Posts Tagged ‘skin care’

Beauty, Celebrity gossip

Georgia May Jagger loves using baby skincare ranges

By Andrea Petrou on December 6th, 2011

Georgia Jagger likes to use baby products on her skin.

The 19-year-old model – who is the daughter of rocker Sir Mick Jagger and model Jerry Hall – prefers natural face washes and creams so thinks those suited for newborn skin are ideal, particularly as they are usually so inexpensive.

She said: “I like beauty products to be quite natural, so I tend to use baby ones such as California Baby’s Super Sensitive Shampoo & Body Wash. It’s cheap and doesn’t have any nasty stuff in it.”

The beauty often looks to her mother for inspiration, and says some of her best tips come from the Texan star.

She added in an interview with Marie Claire magazine: “Ever since I was little, mum has stressed the importance of sleep and drinking lots of water. It’s really simple so they’re probably my top two beauty rules – that and to laugh a lot, because everyone looks better when they laugh.

“My sister Lizzie and I have inherited our mother’s love of a red lip – all three of us wear it as our fail-safe evening look. A good tip I picked up is to put some clear lip balm on your teeth to stop the lipstick coming off on them.”



Beauty

Miranda Kerr regards her KORA Organics Noni juice skincare range to be “like food for the skin”.

By Andrea Petrou on December 6th, 2011

Miranda Kerr regards her KORA Organics Noni juice skincare range to be “like food for the skin”.

The Victoria’s Secret model struggled to find a skincare product that worked well before she created her cosmetics line – which features solutions made from natural ingredients such as rose-hip oil and pomegranate – and she finds Noni fruit a useful tool to use on the affects of sunburn.

She said: “I was looking for an organic product that really worked for me, but I couldn’t find one. I used to put it on my skin if I had a pimple or sunburn. It’s like food for the skin.”

The 28-year-old beauty – who has a 11-month-old son Flynn with her husband Orlando Bloom – admits she was a “guinea pig” for Kora by trying out every product in a bid to find something to treat her feet.

She added on her KORA Organics blog: “I was really the guinea pig for Kora; I tested everything. Being on my heels all the time, I wanted to create a cream to put on after a long day. And it doesn’t hurt that my husband, Orlando, is very good at massaging it into my feet.”



Beauty

Trade in your spotty skin for a fresh face this summer

By alanamcverry on April 21st, 2010

Clinque-Anti-Blemish-Solutions-3-Step-System-luxury-skin-care-beauty-11.jpg If like me, and miss Lowe apparently, you fear the months of the year when you are told to discard your foundation, and bare your skin (and all it’s misgivings) to the world around you. It seems for those whose awkward acne years trail into their twenties, there is not much in the market for the middle ground. Left with a difficult dialectic between purging skin with alcohol based products designed for resilient teenage skin, or lathering up with mums richest age defying cream. And fearing that the day you actually manage to banish the blemishes, will be the day that the crows feet, who up till now have been waiting patiently on the side line, are tagged in to play. So what’s out there for a sensitive approach to spot free summer skin.

1. Clinique’s anti-blemish system
With any blemish prone skin, though the large red pustules are what you want to combat, the underlying blocked pores are really your problem. I asked a lady at a very expensive counter the solution to this, and she said ‘exfoliate, exfoliate, exfoliate’, and so I did. Clinque offers a gentle foaming moisturiser, with an exfoliator that is applied like a toner. And no need to fear moisturiser, it won’t give you spots if you use the right one. Clinique offers an anti-blemish moisturiser that is oil free. Solution.

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2. Environ
Available through www.firstforskincare.co.uk or at harvey nichols treatments counter, this is a range created by plastic surgery doctors, who we would assume would know their stuff. All the range have the clearing power of tea tree oil, and if you combine the subugel vitimin A serum into your routine, you have clinically proven spot beating power at your fingertips. Warning however, vitamin A is a kind of watch it get worse before it gets better kind of deal. So if you’re not particularly patient, stay clear.

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3. Philosophy
Use the purity face wash at night, which acts as a make up remover, cleanser and toner in one, with the microdermabrasion cleanser in the morning as a sure fire way to send your spots packing. The hope in a jar for all skin types is a great anti-ageing mosituriser that doesn’t clog up oily skin. So you can be spot free, and wrinkle free. No need to pick and choose.



Beauty, Fashion Tips

Tried and tested: foundations of the future

By laurenbravo on March 28th, 2010

Foundationpalette.jpg

When did shopping for makeup turn into a science lesson? The secret to a flawless face used to be water, fresh air and eating apples while frolicking in the middle of a cornfield; now, there is a positive laboratory’s worth of fancy-pants formulas waiting to take our skin from nice to NASA-approved.

The upper end of the cosmetics market has long been home to mystifying science-baffle, with all their ‘nanotechnology’ this and ‘kelp minerals‘ that. But now the effect is leaking onto the humble high street, and one trip to Boots is like double A-level chemistry all over again.

So here at ShinyStyle, we’ve done your homework for you with a round-up of the new, space-age and downright fruity foundations on the market. There are ‘photochromatic pigments’ doing battle with blue sapphire and ginger extract in a bid to make us look like Zooey Daschanel. Textures are getting exciting too, with mousses, creams, minerals and ‘soufflés’ all competing with the traditional liquid as the best way to give good face. But does the most futuristic blurb necessarily mean the best results?

Revlon PhotoReady Makeup – £12.99 for 30ml – 6/10

Buy it online here

They say: “Get poreless airbrushed skin in any light. Photochromatic pigments bend and reflect light to erase every flaw.”

We say: This has a nicer texture than most liquid foundations, but still felt a little sticky while drying. As for the ‘photochromatic pigments’, there was a radiant shimmer but the colour tended a little too dangerously towards the oompa loompa for our tastes.

Loreal Matte Morphose – £9.99 for 30ml – 8/10

Buy it online here

They say: “A transformation you can see and feel, with a 12hour luminous matte finish. Pores and wrinkles look smoother.”

We say: Yum. With its lovely moussey texture, this self-proclaimed ‘soufflé foundation’ made us think of dessert (but be warned, it doesn’t taste as good as it looks). The colours all looked a little dark, but went on smoothly and blended beautifully well on the skin. Somewhere between foundation, powder, concealer and pudding, it gave particularly good coverage under the eyes.

Max Factor Second Skin – £13.99 for 30ml – 5/10

Buy it online here

They say: “Now you can create a finish so flawless it’s virtually undetectable even to the professionals…Second Skin uses clever multi-tonal pigment technology to smooth over and blend flawlessly into your own natural complexion in seconds.”

We say: Now, we don’t know about you, but if we wanted our makeup to be ‘virtually undetectable’, we just wouldn’t bother buying any. More a tinted moisturiser than a foundation, this was beautifully silky and slipped on nicely, but the ultra-sheer ‘second skin’ effect was a little too much like our first skin (the one we’re trying to cover up in the first place). Only the flawless need apply.

Bourjois Healthy Mix Foundation – £9.99 for 30ml – 4/10

Buy it online here

They say: “Gives you 70% more radiance and a flawless complexion for up to 16 hours. With ‘fruit therapy’, including apricot for radiance, melon for hydration, apple for antioxidants and ginger for energy.”

We say: Hmm, does this count as one of our five a day? Despite all the science claims, the only fruity grounds this foundation delivered on was looking orange. It felt sticky going on, and the finish was powdery and unsubtle. Think we’ll keep the fruit for eating, thanks.

Boots 17 Hide and Chic Anti-Fatigue foundation – £5.99 for 30ml – 2/10

Buy it online here

They say: “Energises and brightens your skin.”

We say: Sadly, the cheapest of the bunch was also the most disappointing. Far from brightening skin as promised, we found our pores looked clogged and cakey. There was even a worrying return of our old teenage nemesis, the tidemark. Best left on the 17 year olds.

Maybelline Dream Creamy foundation – £7.99 for 14g – 9/10

Buy it online here

They say: “Our new cream-whipped foundation for 100% baby smooth perfection. The combination of rich hydration in a lightweight formula blends seamlessly for 100% smooth perfection for a foundation that stays looking fresh all day.

We say: Maybelline dish up baby-fresh beauty for those of us who maybe aren’t born with it. Like couture for your face, this was cool and lightweight but its creamy solid-to-liquid texture gave reassuringly good coverage. In short? Lush.

Rimmel Match Perfection – £8.99 for 30ml – 7/10

Buy it online here

They say: “Adapts to your skin colour and texture, with blue sapphire pigments for true colour. Give a natural flawless finish.”

We say: Why do advertisers always think the way to sell to women is to tell us that there are jewels in our cosmetics? If we had a pound for every ‘pearl-infused’ conditioner and ‘diamond technology’ facial we’ve been offered, we’d have enough to buy some actual jewellery. But annoying faux-tech blurb aside, this was a pretty good performer. It was sheer but not too sheer, didn’t look powdery or orange on the skin, and gave lovely natural coverage.

Boots No.7 Essentially Natural Mineral foundation – £13.00 for 40ml – 8/10

Buy it online here

They say: “Lightweight hydration for a healthy-looking finish.”

We say: Cool, nicely textured and lightweight to wear, this actually did what it said on the tin (or tube, whatever). Not the sheerest of coverage, but skin looked flawless and felt moisturised and peachy.

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Beauty, Fashion Tips

The recessionista’s top 10 DIY beauty tips

By laurenbravo on March 11th, 2010
Young woman holding strawberry, close-up, portrait

The economists can talk about green shoots as much as they want – all we know is no matter how much we scrimp and save, we still can’t afford Crème De La Mer eye balm.

So we’ve been rolling up our sleeves, and experimenting with ingredients we can source from our very own kitchens… avocado hair masque? Carrot cleanser? Peanut butter facial? You might smell like a sandwich, but you’ll be glowing with the radiance of a girl who’s saved her pennies.

1) Washing-up Liquid Detox Shampoo

Detox shampoos are one of those products we’ve never quite understood the point of – until we heard this tip. To strip away product build-up, pollution and the various other nasties that stop your hair shining, lather up with some good ol’ washing up liquid once every few weeks. Make sure you follow with a good conditioner though, or your locks could turn slightly brillo pad to match.

2) Dairy-licious Bath Milk.

If you’ve ever fancied yourself as an Egyptian princess, take a leaf out of Cleopatra’s book and add a carton of full cream to your bath water. According to experts, the dairy will calm skin’s lipids while the milk proteins help maintain its elasticity. Asp optional.

3) Strawberry Exfoliant

Cut a strawberry in half and rub the juicy side all over your face, let it sit for a few minutes then rinse with warm water. The fruit acids work as a natural exfoliant, stripping away dead skin cells and giving your complexion a brightening zing. Whether you eat it afterwards is up to you (we won’t tell anyone).

4) Talcum Powder Hair Refresh

Does anybody still use talcum powder? Its popularity may have waned sometime in the mid-90s (when people realised that using a towel then standing still for 30 seconds did more or less the same job), but we bet you still have some knocking around somewhere. It’s a great low-budget dry shampoo for those days when a little extra time in bed is just more appealing than washing your hair. Work it into the roots, leave for a few minutes, then brush out and swish like a pro.

Oats and Honeycomb in Bowls

5) Oat and Honey Face Mask

Goldilocks had some issues. Perhaps if she had given up on trying to eat the porridge and dunked her face in it instead, the bears would have been wowed by her soft skin and not felt the nedd to chase her into the woods. Perhaps. Back in the real world, try mixing up oats, water and a dollop of honey, spread it on your face, leave for 10 minutes then rinse. Not to dry, not too greasy, but juuust right.

6) Lemon Tan Corrector

Here at ShinyStyle, we’re still on a mission to convince you all that pale skin has the fashion edge. But if you must bust out the fake bake, avoid the congealed-gravy look by rubbing half a lemon over your knees and elbows after application. The acid is supposed to break down the tanning chemicals. You can also try whitening toothpaste, astringent toner, or just GOING EASY ON THE FAKE TAN IN THE FIRST PLACE.

7) Camomile Tea Rinse for Blondes

My mum used to use this one on me when I was about six. And once, Sean Deacon told me during PE that my hair looked really shiny. What more persuading do you need? Redheads can try cranberry juice, while beer and vinegar work well on everyone (the question is: pub or chip shop, which would you rather smell of?).
8) Haemorrhoid Cream on Under-Eye Circles

This one has been recommended by beauty editors and make up artists the world over, so it’s worth trying out. The ingredients work to reduce capillaries in the skin, shrinking those telltale morning-after bags. Of course the price you pay is in embarrassment having to ask for it in Boots (we like to pretend it’s for an aunt).

9) Toothbrush Exfoliator

An old toothbrush has a million beauty uses. Use it to brush away dry skin on your lips and face, or to groom your eyebrows into place with some Vaseline.

10) Beetroot Juice Lip Stain

This one reminds me of using red Smarties as a lipstick and nail varnish in primary school. Vampy purple lip stains have been all over the catwalks for the last few seasons, and while we can bet that the models at Dior hadn’t been feasting on beetroots (though it’s always nice to see them eating), nobody will know the difference on you. Unless you top it off with a mustard dressing, that is.

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