Lifestyle Choices

Make-up Polish, Colour Cosmetics, Fragrance and Perfumed Outlook (step3-7)

August 23, 2008 By: arlene Category: Beauty, Cosmetic, Fashion, Lips Care, Skin Care 6 Comments →

Step 3: Powder

A complete dusting of translucent powder (avoid the eyes) is now necessary to `set’ the foundation so that it will last all day. Never apply powder blusher directly on to a cream foundation because it will not blend in softly; your skin will ‘grab’ it and look blotchy and harsh.

  • Choose a translucent powder that is ‘colourless’ or neutral in shade, so that it blends with your skintone.
  • Apply powder all over the face with a large, fluffy brush, dusting across the forehead and down over the cheeks, nose and across the mouth, chin and jawline.

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The Permanent Cosmetic Hair Dye (Oxidation Colorants, Highlight)

July 20, 2008 By: arlene Category: Beauty, Body Care, Cosmetic, Facial, Hair Care, Jewelry, Lips Care, Nail Care, Skin, Skin Care, Women No Comments →

The Aniline or Oxidation Hair Colorants

The most permanent (and the most successful), these dyes are included in a number of products for colouring hair such as tinting shampoos, highlighting shampoos, and the single-step and double-step permanent colourants you can buy in packages at the chemist. They are permanent dyes, because the artificial pigment is made to penetrate into the cortex of the hair shaft. There it stays. How this happens is most interesting. (more…)

The Permanent Cosmetic Hair Dye (Vegetable Dyes, Metallic Dyes)

July 20, 2008 By: arlene Category: Asia, Beauty, Cosmetic, Hair Care, Jewelry, Massage, Nail Care, Skin Care, UK No Comments →

There are three kinds of permanent hair colourants: vegetable dyes such as henna, metallic dyes such as those used to gradually cover grey hair, and the aniline dyes or oxidation tints, which include most of the colourants used professionally in salons.

The Vegetable Dyes

Henna is the best-known, since its use dates back thousands of years. Taken from the Lawsonia plant, which is indigenous to Africa and Asia, henna varies in colour depending on which country it comes from. It can be strong orange in colour, as Moroccan henna, or a deep red, as the henna that comes from Iran — the most sought-after in the world. The plant is harvested, dried in the sun, and then crushed into a greenish powder, which is what one puts on the hair. It coats the hair shaft’s cuticle a reddish colour. (more…)

How to be a famous Decorator: TRUST YOUR OWN TASTE part 1

June 22, 2008 By: arlene Category: Art, Beauty, Body Care, Celebrity, Cookery, Cosmetic, Europe, Eye Care, Fashion, Jewelry, Knitting, Nail Care, Parenting, SPA, Skin Care, USA, Women 4 Comments →

Although money can’t buy it, anyone intelligent can learn to have good taste. You can spend like a drunken film star, but you risk an expensive clutter that hasn’t quite come off. If you pay someone else to design your home you risk something pretty expensive, lifeless and unlived in, or alternatively, an exuberantly camped-up setting with mouldings picked out in white and in which you feel uneasy.

So the first rule is Do it yourself. Because otherwise you’ll never learn.

Discovering your own good taste is an unpeeling process, eliminating the layers which other people have impressed upon you. One of the easiest ways to find out what you like is to get a pinboard and start sticking up anything which takes your fancy — a scrap of lace, photographs, postcards, a colour swatch, a cartoon. (more…)

Facial Treatment

February 04, 2008 By: arlene Category: Children, Cosmetic, Hair Care, Lips Care, Massage, Skin Care 4 Comments →

Broken veins

Broken veins are just visible skin blood vessels which are not really broken but just standing out more obviously because they are permanently dilated. They are usually the result of years spent out of doors and are typically seen on the face of farmers and sailors or those with pale skin who live in unsuitable sunny climates. Sometimes the incautious use of powerful steroid creams will cause these blood vessels to appear or make them much worse, or they can accompany skin diseases such as rosacea. When there are just a few they can be destroyed using an electric needle, but when they are so numerous that the whole cheek is redder than normal, it is not so easy. You may find that green foundation creams are useful as a background because the combination of green and red softens the colour and makes the usual foundation cream and powder more efficient. (more…)