L'Occitane Ice Hand Cream This is not the usual hand cream.Not creamy, greasy or even moisturising.No, non...
Not for the prudes please Like a littlered hotsexymini dressmaybe? And thatspretty tame going by what you ...
3.1 Phillip Lim The elaborate blond wood Moorish arches at the mouth of the runway were an obvio...
Good Shot Who: Zani Gugelmann What: Santo, her new collection of 18-karat-white-gold, bull...
Are you addicted to your Ive read about lip balm addiction sometime back but forgot about it until now wh...
Can you use body lotion o Why would anyone want to use their hand lotion or body moisturizer on their face...
Buying mineral makeup in A few people have emailed me asking where they can obtain mineral makeup in Sing...
A woman who flies from Dallas to Manhattan solely to attend a makeup artist’s department store appearance either is crazy or believes he has something unique to teach her. But for Napoleon Perdis, the cosmetics expert artist in question, such a pilgrimage isn’t surprising. While not opposed to a little nip-tuck, Perdis regularly shows clients ways that powders and creams can fake the effects of surgery—without the expense, recovery time, or chance of a permanently lopsided mouth or wonky eye. A native of Sydney, Australia, Perdis, whose 450-item namesake line is sold at Sephora, at Saks, and on Home Shopping Network, derived his technique from the tricks used to take years off movie stars’ complexions in the ’40s and ’50s. “But old-Hollywood makeup was spackled on, not what today’s women want to wear,” he says. “I modified those application methods and created lightweight product formulations. Now the results look natural, not heavy and contoured.”