2012年9月10日星期一

Product Review – GiGi Sugar Bare Microwave F

Product Review – GiGi Sugar Bare Microwave Formula

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gigi-sugar-microwave-wax

Product: GiGi Sugar Bare Microwave Formula
Use: As a hair remover for legs, bikini, face and underarms.
Price: $9.99 for a 12oz jar.
Makeup and Beauty Blog Rating: D

In order to save a few bucks in my ongoing war against excess body hair I started doing at-home waxing – legs, bikini area and lip. I’ve gotten pretty good with these areas, although I will admit to being totally inept at waxing my armpits (it might have to do with me being *extremely ticklish*). I also can’t wax my brows because I have an irrational fear of hot wax falling into my eye and melting off my cornea. Yeah, yeah … I know I can just close my eyes but STILL.

I’ve used several different waxes and I always like to try new ones,Coach Outlet Online, so I was really stoked to find Gigi Sugar Bare Microwave Formula on sale at Sally Beauty Supply. Because sugar waxes are sugar-based they wash off easily with water, so they’re great for beginning at-home waxers.

The first thing I noticed about this product was the groovy handle on the side of the jar. It allows you to easily take the jar out of the microwave. It’s such a small thing, but it makes it easier to get that hot jar out of the microwave. The second thing I noticed was the ingredient list,Cheap Jerseys,Coach Outlet Coupon, which contained only one ingredient: Hydrolyzed Corn Starch. Hmmm. So much for the “sugar” part of this wax.

Trust me people – I could wax the shizz out of my shins in a dark room during a major earthquake and still get legs smoother than a baby’s butt. I know what I’m doing. But unfortunately, that knowledge was tested when I tried waxing my lower legs with GiGi Sugar Bare.

I didn’t make it farther than one quarter of my left shin because GiGi Sugar wasn’t baring anything,Cheap NFL Jerseys,MAC To The Beach- A Bit of Blue for a Rainy Spring Day!

Ideally, when you lift off the muslin or cloth strip (rrrrrrrrrrrip,Coach Outlet Online Store!) your legs are left clean without any hairs or residual wax sticking to them. The product removed only 50% of the hair and left huge clumps of wax on my legs. As I sit here typing this, I’m still peeling huge chunks of wax off,Saturday Surfing_19!

I even tried several different methods to try and make this product work. I’d put a thin layer of wax on, lay down a muslin strip, rub in the direction of the hair, waited and then rrrrrripped. Still only half the hairs removed. Then I’d put a thicker layer on, do the same drill … and I’d still get the same result of half-assed hair removal.

I went back to Sally Beauty Supply today to return this wax. They let me return it without any drama (of course I had my receipt.) I will not be buying this wax again.

Pros:
The only thing that really saves this wax from an F is the nice handle that allows you to pull it out of the microwave easily when it’s hot. Plus it’s easy to find – I’ve seen it at almost every beauty supply store in Marin County, including Sally Beauty Supply and Pure Beauty. You get a lot of wax in the jar for the money.

Cons:
No smell – I’m used to Parissa waxes, which have nice scents like lavender and honey. The wax only grabbed half of my leg hair and completely refused to grab onto any of the shorter, coarse hairs. Left huge clumps of residual wax on my legs. If you are waxing at home for the first time you may be extremely frustrated by this product.

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Makeup and Beauty Blog Monday Poll, Nov. 9

Makeup and Beauty Blog Monday Poll, Nov. 9

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sonia-kashuk-holiday-brushes

Sonia Kashuk Holiday 2009 brushes…review coming soon,Cheap Jerseys!

  1. Mood:
  2. Positively spunky! It’s gonna be a good week.

  3. Have you broken any bones?
  4. Nope. I sprained an ankle running sprints in track when I was 13 (swelled up like a grapefruit, gross!), but that’s the closest I’ve come, knock on wood.

  5. Do you have any piercings?
  6. Just my ears. Mum had them pierced at the hospital right after I was born (it’s a Filipino thing).

  7. Breakfast?
  8. Toaster waffles, a Morning Star veggie sausage patty and a big cup of coffee.

  9. Eyes/lips/cheeks:
  10. I’m being packaging efficient today with the LORAC Silver Screen Palette for all three.

  11. Name of your first pet?
  12. Suzy… She was a black and white guinea pig.

  13. Current favorite cream blush?
  14. I’ve been deeply obsessed with NARS the Multiple Duo in Orgasm/South Beach ($45) for months.

  15. Journey — Cool or cheesy (or both)?
  16. Hella cool! Don’t Stop Believing = one of my favorite songs, evah.

  17. Outfit:
  18. I’ve got my jeans set out for the day,Coach Outlet Online store, but I’m still in my blue and green plaid jammy bottoms, oversize navy blue UC Davis T and gray zip-up sweatshirt. Sexy��

  19. Weekly goals:
  20. Maintain a positive outlook no matter what,On the Road Again With the Bobbi Brown Rose Shimmer Brick, a Traveling Semi-Exclusive, snap some pictures of my new neighborhood,Cheap NFL Jerseys,Wholesale NFL Jerseys, reach out to friends I haven’t chatted with in a long time, drag El Hub to my favorite Indian food restaurant (I’m craving a dosa, big time!).

Heya,Coach Factory Outlet Online, ladies! Happy Monday. :D

I’m halfway through my gigantic cup of coffee and feeling WHEEEEE! — overwhelming burst of caffeine-fueled joy!

How’s your morning? Before things get too crazy in your day, let me know how things are going on your end of the keyboard.


Le list

1. Mood:
2. Ever broken any bones?
3. Do you have any piercings?
4. Breakfast?
5. Eyes/lips/cheeks:
6. Name of your first pet?
7. Current favorite cream blush?
8. Journey — Cool or cheesy?
9. Outfit:
10. Weekly goals:

Talk to you soon! :)

Your friendly neighborhood beauty addict,21 Ways to Store Your Makeup,

Karen

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Paul & Joe’s Matte Pressed Powder in Ci

Paul & Joe’s Matte Pressed Powder in Cinnamon Should Come With a Warning Label: “May Seduce CCLs”

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Attention, makeup companies and packaging designers: printing pics of sad, doe-eyed kittens on the cover of cosmetics compacts WORKS.

Hey, it worked for me. :)

I’m finicky about my face powders, and when I find a few I like, I tend stick with ‘em. These days, I’ve been turning to the MAC Studio Careblends and Tarte Pressed Powders, but I physically couldn’t resist trying Paul & Joe��s Matte Pressed Powder in Cinnamon 001.

This near-translucent $42 face powder padded on the scene with dainty little kitten paws. Part of the Paul & Joe Kitten Collection, it’s become one of the more elusive kitties in the release, or so I’m hearing through the grapevine (apparently, I haven’t been the only makeup fiend to fall for this packaging). I adopted mine from beautyhabit.com, but when I checked back later, it was no longer listed there.

The feline fun doesn’t stop with the cute cat on the outside of the compact, either. There’s also a paw print powder puff in the compact and the silhouette of a kitty on the pan.

Tabs feels that he deserves some of the credit for the idea… After all, the model,Cheap Jerseys, as Tabs put it,Pixi Turned Target Into a Magic Kingdom With the New Disney Pixi PixiGlow Collection, has “some junk in da trunk” — an obvious indicator of Tabs’ influence in the world of plus-size kitty models.

paul & joe kitten collection matte pressed powder
Matte Pressed Powder in Cinnamon 001

paul & joe kitten collection matte pressed powder
Matte Pressed Powder in Cinnamon 001

As far as pressed powders go, Cinnamon seems nice. Before I tried it on,cheap coach handbags sale, I thought it might be too light for my tan, but when I apply it with a fluffy face brush, the semitransparent look reminds me of MAC Blot, which I like. When I use the included powder puff,cheap louis vuitton bags, though,Cheap NFL Jerseys, I find the powder very easy to overapply, in which case it starts to look ashy.

I don’t expect to be able to wear this with a deeper tan when summer rolls around; I think it might be too light for that. If your skin tone is much darker than mine (I’m an NC 42 in MAC), you and this kitty may not get along.

Cinnamon doesn’t appear to aggravate the dry patches on my combination skin, and it also controls the shine on my forehead well, so the formula works pretty well for me. I do find that I have to touch up about halfway through the day.

Like most Paul & Joe products, Cinnamon has a scent. My nose likes this one, which reminds me of violet hard candy.

I could stare at this packaging all day long,How to Look Your BEST in Pictures, but with a $42 powder, I expect even more than that. Don’t get me wrong,Cheap Coach Purses, I think Cinnamon performs just fine, but life changing, it’s probably not.

Of course, that all depends on how much you like the packaging… They do say that cats choose their owners. :)

PRICE: $42
AVAILABILITY: Available now at Paul & Joe counters (it can be tricky to find online)
MAKEUP AND BEAUTY BLOG RATING: B

To see more of Paul & Joe’s Kitten Collection and the Collection Sparkles set…
  • Be Catwalk Ready Right Meow With Paul & Joe Spring 2012
  • This Kittycat Sparkles in Purple, Pink and Beige: The Paul & Joe Face & Eye Color Palette in Kittycat
  • Now There��s a Smooth Cat: The Paul & Joe Face & Eye Color Palette in Siamese Please
  • The Paul & Joe Face & Eye Color Palette in Purr-Fect Is Perfect for Soft Green Smokey Eyes
  • It Was Love at First Blush for These Kittens: The New Kitten Collection Blusher Sticks From Paul & Joe
  • I��m Still Fawning Over the Paul & Joe Kitten Collection, Today With a Twist on an Ombr�� Manicure
  • They Left Their Paw Prints on My Heart, But I��m Still Gonna Knead a Little More From Paul & Joe��s New Lipstick Cs
  • Paul & Joe Waterproof Gel Eye Liner: Water Doesn��t Bother This Kitty Cat

Your friendly neighborhood beauty addict,

Karen

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Girls, Follow the Boys to This NARS Lip Gloss Set

Girls, Follow the Boys to This NARS Lip Gloss Set

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karen of makeup and beauty blog wearing nars sweet revenge lipgloss from the follow the boys holiday 2010 set
NARS Sweet Revenge Lipgloss

Best part of my Friday: listening to Salt N’ Pepa’s Push It while watching Tabs lick his tummy. If you’ve ever watched a small dog or cat cross the street while listening to hip-hop in the car, you’ll know why I found it as funny as I did. :)

Ah,Wholesale Jerseys Cheap, push it…

Ah,Cheap NFL Jerseys, push it…

Second best part of my Friday: swatching the limited edition NARS Follow the Boys Lip Gloss Set ($40).


Sweet Revenge


Turkish Delight

Like the recent Crazy Heart holiday set, Follow the Boys comes with a selection of smaller-than-normal NARS glosses from the company’s permanent line,Coach Outlet Online 2012, except in this set there are four instead of five — Turkish Delight (a creamy pale pink), Sweet Revenge (a shimmery peachy pink), Moon Fleet (a glittery gold) and Easy Lover (a sheer hot pink).

If you wear nude lip colors often, this set may be of more interest to you than Crazy Heart because three of its four shades are light neutrals.


Moon Fleet


Easy Lover

nars follow the boys swatches review photos
From top to bottom: Turkish Delight,Coach Purse, Easy Lover,Cheap Jerseys, Sweet Revenge,Makeup and Beauty Blog Monday Poll, September 1, Moon Fleet


From left: Turkish Delight,The Solar-Powered, Super-Duper, Sun-Protecting Tomato, Easy Lover, Moon Fleet, Sweet Revenge

nars follow the boys sweet revenge lip swatch
Sweet Revenge

nars follow the boys moon fleet lip swatch
Moon Fleet

nars crazy heart swatches review photos easy lover
Easy Lover

nars crazy heart swatches review photos turkish delight
Turkish Delight

karen of makeup and beauty blog wearing nars moonfleet lipgloss from the follow the boys holiday 2010 set
Moon Fleet

karen of makeup and beauty blog wearing nars turkish delight lipgloss from the follow the boys holiday 2010 set
Turkish Delight

karen of makeup and beauty blog wearing nars easy lover lipgloss from the follow the boys holiday 2010 set
Easy Lover

My only minor reservation has to do with the faint plasticky fragrance and scent these have — same as the glosses in the Crazy Heart set. Thankfully it fades before the colors do.

What do ya think, and which set do you like more between Crazy Heart and Follow the Boys?

Picture these with some smokey eyes before you answer. :)

PRICE: $40
AVAILABILITY: At Sephora stores and online
MAKEUP AND BEAUTY BLOG RATING: A

Your friendly neighborhood beauty addict,

Karen

P.S. TGIF! What are you doing tonight? I’m trying to figure out if I’m going to go out or stay in. Tabs says hi.

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MAC Unsung Heroes- Paramount Lipstick

MAC Unsung Heroes: Paramount Lipstick

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mac paramount lipstick

As silly as it sounds to get emotional about a lipstick, I got verklempt when I sat down to write about today’s MAC Unsung Hero, Paramount Lipstick ($14.50), because it’s been a such a pivotal color in my makeup life.

My BFF introduced me to it about 15 years ago in college; since then it’s been on my lips or by my side (literally, in a purse or a pants pocket) through some of the most important moments of my life.

In the living room at my parent’s house, I’m wearing it in a graduation picture taken a few seconds after I walked across the stage to get my diploma. The color also holds the distinction of being the very first MAC product I ever purchased (shout-out to the MAC Arden Fair counter in Sacramento!).

When I pulled out Paramount this morning it hit me like a ton of bricks!

Wait — not like that. I mean that I realized I should add it to my list of MAC Unsung Heroes. :)

Plus, hello! — it’s a perfect color for fall,Cheap Jerseys!

mac paramount swatch

mac paramount swatch

mac paramount lipstick

Technically, MAC classifies deep,The Smashbox Masquerade Collection Unleashes a Sultry, Smoldering Makeup Fantasy for Fall 2010, dark reddish brown Paramount as having a Satin finish, but I think it looks more like a matte on me.

Dark brown matte lips hogged the spotlight in the mid-’90s (gloss was all but MIA), and it wasn’t unusual for gals to wear Paramount year round (I did). These days, though,Coach Handbags Wholesale, it’s more of a fall shade for me. I think it looks right at home with the darker plums and reds that I like to wear when the leaves change.

One of the things that has always made Paramount stand out to me is its touch of red. Some brown lipsticks look very flat on my lips,Cheap NFL Jerseys,How to Look Your BEST in Pictures, but Paramount’s reddish undertones give it depth and make it a little more interesting to me.

I’ve worn the color so many times that I could probably apply it from the tube while hanging upside down with my eyes closed, but if you aren’t accustomed to wearing darker lipsticks, you might want to grab a lip brush and/or a lip pencil (one option: the reddish brown MAC Lip Pencil in Mahogany,Coach Outlet, $14.50) to help corral the pigment into place.

Paramount lasts all day long on my lips (even through multiple meals, although I have noticed that when I wear it day in, day out, the formula can be drying. My lips crave a lot of moisture,Coach Outlet Store, so I usually prep them with a balm. Whenever I plan to wear Paramount, before I start putting on my makeup, I’ll apply a bit of Clinque Superbalm in Grapefruit first. Once that sinks in, I’ll do the rest of my face, and then when I get to my lips, I usually kiss the back of my hand to blot away the balm before applying a layer or two of Paramount.

If you’re looking for a few fabulous fall lipsticks, consider Paramount next time you visit MAC. :)

Your friendly neighborhood beauty addict,

Karen

P.S. Does your phone have a camera? If it does, you could enter the 2011 Breast Cancer Awareness Month Sign Project and Giveaway right now! (Hint, hint.)

The MAC Unsung Heroes series features some of my favorite products from MAC’s permanent collection
  • MAC Unsung Heroes: Paramount Lipstick
  • MAC Unsung Heroes: Mocha Blush
  • MAC Unsung Heroes: Oh Baby Lipglass
  • MAC Unsung Heroes: MAC Mulch Eyeshadow
  • MAC Unsung Heroes: The Cremestick Liners
  • MAC Unsung Heroes: Sable Eyeshadow
  • MAC Unsung Heroes: Soft Ochre Paint Pot
  • MAC Unsung Heroes: Ricepaper Eyeshadow
  • MAC Unsung Heroes: This Cremesheen Glass Is a Veritable Deelight
  • MAC Unsung Heroes: Lipglass in Spite
  • MAC Unsung Heroes: Impassioned Lipstick (and Watermelon)
  • MAC Unsung Heroes: This Lip Pencil Is In Synch
  • MAC Unsung Heroes: Soba Eyeshadow
  • MAC Unsung Heroes: Bombshell Lipstick
  • MAC Unsung Heroes: Sunbasque Sheertone Shimmer Blush
  • MAC Unsung Heroes: Clear Lipglass
  • MAC Unsung Heroes: Humid Eyeshadow
  • MAC Unsung Heroes: Naked Lunch Eyeshadow
  • MAC Unsung Heroes: Russian Red Lipglass
  • MAC Unsung Heroes: Syrup Lipstick
  • MAC Unsung Heroes: MAC Blushbaby Blush
  • MAC Unsung Heroes: Melon Pigment
  • MAC Unsung Heroes: Sumptuous Olive Eyeshadow
  • MAC Unsung Heroes: MAC Vex Eyeshadow
  • MAC Unsung Heroes: Costa Chic Lipstick
  • MAC Unsung Heroes: Fast Response Eye Cream
  • MAC Unsung Heroes: Strobe Cream
  • MAC Unsung Heroes: Blot Powder/Pressed
  • MAC Unsung Heroes: Subculture Lip Pencil
  • MAC Unsung Heroes: Soft Brown Eyeshadow
  • MAC Unsung Hero: Woodwinked Eyeshadow
  • MAC Unsung Hero: Powersurge Eye Kohl
  • MAC Unsung Heroes: All That Glitters Eyeshadow Is Not Just Another Gold
  • MAC Unsung Heroes: The Technakohl Liners
  • MAC Unsung Hero: Groundwork Paint Pot
  • MAC Unsung Hero: Nymphette Lipglass
  • MAC Unsung Heroes: Viva Glam V
  • MAC Unsung Hero: Blacktrack Fluidline
  • MAC Unsung Heroes: Lychee Luxe Lipglass
  • MAC Unsung Hero: Gorgeous Gold Eyeshadow
  • MAC Unsung Hero: Patina Eyeshadow

P.P.S. I’m serious. You could put together a cool sign and send off a pic to enter The 2011 Breast Cancer Awareness Month Sign Project and Giveaway in, like, seconds.

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Benefit’s Bathina Body Balm Gets a Makeover

Benefit’s Bathina Body Balm Gets a Makeover for Spring

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Benefit’s moisturizing Bathina body balm (lucky girl that she is) just got a spring makeover.

Hey, now, don’t stare! Just “Take a Picture… It Lasts Longer…” — that’s actually the product’s name. And for $28 she flaunts updated packaging and a shimmery new color (a light golden pink).

I think it’s part of a beauty conspiracy… Have you heard the news? Benefit recently marked down the original Bathina (Body So Fine) from $30 to $22.50, an obvious ploy to prep us for the arrival of Bathina 2.0.

Speaking of the prequel,Cheap NFL Jerseys, Body So Fine and I go waaay back. We have history,The Sula Beauty Eye Crayon in Never Say Never May Prefer Drier Lids Than Mine,Coach Factory Online,Two Ways to Win a $50 eGift Card from Sephora!_11111, yo! My bestie, Jen, gifted me a tin for my 26th birthday, and I’ve been a fan ever since — the light floral fragrance and super softening balm adds a touch of sexy pink shimmer to legs and arms (great for date nights with the boy).

Luckily, the updated version’s just as fab as before (if not better). Benefit kept the same formula and fragrance but tweaked the shimmer. Instead of a silvery pink, the new Bathina gives skin a golden pink glow,Cheap Jerseys,Cheap Coach Outlet Store Online, one I wager more girls will be able to wear well.

They even cut down on the bulk by compactifying (a real word, honest) the packaging, making it better for overnight trips. Big thumbs up to Benefit for doing so because the big old tin was a pain in my you-know-what. :)

And how ’bout the cute girl on the tin? If ya happen to know where I can buy her butt,Coach Outlet Canada, lemme know, LOL!

Bathina “Take a Picture…It Lasts Longer…” touches down early next month at Benefit.com and should debut on counters a couple weeks later.

Your friendly neighborhood beauty addict,

Karen

P.S. Today felt like the Longest. Day. Ever! Is it Friday yet, LOL!? All I want to do now is curl up in front of the TV with a brownie, some ice cream and my Sex and the City DVDs. Can’t wait for this weekend ’cause I’m feeling kinda beat.

How’s it going out your way? I hope you had a good day. :)

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Makeup and Beauty Blog Monday Poll, Jan. 3

Makeup and Beauty Blog Monday Poll, Jan. 3

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  • You might be wondering, “So what the heck is this Monday Poll thing anyway?”
    Well, it isn’t much of a poll. It’s more just a constantly evolving (devolving?), somewhat random list of questions I’ve been putting out to readers every Monday morning for the past three years, which I guess makes this somewhere around Vol. 151. I’ve always enjoyed reading your answers in the comments, and I hope you enjoy reading mine.
  1. Mood:
  2. A little sleepy (today was the first time I’ve had to wake up before 8 in ages) but excited about the day ahead. I’m feeling extra organized and positive!

  3. One thing you’d like to learn in “the 2011″?
  4. While watching The Fighter, a movie about boxing, last weekend,Cheap NFL Jerseys,The Bronze Goddess Is Back- Estee Lauder Summer 2010, it hit me (haha) that knowing how to throw a punch would probably be a good life skill to have. I don’t plan on joining a fight club or getting into a bar brawl or anything; I just want to have enough muscle memory to clock someone should I ever need to throw down.

  5. One thing you love about yourself?
  6. My weird sense of humor. Sometimes I can be reserved when I first meet people, so when it comes out of the woodwork I think it catches them off guard.

  7. What’s your current beauty obsession?
  8. Bangs — it’s amazing how just a few snips can change your look. I haven’t been this enamored with them since my hair bear days in the late ’80s/early ’90s.

  9. Your favorite eyeshadow brush and why?
  10. I’m majorly infatuated with the MAC 239 at the moment. The dense brush head applies just the right amount of color, and the size is big enough to cover a decent amount of area, yet small enough to do detail work.

  11. What’s your eyebrow maintenance routine?
  12. I pluck below and between the brows with a Tweezerman to give them an arched shape, trim the tops with scissors and then fill in sparse areas with Benefit Instant Brow.

  13. Have you ever actually stuck to a New Year’s resolution?
  14. Yes,authentic coach handbags outlet online! During my junior year in college I wanted to get more physically fit, so I set a goal to run the San Francisco Bay to Breakers (a 7.46 mile race that winds through the city) in May. I started running short distances around my house, gradually increasing them over time. When May rolled around I ran the race just fine — well, the flat parts at least. The hills just about killed me.

  15. What’s surprised you most about your life so far?
  16. That I can make all the plans I want, but part of the equation seems to always involve a crapshoot — being at the right place at the right time, knowing somebody who happens to know somebody else, that kind of thing. Sometimes it works in my favor, and sometimes it doesn’t.

  17. What’s for lunch today?
  18. It’s really cold out, so a bowl of hot,Coach Factory Outlet Online, comforting corn chowder sounds good right now.

  19. Weekly goals:
  20. Cross off everything on my daily to-do list, cook a couple of healthy dinners and find some new running music.

Another year, another Monday poll, babe. You’re probably back at the grind,Cheap Jerseys,louis vuitton outlet store, getting ready to tackle your regularly scheduled programming (LOL,MAC Make-Up Art Cosmetics Face of the Day with the Notoriety Quad!), but if you’ve got a second, will you please pop in? I’d love to hear from you so we can start the new year together. :)

  • To complete the Monday Poll, just copy the following list, and paste it with your answers in the comments.



1. Mood:
2. One thing you’d like to learn in “the 2011″?
3. One thing you love about yourself?
4. What’s your current beauty obsession?
5. Your favorite eyeshadow brush and why?
6. What’s your eyebrow maintenance routine?
7. Have you ever actually stuck to a New Year’s resolution?
8. What’s surprised you most about your life so far?
9. What’s for lunch today?
10. Weekly goals:

Let’s set the tone for 2011 by having a fabulous week, ‘kay? I’m sending lots of positive energy your way…

Your friendly neighborhood beauty addict,

Karen

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Japanese Fashion – Past, Present, Future-

Japanese Fashion – Past, Present, Future?

by Sarah Scaturro


Issey Miyake’s new 132 5 collection as displayed in the Barbican Art Gallery’s exhibition “Future Beauty: 30 Years of Japanese Fashion.” Photo by Barbican Art Gallery.

We all know that fashion is an expression of the zeitgeist – a style or trend can explode out of seemingly nowhere, with disparate tribes and geographies adopting it simultaneously. Fashion exhibitions are no different. The past few years have seen many exhibitions mounted on similar topics (colors, sustainability, glamour, etc). Currently there are two very different exhibitions on display about Japanese fashion. The first is “Japan Fashion Now” at the Museum at the Fashion Institute of Technology (MFIT) in New York City, and the second is “Future Beauty: 30 Years of Japanese Fashion” at the Barbican Art Gallery in London.

There are some obvious similarities between these exhibitions – both are curated by top curators in the field (Valerie Steele at MFIT and the Kyoto Costume Institute’s Akiko Fukai at the Barbican). Both focus on Japanese fashion designers and celebrate their contributions to the Western fashion system. Both show looks dating back to 30 years ago and pay attention to contemporary Japanese sub-cultures. But that’s it. Their interpretations, exhibition design and overall approaches are radically different.

I first visited the MFIT exhibition “Japan Fashion Now” when it opened – having seen almost all MFIT exhibitions over the past 6 years, I figured I knew what to expect. I was happily surprised to see that the first gallery of the show had been enlarged and was dedicated exclusively to early works by the groundbreaking designers who were the first to put Japanese fashion on the map: Rei Kawakubo, Issey Miyake, Hanae Mori, and Yohji Yamamoto were among this group. This immediately made a lot of sense,Cheap NFL Jerseys, since the thesis of the show was about what is happening now in Japan, rather than in the 1980/90s. I asked a close friend of mine what she thought about this first room after visiting it on her own. “They look like dead, headless corpses in a cemetery” she replied, citing the dark room, low ceilings and headless white mannequins wearing somber colored garments as the main issue. Now, she isn’t familiar with the challenges of the introductory gallery space and fashion exhibition display in general (low ceilings, low light levels, stiff mannequins, etc.), but she did have a point, especially when contrasted to the main exhibition space with its J-Pop music, vibrant colors, and soaring walls vinyled in a Tokyo-like cityscape. She also could have been reacting to the severity and deconstructed qualities of the garments on display in the first gallery – I could only imagine how shocking they must have seemed at the time when they were first shown decades ago. I personally thought the first gallery was a meditative moment, and was a nice contrast to the main exhibition space.


The first gallery in the “Japan Fashion Now” exhibition at MFIT. Photo by MFIT.

Entering into the main exhibition gallery, I was dynamically swept into a miniature city landscape. MFIT really used the gallery’s too-high ceiling to their advantage, creating a sort of mini-Harujuku by stitching together photos of Tokyo buildings and enlarging them to cover all the gallery walls. This mise-en-scène held more recent looks from designers also shown in the first gallery, but focused mainly on the contemporary generation of Japanese fashion designers. The platform featuring menswear designers was especially insightful, as it succinctly displayed a lot of what Japanese fashion is known for: technology, heritage, authenticity, gender-bending, punk, deconstruction, playfulness, elegance, etc. I really wanted to like the section on subcultures and street fashion, but it just didn’t resonate with me. The scary teenage girl mannequins were one problem, but the main reason was that part of the success of the subculture movement is that it is about a fantastical (and powerful) sense of individualism and performance. Without seeing the actual girl wearing the clothes, with her movements, voice,Christian Louboutin Uk, hair, shoes, etc, I just didn’t buy it – they looked more like costumes for Halloween than street-fashion. Although, maybe that was the point. It was nice to see MFIT touch upon the tribal, or “zoku,” subcultures (I remember being infatuated with the style of the Bosozoku [motorcycle gangs] when I lived in Japan a decade ago) as well as the never-ending search for “authenticity,” particularly concerning Japanese denim.


View of the first floor gallery from the second floor of the “Future Beauty” exhibition.
Photo by Sarah Scaturro

The joyful cacophony of color, styles and sound at the MFIT exhibition contrasts sharply with the white, almost Zen-like design of the Barbican show. “Future Beauty” is broken up into two floors, with the second floor essentially a square with an open center, looking down onto the first floor gallery. Just like MFIT exploited the high ceilings of their main gallery, the Barbican used the high ceilings of the first floor to hang sheer white silk-like panels of fabric. As a design element,Cheap Jerseys, these fabric panels served several purposes – they made a pathway through the exhibition, they delineated themes, and they created small, intimate moments in which to view the garments, sometimes only a single look. The show itself was broken into several themes, with the first floor exploring “In Praise of Shadows,” “Flatness,” “Tradition and Innovation,” and “Cool Japan.” My favorite section on the first floor was “Flatness,” which displayed Miyake’s A Piece of Cloth and Pleats concepts in a dynamic and inventive way, and also included a separate display of Kawakubo’s garments shown on mannequins coupled with Naoya Hatakeyama’s photos of the same garments flattened out. As Fukai in the Gallery Guide points out, “the interstices between fabric and figure…represent an expression of ‘ma’ – the Japanese concept which views the void between objects as a rich,discount louis vuitton handbags, energized space.” The “Cool Japan” section was the only nod to street fashion and sub-cultural styles in the exhibition. Interestingly, whereas MFIT showed actual street fashion garments, the Barbican displayed only high fashion garments inspired by street fashion, anime and “zoku” style (designers included Ohya, Zucca, Jun Takahashi and Tao Kurihara). Fukai mentions that these designers were “eschew[ing] the visual overload common to Tokyo street fashion in favor of a simpler, more iconic use of manga characters.” I think this comment can be extended to describe the two exhibition design approaches in general – one is about visual overload, while the other is about restraint.

The second floor featured small vignettes of the work by the most well-known (and presumably most important) Japanese designers, including Miyake, Yamamoto, Takahashi, Kurihara, Watanabe, and Kawakubo. It also included a section on Mintdesigns, a duo who use print and graphics in an almost “fetishistic” manner, as well as another section on “The Next Generation,” which included work by Chitose Abe, Tamae Hirokawa and Akira Naka. Honestly,Korres Face Primer- All Hail the $10 Tube!, after seeing all other sections before, I was underwhelmed by the choices included in “The Next Generation” – they seemed a lot like rehashings of ideas already expressed by earlier generations of Japanese designers. The section on Kawakubo was especially touching, as it showed several looks from her revered 1997 Spring/Summer collection Body Meets Dress, Dress Meets Body, as well as a video showing the actual runway show. I had never actually seen the runway show, so I had no idea that the audience was rapturously clapping as each model appeared and walked down the runway.

The titles to the two exhibitions give the most overt clue to their fundamental difference – the MFIT show focuses on celebrating the here and now of Japanese style,Makeup and Beauty Blog Monday Poll, September 1, whereas the Barbican show leaves a distinct feeling that the glory years of Japanese fashion are mostly in the past (even though its title ironically includes the phrase “Future Beauty.”) I left the MFIT show with a sense that Japanese fashion was fun, quirky, youth-oriented and democratic, whereas the Barbican show seemed to elevate all of Japanese fashion into the cerebral realm of art (I think the fact that the MFIT exhibit was free whereas the Barbican show cost around $18 also contributed to that mindset.)

A large part of the disconnect between the two exhibitions has to do with the fact that the Barbican exhibit was curated by a Japanese fashion insider, whereas the MFIT show was organized by an outsider looking in at contemporary Japanese culture. This inside/outside dichotomy can’t be overstressed, as it plays into every aspect of interaction Japan has with outside cultures – even fashion. (As someone who has lived in Japan, I am very aware of having always been considered a “gaijin,” which means “alien.”) Fukai even presented a run of fashion show invitations from Miyake that she had actually received, further emphasizing her own inclusion, and by extension authority, in the realm of Japanese fashion. Precise and tightly-edited, “Future Beauty” is the exact vision and message of Japanese fashion that Fukai wants the rest of the world to know – no more and no less. Steele, perhaps cognizant of her American audience (as well as the FIT student body), has presented her own interpretation of Japanese fashion that is in many ways more in-line with American values and tastes through its emphasis on youth, democracy and individuality. Ideally, a visit to the MFIT exhibition would be coupled with a visit to the Barbican exhibition. The two exhibitions, with their disparate foci and approaches actually complement each other, bringing a fuller understanding of just how revolutionary and influential Japanese fashion was, and still is, both inside and outside of Japan.

Japan Fashion Now is on display until April 2, 2011.

Future Beauty: 30 Years of Japanese Fashion is on display until February 6,coach factory outlet store online, 2011.

Sarah Scaturro

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