makeup Meltdown

Gorgeous sunny summer weather makes for the perfect backdrop for your wedding. But the hot and sometimes humid weather can set you up for a makeup meltdown, so here are 6 tips to keep your summer wedding makeup looking flawless and staying in place until the night is over.

Makeup-Tips-For-Summer-Brides



Use A Light Moisturizer.
Unless you have dry skin use a lightweight, gel formula moisturizer. Apply it as soon as you get out of the shower and give it plenty of time to soak in before you move on to makeup.
Blot away any residue on the surface of the skin with tissue before starting makeup.
A fabulous alternative is to use a gel sheet mask to revitalize your skin. Try Glacier Water Gel Mask from Memebox

Invest In A Mattifying Primer
Give your complexion all the help you can by using a high quality mattifying primer to keep foundation in place and too aid in fighting shine. Mattifiers have light diffusing properties that will stop light from bouncing off the smooth planes on your face.
Try Hyaluronic Hydra Primer by Terry

Check Your Foundation Formulation.
If you are being airbrushed on your wedding day ask for a water based formula rather than a silicone base. Water based is much more sheer and weightless.
If you are using traditional foundation keep your application as sheer as possible. The thicker the application the more gooey it will look as it heats up. Try Giorgio Armani Lasting Silk SPF 20 Foundation at Nordstrom.com

Makeup-Tips-For-Summer-Brides

Be Aware Of Lash Length.
If you will be outdoors or are having outdoor photography be cautious with strip lashes and with the length of your false lashes.
A lash that is too dense will collapse your eye and make you look like you are squinting in all your pictures. (The dense black line of the lash will grab light and suck it in).
Lashes that are too long will act like an awning over your eyes in the sunlight, creating  a shadow below which leaves you looking tired and haggard.
The same applies with lash extensions - they may look good indoors but if they are too long or too dense they can destroy your look when you step  outside.

Seal It with A Kiss.
A matte lip can be a lifesaver on a hot or humid day.
Matte lips can tone down the extra glow or shine you are sporting when it's hot outside and act as a neutralizing balance.
A glossy lip can make your whole face appear extra shiny.
Matte lips don't slip, and with a good color payoff last longer too.
Try Charlotte Tilbury Matte Revolution in Miss Kensington

Finishing Spray.
A light misting of finishing spray can help hold everything in place on a humid, steamy day. Try Face Atelier Face Finish from FaceAtelier.com

Monday, July 6, 2015

6 Must Have Beauty Products For Summer ~ Beauty Tip of The Week #19

Essential-Beauty-Products-For-Summer
image via Harpers Bazaar Mexico
I love summer beauty.
I love fresh, glowing, bronzey, sunkissed skin.
I love the quick and easy to do makeup looks paired with beachy wavey hair.
It's fabulous.

But you do need the right products to pull off the perfect look for summer, so here is my list of essentials:

6 Must Have Beauty Products For Summer

Essential-Beauty-Products-For-Summer


It's Skin Facial Solution Water Mist ($14) is one of my all time favorite products. It's fantastic year round, but extra helpful in the summer. Feeling dry? spritz it on to rehydrate. Feeling oily? spritz it on to refresh. Had a long day in the sun or on the beach? spritz it on to sooth and soften your skin. Need to transition from the office to happy hour? spritz it on to re-energize your makeup. 
This one is always sold out, so when I see it available I buy 3 or 4 bottles at a time.

Chantecaille Radiance Gel Bronzer ($56) Powder bronzers sit on the surface of summer skin and look too dusty and makeup-y. Instead I prefer to use liquid and gel bronzers that give sheer, buildable color and that make the complexion look radiant and luminous. Chantecaille's is extra lovely, and doesn't clog your pores so you don't have to deal with makeup induced breakouts and blackheads at the end of the day.

MAC Fluidline Brow Gel ($16)
Hot weather, humidity, swimming and perspiring all destroy your artfully created eyebrows, leaving them tail-less and disappearing.
Summer makeup relies on a little brow accent to offset the simplicity of the rest of your look, so you want your brows to stay put. I love the MAC brow gel for it's colors, texture and staying power.

MAC Lipstick in Full Fuchsia or Girl About Town ($16)
I love both of these blue fuchsia shades for summer. They are bright and fun and make your teeth and the whites of your eyes look super white. When you are keeping everything else neutral and understated, a bold lip can look both stunning and fresh.

Tom Ford Shimmering Body Oil ($95)
I love everything Tom Ford does.
His Shimmering Body Oil is a sexy combination of a luminous golden shimmer for your limbs and a golden amber sandalwood fragrance. 

Bumble and Bumble Surf Infusion ($29)
The ultimate summer hair is beachy looking waves. Bumble and Bumble Surf Infusion is a yummy mix of tropical oils and sea salts that gives you soft, supple waves, instead of those crunchy, dried out looking sea curls. It is super awesome for dry or coarse hair. 

Friday, July 3, 2015

Best Braids Of Summer

Do you wear braids?


Summer-Braids
braids at Mara Hoffman

I'm kind of crazy about them at the moment.
I'm stalling on getting my hair cut, as I'm trying to time it so that my hair will be fabulous for some big travel that I have coming up, so it's at an in-between stage right now.

Half-Up-Braid

So that along with the crazy heat of summer has me utilizing braids a lot at this season.
When I'm on shoots I love having the hairstylist do some fun, wispy fishtail looks on me, but I can never do it as well as they do!

Check out these gorgeous braids for summer:


side-fishtail-braid

side-fishtail-braid

side-braids

Halo-Braid
I love halo braids for keeping hair out of your face

Nicole-Ritchie-Braid

braids-and-Ponytails


Braids-And-Buns

Fishtail-Braids

Braids-And-Ponytails

Summer-Braids

Braids-and-ponytails

Halo-Braids

braids-and-buns

halo-braids

braids-at-Mara-Hoffman

halo-braids

I took this last one from Amber Fillerup's instagram (@Amberfillerup
She does so many inspiring hairstyles using braids. She also does tutorials for them on her blog, Barefoot Blonde.


barefoot-blonde-braids

Thursday, July 2, 2015

Reasons Why You Can't Sleep On A Plane

I used to be able to sleep anywhere.
And I could sleep easily on airplanes. 
Now? Not so much. In fact lately I have a really hard time sleeping on planes, especially long haul, international flights.
In a few weeks time I have some really crazy trans-world flights happening, that seriously require a situation that involves me, sleeping.

So I was looking around to see if I could find some new advice, and I found this great article on AirfareWatchdog.com

This Is Why You Can't Sleep on the Plane

By Avital Andrews

How-To-Sleep-On-A-Plane
image via Huffington Post

When boarding a plane, you have the purest of intentions: You're going to use this rare empty stretch of time to catch up on much-needed sleep. You'll land at your destination bright-eyed, bushy-tailed, and ready to take on the world!
But things aren't ever that simple, are they? In reality, you end up doing all the things that keep you from floating into dreamland. By the time you deplane, you're tired, disheveled, and your carefully planned trip is off to a shaky start.
To prevent thwarting yet another vacation or business meeting because you're overtired, figure out what you're doing that's making it difficult to sleep—and cut it out. Whether your goal is to squeeze in a catnap during a quick commuter flight or a half dozen REM cycles on a red-eye, these are all the ways you might be sabotaging your mile-high shuteye.
You Stare at a Screen
Who among us hasn't gone down the social-media or Web-surfing rabbit hole when we should be resting our eyes and brain? It's an easy mistake to make, but a mistake nonetheless, especially considering that smartphone, tablet, and laptop screens emit a bluish hue that messes with your body's natural sleep hormones.
"Essentially what blue light does is interfere with melatonin production in our brains," says Shelby Harris, the director of behavioral sleep medicine at New York's Montefiore Health System. "Melatonin makes us sleepy," she adds, "but needs darkness to work. And blue light reduces melatonin even more than plain old full-spectrum white light."
If you can't slow down your thoughts unaided, get into a paper book (or Kindle e-reader) instead. "Reading on an airplane is one of the best possible rituals you can do to help you fall asleep," says Ben Michaelis, a clinical psychologist and wellness author. "It helps put your mind at ease, making you feel relaxed and distanced from the hustle and bustle of traveling."
Samsonite
You Booze Before You Snooze
Sure, having a stewardess-stirred cocktail might make you nod off quicker (thanks, adenosine). But don't fool yourself into thinking that a nightcap will help you sleep better. In fact, dozens of studies have confirmed that any form of alcohol consumed within an hour before shuteye will dehydrate you, leave you groggy when you wake, exaggerate jetlag, and, worst of all, disrupt your overall sleeping pattern, since you get fewer REM cycles during alcohol-induced sleep. (Besides, you'll have to get up to pee.)
You know yourself best, of course, but if you're like most humans, liquor is pretty much guaranteed to mess up your circadian rhythm so that you won't sleep as long and you won't get much real rest from the sleep that you do get.
You Drink Coffee
As tempting as a steaming cup of joe might sound as the flight attendant asks for your drink order, especially if that roasted-bean smell is wafting through the cabin, resist the urge if your goal is to sleep.
The fact that coffee keeps you awake hardly needs expanding upon (a typical eight-ounce cup packs 95 milligrams of caffeine), but it's astounding how many passengers order it even if they intend to doze. Don't do that.
Instead, request room-temperature water, herbal tea, or warm milk. Beware the airlines' go-to Lipton tea, though—a bag steeped in eight ounces of water delivers 55 milligrams of caffeine. Steer clear of Coca-Cola and chocolate, too, both of which will buzz you up on caffeine and sugar.
You Pick the Wrong Seat
If you've ever been stuck in the middle seat between two strangers, you know the near impossibility of achieving sleep status there. And if you're in the aisle, you'll get awoken whenever your row mates need to visit the loo or the flight attendants need to deliver service. Your most nap-optimal option, then, is always the window seat. You've got the wall to lean against, the shade to close, and the luxury of being left mostly alone.
Book your window seat when making your flight reservation. Or if you're flying an airline like Southwest whose seats are first-come, first-served, set your alarm for as soon as you can check in online. The earlier you check in, the earlier you can board the plane—and the likelier you are to nab a window seat.
As for other seat-related factors, Clint Johnston, founder of Triphackr.com, recommends using SeatGuru to suss out your most comfortable spot: "A seat away from the lavatory and the galley is a must," he says.
Wherever you end up sitting, buckle your seat belt atop your blanket or jacket so that the flight staff won't need to wake you to confirm that you're safe.
Booking.com
You Come Unequipped
Don't expect to be able to sleep well if you don't bring the proper equipment. "Before your flight, pack a small sleep kit and toss it into your carry-on," recommends Alanna McGinn, a certified sleep expert and the founder of the Good Night Sleep Site. "Earplugs and an eye mask can help minimize distractions and let you drift off a little easier," she adds.
The other experts I surveyed for this piece recommend bringing noise-canceling headphones, thick socks, a neck pillow (some prefer to use it under the chin instead of behind the neck), a blanket, a toothbrush and toothpaste, and your contact case and solution if needed. If you don't have an eye mask, sunglasses work in a pinch and can double as a do-not-disturb sign. 
If you know they work for you, you can take sleeping pills—Ambien is popular—or better yet, a natural sleep aid like melatonin or magnesium citrate powder. "Magnesium is an anti-stress mineral and sleep aid that will help you relax and fall asleep," says Carolyn Dean, a women's health expert. "You can take travel-size packets and pour one into your water bottle and sip throughout the flight," she adds.
You Don't Prep at the Airport
There are certain things you can do before you get on your flight that'll make your time in your seat more restful. First of all, go to bathroom before you board. Also, eat a normal-sized meal—not too big, not too small—and get to the airport with enough time to get through security so that you don't arrive at your gate flushed and stressed.
While you still have Wi-Fi, and before you put your phone on airplane mode, download a few relaxing songs and apps. Johnston recommends Sleep Machine, which, he says, "offers soothing sounds, like the forest, the ocean, or a campfire that you might prefer over blocking noise with earplugs." Roger Brinkley, CEO of Pac2Go, a travel-accessory company, swears by the Ambi Science Pure Sleep app:"It uses a combination of binaural and isochronic entrainment," he says. (That just means it plays two kinds of tones that get your brainwaves to calm down.) "Think of it as white noise on steroids."
Booking.com
You Don't Make Yourself Comfortable
There are so many little ways you can create your own comfort aboard an aircraft, yet most people don't do it. For maximum coziness, don't forget your pillow, take off your shoes, and slip on a pair of clean socks. If you need legroom, store as much as possible in the overhead bin; or, if you prefer a leg rest, use your carry-on to prop up your feet. A few travel experts recommend placing a pillow or your backpack on your open tray table for a comfortable place to rest your head, if you don't mind leaning forward.
The day of travel, don't wear anything constricting or stiff—except for compression socks or tights, if needed. Instead, dress yourself in clothes that are as loose and comfortable as possible without it looking like you're wearing pajamas. On a long-haul flight, consider bringing actual pajamas to change into after taking off.
"Another tip is to layer up," says Heather Richardson, a luxury travel advisor. "Cabins are always too hot or too cold, so make sure you can take off layers or put them on as required." And a jacket can double as a pillow if you roll it up.
The eternal question of whether to recline your seat remains as controversial as ever—but if no one's sitting behind you, or if that person is reclined, don't hesitate to lean on back.
Your Timing Is Off
Avoid scheduling flights for the time of day that you tend to be most awake and alert. Early-morning flights are great for this reason, so long as you don't have your usual cup of coffee. Otherwise, book a ticket that departs right before bedtime. Either way, the key is to board the plane tired. If that means you need to wake up extra-early that morning, or get in a hardcore workout during the day, do it.
"On short, transatlantic flights eastbound to Europe where flight times might be as little as six hours, the key in any class of service is to get to sleep right away," says Kyle Steward, who owns a travel agency called Trip Sherpa. "You will have a chance at five to six hours of sleep, but getting a head start is key."
Booking.com
You Fly Coach
Yeah, we know, this isn't something most of us can control. But if you happen to have the money, miles, or charm to get up front, use it. For better chances of an impromptu upgrade, arrive at your gate early, dress sharply, and ask nicely. The worst they can say is no.
And if the flight staff ever asks for a volunteer to give up their economy-class seat to accommodate other passengers' needs, raise your hand—there's a decent chance they'll escort you into business or first.
So long as you don't indulge in the free champagne and chocolate, you'll have a much better chance at getting longer, higher quality sleep where you have more space around you, fewer people, and seats that basically turn into beds.
You Chat up Your Neighbor
On an airplane, even a friendly greeting can be misconstrued as a signal that the conversational door is open. And then, if you're seated next to a chatty Cathy (or a talkative Tom), you're at risk for an hours-long back and forth when what you really need to be doing is sleeping.
When acknowledging your seatmate, keep it quick and polite, then quickly put on headphones or an eye mask. To solidify your chances of silence, say something like, "Hey, if the flight attendant comes by to take drink orders, would you mind telling her I don't want to be woken up?" This'll send the loud-and-clear message—without having to outright say so—that you're not up for a gabfest.
Booking.com


Wednesday, July 1, 2015

Amal Clooney's Best Looks. Well, Some Of them Anyway....

Amal Clooney is sensational.

Beautiful-Amal-Clooney

In a world full of pretty women she stands out not just for being beautiful, but because she is also intriguing.
Preternaturally thin, she stands out in the fashion world not just because everything looks amazing on her long, lean body, but because she has an innate sense of style. 
Unlike your stereotypical fashonista cavorting glamorously around the world stage, Amal is incredibly accomplished. Brilliantly accomplished. 

Amal-Met-Gala-2015

Funnily enough that fellow she married has had a big career too. He was considered at one time to be the sexiest man in the world. After a string of young, vacuous companions perennially at his side his brand was beginning to look a little lecherous and a little tarnished. But then he met and married Amal. For a moment she made him look good. 
And then she completely eclipsed him. She is so spectacular, not just because she is gorgeous, but because she is gorgeous and brilliant, and successful in a field that really matters. She specializes in international law, human rights and extradition.

Walking next to her he no longer looks like one of the biggest movie stars in the world, the top name on the marquee. 
Instead he looks like some funny little bloke who got super lucky and now gets to bask in the light that radiates from her star.

Amal-George-And-Dogs

This was going to be a fashion post about Amal's enduring relationship with Giambattista Valli, but the more I scrolled through images of her the more taken I was with her overall style.
So here is a look at some of Amal Clooney's best looks:

Amal At Night

Could she possibly look more gorgeous?? I love her in this Maison Margiela. Don't you think George looks like the sideshow? Amal definitely looks like the main event.

Amal in Maison Margiela

Sideshow George escorts Amal to the Met Gala in 2015.
He used to look so debonair in his tux, but now you barely notice him standing there in her shadow.
Amal-Clooney-Met-Gala-2015
Amal in Maison Margiela at Met Gala 2015
Amal-Clooney-In-Stella-McCartney
Amal in Stella McCartney

Amal-In-Alexander-McQueen
Amal in Alexander McQueen in NYC

Amal-In-Giambattista-Valli-NYC
Amal in Giambattista Valli in NYC

Amal-In-Florence
Amal in Florence

Amal Just Being Glamorous

Amal-In-Stella-McCartney
Amal in Stella McCartney in Venice


Amal-In-Giambattista-Valli-Haute-Couture
Amal in Venice wearing Giambattista Valli Haute Couture

Amal-in-Alexander-McQueen-In-Venice
Amal in Alexander McQueen

Amal In Summer Dresses

Amal-in-London

Amal-in-Paule-Ka-Pink-Dress
Amal in London in Paule Ka pink dress

Amal's Work Clothes

Amal-In-Camillo-Bona
Amal in Camilla Bona

Amal-In-Giambattista-Valli
Amal in Giambattista Valli suit, London

Amal-at-Colombia-University-2015

Amal-in-NYC-With-Tod's-Bag
Amal in NYC

Amal-In-Oscar-de-la-Renta
Amal in Oscar de la Renta at Heathrow Airport





Amal In Jeans

Amal-in-J-Brand-Leather-Jacket
Amal in J Brand leather jacket

Amal-in-Giambattista-Valli-top
Amal in jeans and Giambattista Valli top


Amal-In-Ripped-Jeans
Airport Amal
Amal

Amal-In-Prada-Brogues

Amal in Winter

Amal-In-Giambattista-Valli-Coat
Amal wearing a Giambattista Valli coat

Amal-Paule-Ka-Red-Coat
Amal in Paule Ka coat
It has always seemed as though the girl with George has had to fight to keep him interested, to keep him coming back.
Now I think the tables have turned.
Don't you think he looks like he still can't quite believe he got her? And like he is going to stay on his toes and do whatever it takes to stay interesting so that he doesn't lose her?

Even in repose she looks like she is thinking interesting thoughts.

Good for you George!

George-And-Amal