If I had a dollar for every time someone stopped me on the street to tell me I look like Zooey Deschanel or Katy Perry, I’d be able to afford many a jar of La Mer.
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The Right Way to Copy a Celeb’s Hairstyle
In The Pursuit of Prettyness
The weather (at least here in New York City) may still be doing its schizophrenic is-it-or-isn’t-it-spring thing, but I’m more than ready to set aside my winter makeup and make way for fresh shades.
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Color of the Moment: Celadon (Plus, a New Take on Green Makeup for St. Patrick’s Day)
Don’t know about you guys, but my spring fever has reached fever pitch. (Groan. I know.) So these flower-bedecked nail-polish strips from Incoco couldn’t have reached my desk at a better time.
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View From the Beauty Closet: A Bouquet of Incoco Nail Wraps
I read today in Fast Company about Commodity, an LA-based online fragrance startup that has the modest goal of “changing the fragrance industry forever.” How do they want to do that? With a Kickstarter campaign that will fund an affordable fragrance line (20 scents with names like Whisky, Paper, Magnolia, and Dew at $50 for a full-size bottle) with no traditional marketing (models, celebs, advertising, fancy packaging)—all the trappings Commodity claims lead to the exorbitant markup of fragrances.
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Fragrance Notes: The Warby Parker of Perfume?