Categories
Beauty

Does Foundation Stop Your Skin From ‘Breathing?’

No matter where you get your beauty info from—whether it’s magazines, social media or good ol’ word of mouth—it’s safe to say that the abundance of sources and information available at any given time has made things, well, pretty confusing. With so much info at our fingertips, it can be tricky to differentiate between what’s factual and what isn’t. That’s where we come in. We’ve tapped the top pros in every area of the beauty industry, from hair care to skincare to makeup and more, to bust some common myths and shed light on what you *actually* need to know.

Of all of the makeup categories, foundation is the one that’s arguably had the biggest glow-up in recent years. Its most notable upgrade has been the long-overdue expansion in shade ranges offered by (most) brands, which has been referred to as the Fenty Effect, following the popularity of Rihanna’s Fenty Beauty debut in 2017. The line launched with an impressive 40 shades of foundation with a range of undertones, catering to a wide and diverse audience. Of course, some brands, like M.A.C and Cover FX, had long offered impressive shade ranges but, as we now know, Fenty Beauty signalled a widespread movement that woke up other brands to the necessity of providing consumers with diverse, inclusive shade options.

But it’s not just foundation shades that have expanded. Different textures and finishes are more accessible to consumers than ever before. Whether you’re shopping for a full-coverage matte foundation or a dewy, sheer pick that just gives you a hint of coverage, if you prefer liquid formulas, powders or on-the-go sticks, it’s never been easier to find your perfect match.

Read this next: 25 Makeup Brands With Inclusive Foundation Shade Ranges for Dark Skin

And yet, even with all of the advances the category has made, some decades-old foundation myths still persist, including questions like whether it’s bad for your skin. So we tapped two makeup artists to dispel some rumours and set the record straight on what foundation can and cannot do.

True or false: Foundation doesn’t let your skin “breathe” and causes breakouts

Mostly false. “Your skin ‘breathes’ or gets its oxygen through the blood that nourishes your skin,” explains e.l.f. Cosmetics makeup artist, Anna Bynum. “Putting foundation on does not block oxygen from flowing to your skin, but oil, dirt and debris that has built up on the skin during the day, along with makeup, can get trapped in the pores if not washed off thoroughly, and this can cause breakouts.” Bottom line: As long as you’re properly washing off your makeup at the end of the day, you’re good to go!

True or false: Foundation and concealer should be the exact same shade

“That’s a tricky question,” says celebrity makeup artist Hung Vanngo, who works with A-listers like Selena Gomez and Jennifer Lopez. “When using concealer to cover up a pimple, use the same shade as your foundation. But when using concealer under the eyes or on the bridge of the nose, use a lighter shade.” So it really depends on what you’re going for—if it’s brightening you’re after, opt for a shade that’s a touch lighter than your foundation, but if covering blemishes is your goal, choosing a shade that’s identical to your foundation is your best bet for seamless camouflaging.

True or false: Foundation should only be applied with a blending sponge

False. While blending sponges are wildly popular (and, yes, great for blending), they’re certainly not the only option. “You can use a sponge, your fingers or a brush,” says Vanngo. “It really depends on the look and how much coverage you want.” Vanngo’s rule of thumb is to opt for blending sponges when you want a full coverage finish, a brush for a medium finish and your fingers for a sheer finish. “It’s really about personal preference, though,” says Vanngo. “When used wet, a blending sponge can help minimize the amount of foundation used, since it won’t soak up a lot of product and can help you get a full coverage finish without worrying about streaks from a brush,” suggests Bynum.

Read this next: How to Level Up Your Eye Makeup While Wearing a Mask

True or false: Foundation is too drying to be used around the eye area

False. “If your skin is prepped and primed properly, your foundation should not be too drying around the eyes, even if it is a matte finish,” says Bynum. If your foundation is leaving your skin dry and dull anywhere, even though you’ve primed and prepped (read: thoroughly moisturized and applied a coat of face primer, if that’s your thing) then it’s time for a new foundation.

“When I do a red carpet look for a celebrity, [I make sure I] have time to exfoliate, do a face mask, an eye mask, do everything for the skin so it’s fully prepped, really cared for and really hydrated before I start,” says Vanngo.

True or false: The more full coverage your foundation is, the better your skin will look

False. “It’s all in the blending,” says Vanngo. “You can use as much or as little foundation [as you want] but if you don’t blend well, it won’t look good.”

“Full coverage foundation, if not applied properly, can in fact make your skin look worse,” says Bynum. “The key to great-looking skin is an even complexion with a natural, healthy glow.” One of our all-time favourite tips for making foundation look amazing, no matter how sheer or full coverage it may be, is adding a few drops of liquid highlighter or illuminating moisturizer, for a guaranteed glowy finish.

Read this next: PSA: You’re Probably Overusing These Skincare Ingredients

Shop some of our favourite ways to make your foundation look flawless below.

Quo Beauty Stick It To Me Foundation, $18, shoppersdrugmart.ca

Quo foundation

This versatile foundation stick, which is part of Quo Beauty’s recent revamp, is formulated with 30% pure pigments and hydrating ingredients to provide coverage and comfort.

Rare Beauty by Selena Gomez Liquid Touch Weightless Foundation, $38, sephora.ca

rare beauty concealer

Available in 48 shades as part of the first Rare Beauty by Selena Gomez launch, this foundation is made up of pure pigments that are formulated in a serum-like base, making it easy to blend and customize to create your ideal finish.

e.l.f Cosmetics Hydrating Under-Eye Primer, $4, walmart.ca

e.l.f. foundation

Infused with vitamins C and E, green tea and aloe, this nourishing under-eye primer is a cult fave for a reason. Its silky texture allows your concealer and foundation to glide on top ever-so-smoothly.

Antonym Cosmetics Organic Baked Foundation, $55, shopkalosophie.com

antonym cosmetics

If baked foundations are your jam, you’ll love this pick by Antonym Cosmetics, which is perfect for achieving sheer to medium coverage. It also takes the work out of setting your makeup, since the creme-to-powder texture settles beautifully onto skin and gives you long-lasting coverage. The best part? It’s housed in sustainable packaging.

Live Tinted Hueglow, $46, livetinted.com

live tinted

Available in bronze or rose-gold, this serum-highlighter-moisturizer combo beautifully blends into any foundation, leaving skin looking radiant. Use it with or without foundation for an instant glow.

Catrice HD Liquid Foundation, $14, shoppersdrugmart.ca

catrice cosmetics

This full-coverage, matte foundation is perfect for creating a flawless finish. Thanks to its genius dropper applicator, you can customize how much coverage you want and build it up as you see fit.

Categories
Fitness

If You’re Ready to Upgrade Your Home Gym, Shop These 14 Treadmills

Of all the work we’ve done on our homes this year, we’ve undoubtedly given the most attention to our home gym situation. In the beginning of the year, our at-home workout equipment was nonexistent, and now we’ve collected a stash of weights, resistance bands, and other props. If you’re looking to amplify your workout-from-home situation, and are interested in investing in a machine, we’d go with a treadmill.

These 14 options are great for all types of exercisers. Whether you love to do quick sprints or prefer to log miles, there’s something for everyone. Whether you’ve got a ton of space (we’re jealous) or are looking for a machine that folds us and is easier to store, we’ve got you covered. Keep on reading to shop our picks!

Categories
Life & Love

The Couple Making Themed Budget Hotels a Dreamy Instagram Aesthetic

The Best Western in Galena, IL looks unremarkable from the outside — just another hotel chain off the highway. Inside, it’s a different story. There’s a stone-walled cave room, a shell-shaped bed in the aquarium room, and a classic honeymoon suite filled with mirrors. “What a nice surprise,” Margaret Bienert says to the camera, soaking in a foamy bath and drinking wine from a plastic cup with her husband, Corey.

As a travel video series, Margaret and Corey’s A Pretty Cool Hotel Tour is charming and goofy. The California-based duo, now in their 30s, have been together for over 11 years and naturally play off each other’s energy. In Miami at Executive Fantasy Hotels, for example, they do improv comedy with sex furniture, trying to figure out how it’s supposed to work. At Toledo’s Designer Inn & Suites, Bienert checks the bed for hairs and finds a leftover candy. On their popular Instagram account, which has nearly 90,000 followers, the mood isn’t quite so kooky. The still images of their themed room adventures have a more dreamy and ethereal vibe, transporting you to a time and space that feels divorced from time and space.

a pretty cool hotel tour margaret bienert

Bienert poses in the Space Odyssey Suite at the Sunset Inn & Suites in Clinton, IL.

Courtesy of Margaret Bienert

Hotels are, philosophically, otherworldly. Even the most generic motel is a liminal space, hanging somewhere between regular life and fantasy, but themed rooms take it a step further. They create fantasy within reality. Putting that fantasy on social media both exposes the illusion while creating another. It’s a deviation from the bland millennial aesthetic that floods other travel influencers’ feeds. You know the look — white walls, exposed brick, mid-century modern tables. That style is specific to nowhere, found all over the world. Themed hotel rooms, on the other hand, are specific to only themselves. “These designs shake you into processing what you’re looking at,” Bienert told ELLE.com.

“You can’t walk in and just think, ‘Oh, that’s pretty.’ A true themed hotel room should be three dimensional. What can I touch? What can I sit in? I want there to be a shape,” she said. At the Anniversary Inn in Salt Lake City, the duo plays foosball in the Player’s Clubhouse and relaxes in the Venice suite’s gondola bed. The kitsch becomes part of the adventure and builds a narrative.

In her essay about the architecture of honeymoon resorts, Barbara Penner writes that sensory engagement is part of the desired effect. The rooms are supposed to appeal to the body. It’s an invitation “to feel, to stroke, to recline onto, to sink into, to grasp, to indulge, to consume.” After all, this is about romance and sex. Historically, themed rooms can be traced back to bridal chambers on Mississippi River steamboats starting around 1840. Frilly and regal, they were designed to make women more comfortable with losing their virginity.

margaret bienert heart shaped tub

Bienert lounging in a heart-shaped tub, a feature of the Honeymoon Suite at the New Relax Inn in Bridgeview, IL.

Courtesy of Margaret Bienert

Around the 1950s, the aesthetic of honeymoon hotels shifted to capture the glitz and glamour of Hollywood. There are raised platforms that look like a stage, props, lighting, and mirrors. In these rooms, you’re the star of the show — a notion that, when Bienert started the project, was a stark departure from her upbringing in purity culture, a strict form of abstinence practiced by young Evangelical Christians that requires no physical, emotional, or spiritual intimacy with others until marriage.

“I grew up super religious, and sex was something that I didn’t talk about or think about. The first time I visited a themed hotel, it transformed my view of sex and how I could participate in it,” she says. “Seeing myself in all the reflected surfaces made me feel like I was the lead in a 90s romantic comedy. It felt like it was for me. When you’re not sure how to be sexy, or not sure if you’re allowed to be, the room creates an environment where it’s inescapable.”

While many sexually-driven spaces are geared towards men (like adult theaters or brothels), themed hotels might be the only mainstream venue explicitly designed for women to explore their eroticism. Bienert says, “It’s not like, bam, an elaborate sex swing and mirror above the bed. The rooms draw you in, they romance you. It’s more about the pleasing lighting, the light pink curtains, and having a glass of wine in the hot tub. Then you notice the mirror and the sex swing in the closet when you’re ready for it.”

“The rooms draw you in, they romance you.”

Renowned couples therapist Esther Perel writes that because women are often socialized to be caretakers, they might find it difficult to focus on themselves in sexual situations. Among cis women in heterosexual relationships, women are more likely to identify as objects for the purpose of male satisfaction than the subject of their own fantasies. Perel urges women to give themselves permission “to feel [their] own narcissism” as an entrypoint for sexual freedom.

margaret bienert pretty cool hotel tour

Corey and Margaret toast in the Aphrodite’s Court suite of The Anniversary Inn in Logan, UT.

Courtesy of Margaret Bienert

In her own life, Bienert has noticed the link between being seen and feeling good.

“If lots of mirrors in a hotel room freak you out, I want people to wonder why they’re afraid to see themselves. I’ve noticed that a lot of women in my life, especially from other generations, don’t want to be in group photos or want to stand in the back. I really don’t want to feel that way about myself, and I don’t want other women to feel that way. We should give ourselves permission to prioritize ourselves, be allowed to feel good and be seen,” she says.

Staying in a themed hotel room can provide more than a new window into our sexuality. Studies show that sharing new experiences makes us happier in our relationships. Although it wasn’t their explicit intention, Bienert agrees that the couple’s adventures into the unknown have drawn them closer together. “When you’re in your relationship groove, there aren’t many moments for you to dress up and do something special. The hotels make us step outside of the norm,” she says.

While some travel accounts are aspirational, making us covet faraway places and luxury experiences, Pretty Cool Hotel Tour is a relatively accessible way to broaden your horizons without straying too far from home. The rooms usually cost less than $200 a night and are generally close to major cities. But if you’re looking for your own themed hotel experience, Bienert recommends staying open-minded about the experience—even if that means bringing your own bleach and sheets. While some hotels are top notch, others are lagging in their cleaning services and general hospitality.

margaret bienert pretty cool hotel tour giant champagne whirlpool

At the Pocono Palace Resort in East Stroudsburg, PA, the Roman Tower Suite boasts a giant champagne whirlpool.

Courtesy of Margaret Bienert

“I want people to understand that it’s part of the character. Sometimes you have to wipe down a tub and put up with the smell,” says Bienert. “Don’t go to a themed hotel and leave a two-star Yelp review because you expected it to be perfect.” She hopes that her project will generate more customers for the hotels and keep them from closing.

Because of COVID-19, however, their travel plans have been delayed. As they find ways to continue A Pretty Cool Hotel Tour, Margaret and Corey are temporarily living in Palm Springs and designing their own themed rooms for a friend’s vacation home. “It’s called The Rainbow Getaway and each room will be a different color. We’re not going to push it too far,” says Bienert. “But I currently have $1,000 of pink fake fur that’s definitely going up on the walls.”

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Categories
Culture

Kamala Harris’s Mother, Shyamala Gopalan Harris, Inspired Her To Pursue Politics

“While I may be the first woman in this office, I will not be the last.” Those were the words from Vice President-elect Kamala Harris will stay with women everywhere long after her historic November 8 acceptance speech. But it was her tribute to another female figure—her late mother Shyamala Gopalan Harris—that hinted at Harris’s own political journey:

When she came here from India at the age of 19, she maybe didn’t quite imagine this moment, but she believed so deeply in an America where a moment like this is possible, and so I am thinking about her and about the generations of women, Black women, Asian, white, Latina, Native American women who throughout our nation’s history have paved the way for this moment tonight. Women who fought and sacrificed so much for equality and liberty and justice for all, including the Black women who are often, too often, overlooked but so often prove they are the backbone of our democracy.

It was far from the first time Harris has spoken at a podium about her mother, who passed away from colon cancer in 2009. The Tamil Indian-American cancer researcher and civil rights activist inspired Harris’s role as “Momala” to Cole and Ella, her stepchildren with husband Doug Emhoff. Gopalan also imbued her daughter with the passion that got her elected to attorney general, then senator, before she made history as the first female, first Black, and first Indian American to be elected Vice President of the United States.

Ahead, a look back at Gopalan’s life and her influence on Harris’s own journey.

Gopalan emigrated to the U.S. from India for a doctorate degree.

Born in Chennai India, Gopalan left her home country at age 19 after graduating from the University of Delhi with a degree in science. While earning her PhD in nutrition and endocrinology from UC Berkeley, she met Donald Harris, who had similarly immigrated to the U.S. from Jamaica for a doctorate. They first saw each other at a civil rights protest and married in 1963 before welcoming two daughters (Kamala in 1964 and Maya in 1967). While the couple separated in 1971, their involvement in political causes inspired both of their children.

“When I was a young girl visiting my grandparents in India, I’d join my grandfather and his buddies on their morning walk along the beach as they would talk about the importance of fighting for democracy and civil rights,” Harris wrote on Instagram last September. “Those walks made me who I am today.” Donald Harris, 82, is an economics professor at Stanford University but has mostly stayed out of the political spotlight.

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She spent decades as a civil rights activist.

It’s clear that Harris’s childhood has stayed with her. During the 2020 Democratic National Convention, she said her parents “fell in love in that most American way—while marching together for justice in the civil rights movement of the 1960s.” She also recalled meeting Martin Luther King Jr. when he came to speak to students at Berkeley in 1967.

In an October cover story interview with ELLE, Harris shared an anecdote from attending protests as a kid:

At some point, she fell from the stroller (few safety regulations existed for children’s equipment back then), and the adults, caught up in the rapture of protest, just kept on marching. By the time they noticed little Kamala was gone and doubled back, she was understandably upset. “My mother tells the story about how I’m fussing,” Harris says, “and she’s like, ‘Baby, what do you want? What do you need?’ And I just looked at her and I said, ‘Fweedom.'”

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In her 2019 memoir, The Truths We Told, Harris wrote that Gopalan had “developed a keen political consciousness” due to her civic upbringing in India. Harris continued, “She was conscious of history, conscious of struggle, conscious of inequities. She was born with a sense of justice imprinted on her soul.”

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She was a dedicated breast cancer researcher.

After receiving her PhD at Berkeley, Gopalan stayed at the college as a breast cancer researcher before bringing her expertise to the University of Illinois and the University of Wisconsin. Then, Gopalan moved her daughters to McGill University in Montreal, where she received tenure. Harris attended school in Canada from age 12 to the end of high school.

Harris wrote in The Truths We Hold that finding a cure for cancer was of paramount importance in Gopalan’s life:

My mother was barely five foot one, but I felt like she was six foot two. She was smart and tough and fierce and protective. She was generous, loyal, and funny. She had only two goals in life: To raise her two daughters and to end breast cancer. She pushed us hard and with high expectations as she nurtured us. And all the while, she made Maya and me feel special, like we could do anything we wanted to if we put in the work.

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Sadly, Gopalan lost her own fight with colon cancer in 2009, but not before contributing vital research to the study of breast cancer. “Harris’s work in isolating and characterizing the progesterone receptor gene transformed the medical establishment’s understanding of the hormone-responsiveness of breast tissue,” the Breast Cancer Action’s obituary of Gopalan noted. “Her discovery sparked many advances regarding the role of progesterone and its cellular receptor in breast biology and cancer. She was innovative in her work, generous in her commitments, and loyal to the causes in which she believed.”

Gopalan is often invoked in Harris’s speeches.

Maya Harris, Kamala’s younger sister, once tweeted, “You can’t know who Kamala Harris is without knowing who our mother was.” In fact, Harris often mentions her mother on some of the largest stages in the world.

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At the 2020 virtual DNC, Harris said of Gopalan:

When I was 5, my parents split and my mother raised us mostly on her own. Like so many mothers, she worked around the clock to make it work—packing lunches before we woke up— and paying bills after we went to bed. Helping us with homework at the kitchen table—and shuttling us to church for choir practice. She made it look easy, though I know it never was. My mother instilled in my sister, Maya, and me the values that would chart the course of our lives. She raised us to be proud, strong Black women. And she raised us to know and be proud of our Indian heritage. She taught us to put family first—the family you’re born into and the family you choose.

In her first speech after being announced as Joe Biden’s running mate, Harris also paid tribute to her late mother:

My mother, Shyamala, raised my sister, Maya, and me to believe that it was up to us and every generation of Americans to keep on marching. She’d tell us, “Don’t sit around and complain about things, do something.” So I did something, I devoted my life to making real the words carved in the United States Supreme Court, equal justice under law.

Gopalan directly inspired Harris’s political aspirations.

If it wasn’t already evident from her speeches, the VP-elect has given Gopalan complete credit for her history-making career. On Instagram, the Harris often writes of her mother’s impact: “She was the kind of parent who if you came home complaining about something, she’d say ‘Well what are you gonna do about it?'” Harris posted on Instagram in July 2019. “So I decided to run for President of the United States.”

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Earlier that year, Harris tweeted that Gopalan had been her “first campaign staffer” and expressed desire for her mother to witness her presidential campaign. “Thinking of my mother today. She was smart, fierce, and my first campaign staffer—and I dearly wish she was here with us for this moment. Her spirit still drives me to fight for our values.”

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Despite Harris’s monumental achievements, she wrote in a 2018 New York Times op-ed that being known as Gopalan’s daughter was her most important accomplishment. “And though I miss her every day, I carry her with me wherever I go. I think of the battles she fought, the values she taught me, her commitment to improve healthcare for us all,” Harris noted. “There is no title or honor on earth I’ll treasure more than to say I am Shyamala Gopalan Harris’s daughter.”

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    Categories
    Beauty

    Shay Mitchell is Keeping Her Family’s Beauty Game in Check During Quarantine

    x Shay Mitchell Happy Holi-Beis Beauty Bag

    REVOLVE Beauty
    revolve.com

    $120.00

    Shay Mitchell has ridiculously shiny hair. It’s something I’ve admired about her since my days of watching Pretty Little Liars on my plaid green Pottery Barn sofa in Dallas, Texas—years before I imagined life as a beauty editor where I’d actually get to find out what products she uses to get those lustrous locks.

    Now, thanks to Mitchell’s travel accessories brand BÉIS and Revolve, I finally know the secret to that shiny hair. BÉIS and Revolve have teamed up for a limited-edition beauty box filled with all the Shay Mitchell-approved products for, well, looking like she does. Inside the box, you’ll get full-size samples from brands like Embryolisse, KNC Beauty, Tower 28, Joanna Vargas, Ouai, and Oribe, plus the BÉIS cosmetic case.

    Spoiler alert: Ouai Rose Hair & Body Oil and Oribe Travel Gold Lust Shampoo and Conditioner are the products responsible for her undeniably shiny hair.

    The entrepreneur (she also has a cocktail brand, ONDA), actress, and new mother chatted with us about how she finds her favorite beauty products, how life has changed with Atlas, and the first place she’s traveling to when the world is back to normal.

    How do you like to discover new beauty brands to try?

    Mainly by word of mouth. I am recommended products by people I trust or who are experts in the beauty world. I also always discover new brands through Instagram.

    What has changed about your beauty routine during your daughter Atlas’ first year?

    Oh, you know—I used to be able to have a routine. Now I’m lucky if I brush my teeth in the morning (just kidding). To be honest, my beauty routine has always been pretty simple: I wash my face every evening, moisturize, use products with quality ingredients, and stay hydrated during the day. If I just have an easy day, I put on some mascara and call it a day.

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    What’s a beauty practice you learned from your mom and that you plan to pass down to Atlas?

    I feel like it’s less a practice and more a routine. One of my fondest memories from growing up was watching my mom get ready for work. I remember her putting her lipstick on before she left the house. She was so chic, put together, and calm. When she came home, she always managed to take care of us, the house, and have a family dinner. I used just to think she was a mom, but now I know she is a superwoman.

    What’s the secret to staying organized when you’re traveling?

    You may laugh, but the whole reason that I started BÉIS was because I wanted products that both looked good and kept me organized on the road. I want to zip up my suitcase and unzip it at my destination and have everything be exactly where I need it. We have bags with sneaky storage, all the pockets your heart could desire, bags that transition from day to night, pieces that serve multiple functions. I am very biased, but they’re the best.

    Where’s the first place you’re going to go on vacation when it’s safe?

    The first place I will go is back to Canada (where I have gotten to go twice this year with quarantine restrictions), but I want to revisit my Gram.

    After that, anywhere. I’m game. The top choices are Italy, Colombia, and Ireland.

    Do you and Matte [Babel] share any beauty products? Have you taught him any tricks or vice versa?

    Coconut oil for everything.

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    What projects are you most excited about for 2021?

    Project “Let’s Fix the Earth” and project “Let’s Find Some Common Ground.” Then, of course, super excited and focused on continuing to grow BEIS and ONDA!

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    Categories
    Women's Fashion

    Madewell’s New Collab With Buffy is Basically a Line of Wearable Blankets

    As someone who has spent the bulk of the year in leggings and oversized vintage tees, I’m optimistic that loungewear will one day be considered real clothes. Who wants to wiggle into their stiff jeans when they can score all-day comfort in some sweats? If I’m being totally honest, I dread the future of when I have to put on presentable clothes and go outside again.

    Fortunately, Madewell’s making those days a little easier. The retailer always anticipates our fashion needs well before we do and recently teamed up with Buffy to create a line of ultra comfortable (and chic!) essentials.

    For Joyce Lee, Madewell’s head of design, the collaboration was a no-brainer.

    “Over a year ago in one of our design meetings, my team and I came up with the fun idea of using a duvet as a coat,” she explains. “We’d been thinking about how being wrapped in a comforter is the best, coziest experience. I’ve always admired Buffy’s cloud-like bedding and their use of earth-friendly materials, and knew they’d be the perfect partner.”

    This mini-collection is full of cozy essentials like an eye mask, mittens, muffler, and duvet-like jacket to transition from your bed to the real world. The collection taps out at $258, so you’re bound to find something that fits your budget. These pieces might have Madewell’s signature laidback style, but they’re also incredibly comfortable. Each piece has a slightly oversized fit to make you feel as if you’re surrounded by pillows. (The dream, right?) The collection uses a Primaloft insulation—made with recyclable contents, by the way—to keep you nice and toasty.

    “Sustainability is a huge focus for both Madewell and Buffy, so we ensured that all of the pieces from the collection were made with sustainable materials,” Lee adds.

    Admittedly, the bulk of Madewell and Buffy’s collaboration is meant for outdoor use, but I’m already thinking of ways I can incorporate these pieces into my WFH setup. For staters, the eye mask is a must-have for when I want to score some shuteye after a long day. If I want to stay warm, the puffer coat will elevate my daily walk outfits. And, I can totally picture myself throwing on the muffler for when I want to amp up my Zoom ensemble. Let’s be honest: In 2020, anything goes.

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    Categories
    Women's Fashion

    The Nobis x Serge Ibaka Capsule Collection Has Arrived

    Photography courtesy of Dan Lim for Nobis.

    The drop features genderless, limited edition pieces.

    The hotly anticipated capsule collab from Canadian outerwear brand Nobis and NBA champion/Toronto Raptor/style lord Serge Ibaka dropped today with a selection of nine genderless winter-ready styles including a parka, anorak, vests and accessories. Obviously scarves are part of the mix because Ibaka loves that #BigScarfEnergy.

    “I’m thrilled to collaborate with Nobis on my first fashion collection,” Ibaka said in a statement about the wares, which range in price from $60 to $995. “Nobis is very simple and chic, which made me really fall in love with the brand, making them the perfect partner. Getting dressed to me is an art, and I wanted to express myself through this collection and share it with my fans.”

    nobis serge ibaka
    Photography courtesy of Dan Lim for Nobis.

    This drop comes after the announcement late last year that Ibaka – who’s an integral part of turning pre and post-game style into newsworthy content – would be a Nobis brand ambassador. Speaking to the superstar athlete’s travel-heavy schedule, every piece in the assortment can be laundered at home; and the outerwear items feature water-repellant and windproof fabrications. (For Ibaka’s biggest fans, the bucket hat boasting his catch phrase “Mafuzzy” is sure to be a huge hit.)

    “We couldn’t be prouder to take our partnership with Serge Ibaka, one of our Global Brand Ambassadors, to the next level with the release of this collaborative collection,” Nobis Co-founder and Vice President Robin Yates said about the novel launch. “Serge represents the best of professional sport and international fashion and we are absolutely delighted to be working together in bringing his vision of Nobis x Ibaka to life.”

    Categories
    Beauty

    20 Warm And Stylish Winter Boots You’ll *Actually* Want To Wear

    From insulated sneakers to heavy-duty snow boots, these picks will get you through winter in style

    It’s getting cold out there, which means it’s time to prepare for snow, slush and salt stains (if you aren’t already encountering them!). A great pair of winter boots that will see you through the colder months in style can make all the difference. From chic faux-fur-trimmed booties and insulated sneakers to heavy-duty snow boots you’ll actually want to wear, we’ve rounded up stylish options that will keep your feet warm and dry no matter what winter throws your way.

    Read this next: Yes, You Need a Cold-Weather Bucket Hat

    Categories
    Fitness

    Here’s Why Your Dentist Loves Fluoride So Much

    Smiling woman looking teeth in hand mirror. Female dentist is explaining dental health to patient. They are in medical examination room.

    While my mouth is full of equipment, my dentist always checks-in with, “You’re using fluoride products, right?” I respond with a shrug while trying not to spit or choke.

    Admittedly, I don’t seek out fluoride — it’s coincidentally in some of the dental products I habitually use. Am I consuming too little or too much? I have no idea — honestly, I’m not even sure of what fluoride is all about.

    I have Dr. Shruti Shah, DMD, of ProHEALTH Dental, to thank for breaking things down for me: “Fluoride is a mineral that has cavity-fighting and cavity-prevention properties. Trace amounts of fluoride can be naturally found in water, food, soil, and plants. It’s most commonly consumed by drinking fluoridated water, having food and drinks that are made with fluoridated water, and using toothpaste and other dental products.”

    Dr. Shah explains that your teeth’s enamel loses and gains minerals daily — plaque, bacteria, and sugar in the mouth attack the enamel while food and water containing minerals like calcium, fluoride, and phosphate replenish your teeth. When demineralization exceeds remineralization and the enamel layer isn’t sufficiently repaired, tooth decay occurs, she adds.

    If you want to rebuild weakened tooth enamel, reverse the progression of early or existing cavities, prevent tooth decay, prevent the growth of harmful oral bacteria, or reduce hypersensitivity, Dr. Shah says that fluoride might help.

    Suffering from dry mouth (or a condition that causes dry mouth!) could make you more susceptible to developing dental cavities, in which case, your dentist might up your fluoride intake — especially if you’re dealing with tooth sensitivity, she adds.

    “The safest and easiest way to consume fluoride is simply by drinking water in fluoridated communities. According to the CDC, drinking fluoridated water reduces tooth decay rate by 25 percent.”

    Depending on your age and oral health, your dentist might recommend you use additional products like fluoride-infused toothpaste, mouthwashes, and beverages processed with fluoridated water, and dietary supplements containing prescription-level fluorides, Dr. Shah says.

    Seeking advice from your dentist on fluoride intake is important because there is such a thing as overdoing it — especially amongst children. Dr. Shah explains that if a kid (especially under the age of six-years-old!) consumes too much fluoride, hazardous fluoride toxicity can occur.

    “If enamel discoloration (dental fluorosis) occurs from overuse of fluoride (in young children), the amount of fluoride used topically should be reduced to the recommended levels based on age. Fluoride hypersensitivity or toxicity from the overuse of fluoride may indicate a need to lower usage of topical and/or systemic fluoride.”

    Click here for more health and wellness stories, tips, and news.

    Categories
    Culture

    Who Is the Serpent on Season 4 of The Masked Singer?

    After America waited…and waited…and waited to find out who would be declared the winner of the 2020 presidential election, it’s time to focus on equally important drama: Who from Group B will be unmasked on Fox’s The Masked Singer tonight. This week, two people in Group B will be going home; there is only room for two people from that group in the coming “Super Six.” This episode, called “The Mask Chance Saloon,” features Serpent, Whatchamacallit, Crocodile, and Seahorse.

    We’ve already seen two performances from each of these characters, and it’s time to whittle down the competition, because, after all, this thing can’t go on forever. So far, we’ve eliminated Clint Black and Lisa Hartman (Snow Owls, Group A); Bob Saget (Squiggly Monster, Group C); Wendy Williams (Lips, Group C); Mark Sanchez (Baby Alien, Group B); Brian Austin Green (Giraffe, Group A); Mickey Rourke (Gremlin, Group B); and Busta Rhymes (Dragon, Group A).

    Following next week’s Group C finals, all the remaining characters will square off in the “Super Six” episode on December 2. The final episode of the season will air on December 16 and crown the season 4 winner. Not many shows are easy to film during a global pandemic, but at least this one is built around the literal concept of mask-wearing.

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    So, before Serpent is potentially unmasked and this season is one episode closer to being over, it’s worth asking: Who’s behind that snake costume? So far, Serpent has performed “I’m Gonna Be (500 Miles)” by The Proclaimers and “The Bones” by Maren Morris. Jenny McCarthy guessed John Legend, Ken Jeong thinks maybe it’s Daveed Diggs of Hamilton fame, and Nicole Scherzinger thinks it might be Diggs’s Hamilton co-star Leslie Odom Jr. Other panelist guesses include Taye Diggs, Jesse Williams, and Brian McKnight

    Here are the prevailing fan theories.

    Dr. Elvis Francois

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    The YouTube comments are full of guesses for this one, and some fans on Twitter seem to be convinced, too. Francois is an orthopedic surgeon resident who’s gone viral for using his music to brighten moods and raise money during the COVID-19 pandemic this year. He’s appeared in interviews on Ellen, Good Morning America, and CNN. On top of it, Jeong tweeted on Monday that tonight’s episode features “the most emotional reveal yet,” which points to someone whose very presence might bring on the tears. This is definitely one of Dr. Francois’s talents.

    Leslie Odom Jr.

    freeform presents "love in the time of corona"

    FreeformGetty Images

    The person behind this mask has a seriously good voice, so it does make sense that they get paid to sing on a regular basis. In the clues package, there is a map of the Caribbean and a stack of books. Odom played Aaron Burr in Hamilton, the title character of which was an immigrant from the island of Nevis. Burr was also a lawyer who went to Princeton, hence the books.

    Christopher Jackson

    encores off center presents "working a musical" opening night

    Walter McBrideGetty Images

    Odom’s Hamilton co-star was also the guess of some fans in the comments, but just in case you haven’t seen his Twitter in the last few months, he debunked that pretty quickly.

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    Jamie Foxx

    26th annual screen actors guild awards   red carpet

    Rich FuryGetty Images

    Jeong is known for his wacky guesses on this show, but no one seemed to push back when he suggested Jamie Foxx, who does have an excellent voice. Jeong said he’s been onstage with Fox at Stand Up to Cancer events, and he seemed to recognize the Serpent’s voice.

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    Is Jeong actually right about this one?

    John Legend

    macy's fourth of july fireworks spectacular   season 44

    NBCGetty Images

    Some fans on Twitter think the gorgeous voice behind the Serpent might be the one that belongs to Legend.

    No matter who this superstar is, there’s a 50 percent chance we’ll find out tonight.

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    Categories
    Women's Fashion

    Why Farfetch Wants to Give Your Designer Bag a Second Life

    style points

    Style Points is a weekly column about how fashion intersects with the wider world.

    If there was an overarching theme to this fashion season, it was that seasons themselves no longer matter. What with Prada riffing on its hit ’90s prints, Coach reissuing pieces from recent seasons—as recent as fall 2020—and even fledgling designers reimagining their less voluminous catalogs, the idea of reaching into the archives was a through-line of spring 2021.

    It’s not just designers, of course—people are rifling through their own backlogs more than ever. They’re rediscovering pieces they suddenly want to wear again, as well as ones they’d like to trade in for a new model. The luxury industry, once resistant to resale, began to see it as a badge of honor. In recent years, big names like Burberry and Stella McCartney have partnered with resale giant The RealReal, while Rebag has blossomed as a destination for gently worn designer goods.

    farfetch second life

    A street-style image promoting the Second Life campaign.

    Jason Jean

    Farfetch—created to link shoppers with far-flung boutiques, from London emporium of cool Browns to Amore, the vintage Chanel wonderland in Tokyo—is one of the e-commerce forces that has helped make pre-owned goods fashionable, not to mention desirable. The site, says its Chief Commercial and Sustainability Officer Giorgio Belloli, “was built on the premise of selling existing stock in small boutiques around the world—to better match supply and demand and reduce waste.” It has been offering curated vintage and pre-owned pieces for the past decade, and is the only multi-brand site with a pre-owned section.

    farfetch second life

    A street-style image promoting the Second Life project

    jonathan paciullo

    Its latest project, Second Life, promises to further dissolve the barrier between luxury and resale. Belloli found that “resale is an area of increasing interest for our customers,” and he notes that the pre-owned luxury market is predicted to hit $64 billion within the next five years. When designers re-introduce past styles in their collections (à la the Dior saddle bag or the Fendi baguette) Farfetch has seen increased demand for the pre-owned versions of those items.

    Last year, the site began piloting the Second Life program in the UK and Europe. It allows customers to trade in their high-end bags in exchange for credit to shop new collections on the site, which mirrors the one-in, one-out approach many of us are taking with our wardrobes right now. The across-the-pond version also served as an advertisement of sorts, drawing in a number of brand-new customers, and will likely bring in more as Second Life officially launches in the U.S. today.

    farfetch open doors campaign

    A look from the store’s Open Doors campaign.

    Courtesy of the subject.

    Fashion is undergoing a reckoning with sustainability right now, and Belloli notes that the launch is an extension of the site’s ongoing green efforts, which are gathered under the umbrella of Positively Farfetch. Last year, the site launched its Conscious Collection, along with tools to help customers shop more ethically. This year, they introduced a fashion footprint tool as well as Climate Conscious Delivery, which includes environmentally efficient packaging and the use of carbon offsets.

    As customers look for more sustainable ways to shop, “the secondhand market will continue to become more relevant and a larger part of every business,” he predicts, with the life cycle of an item no longer ending the first time it’s purchased. “Brands are starting to take more responsibility and ownership of what they have already produced,” he says, “and are seeing the value in product they have already sold.” Sounds like it’s time to dig out that Balenciaga motorcycle bag from the Olsens’ NYU days.

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    Categories
    Women's Fashion

    Ssense and Streetwear Brand Fear of God Are Collaborating on Content and Product Drops

    Photography courtesy of Ssense

    The exclusive “immersive digital experience” launches today.

    Seven Days to Forever, the new digital micro-platform devised by Montreal-based retailer Ssense and Jerry Lorenzo–founder of the streetwear brand Fear of God­–has gone live with a week’s worth of exclusive content and product launch programming including re-releases of the sunglasses collection from Fear of God and Barton Perriera, and its collaboration with iconic suiting house Ermenegildo Zegna. You’ll also find the drop of Ssense’s Essentials Dark Navy collection coming in hot on Saturday, November 21st as well as an opportunity to pre-shop its Essential Tennis Sneakers on the 23rd.

    “We are honoured to be partnering with Ssense on this project,” Lorenzo said in a statement. “[They have] supported Fear of God since the inception of our brand’s launch. We’ve had a long-standing relationship, as well as a lot of mutual love and respect for each other’s business and craft. They are the perfect partner to build our legacy with.”

    In addition to scooping up covetable collections, visitors to the site will engage with a variety of editorial content pieces including 7 Questions with Jerry Lorenzo (where the entrepreneur will answer queries from Ssense’s online community), and what’s described as an “an illustrated synthesis of the Fear of God Ermenegildo Zegna collaboration.”

    With Virgil Abloh also recently introducing his own interactive platform for fledgling fashion entrepreneurs, expect to see even more digital, fan-focused launches like this in the coming months.

    Categories
    Fitness

    It’s Been Years Since the Sports Bra Went Public, So Why Are We Still Being Told to Cover Up?

    PASADENA, :  Brandi Chastain of the US celebrates after kicking the winning penalty kick to win the 1999 Women's World Cup final against China 10 July 1999 at the Rose Bowl in Pasadena. The US won 5-4 on penalties.  (ELECTRONIC IMAGE)   AFP PHOTO    Roberto SCHMIDT (Photo credit should read ROBERTO SCHMIDT/AFP via Getty Images)

    It was the 1999 World Cup, and Brandi Chastain had just scored the winning goal, solidifying the US Women’s National Team’s victory over China. Chastain tore off her jersey and fell to her knees in celebration. It was a historic moment — but for the millions who watched, it wasn’t the penalty kicks or the team’s excitement they remembered most. It was Chastain’s sports bra.

    In the past 20 years, the USWNT has won a total of four World Cups. Women athletes across every sport are setting the bar higher and higher. But despite their successes, the public conversation has yet to move past their bras. Sports bras are merely training gear, much like cups or jockstraps. As a runner who wears sports bras to track practice, I know they’re no more revealing than crop tops. They’re often less revealing than bikini tops. So, why does a five-ounce piece of lycra and cotton keep making headlines?

    Women athletes across every sport are setting the bar higher and higher. But despite their successes, the public conversation has yet to move past their bras.

    The pearl-clutching over women’s activewear extends beyond the professional arena and onto college campuses. At New Jersey’s Rowan University, the football coach criticized the women’s track and field team for wearing just their sports bras to practice, claiming his players couldn’t concentrate.

    Across the country, campus gym policies unfairly target women through the dress codes themselves or selective enforcement. At the University of the South, a gym employee told student Claire Crow to change her shirt because an inch of her stomach showed. Meanwhile, two shirtless men worked out uninterrupted. The University of Michigan and New York University are just two of the many schools whose policies have come under criticism after staff members demanded that students wear shirts over their sports bras or leave the gym. In each case, the men wearing revealing open tanks or no shirts at all exercised without consequence.

    Fortunately, when confronted with the inequity of their policies, many schools have modified their rules. For example, Crow worked with the school’s Title IX coordinator to change the university’s athletic dress code. Where the policy once stated that students should wear “proper training attire” to the gym, it now specifically states that women may wear sports bras and crop tops and men may go shirtless. However, not all schools have shifted their standards, and students shouldn’t have to fight this battle on yearly basis.

    In just a year, I’ll be on a college campus. Will students have already fought and won this dress code battle at the school I attend next fall? Or, will I, too, have to fight against discriminatory policies?

    Focusing on women’s attire sexualizes their bodies. When Rowan University’s football coach claimed his players were distracted by the sports bra-clad runners, he shifted responsibility from his own athletes to the women who were simply trying to train. He reinforced the idea that women must cover themselves to prevent people from thinking about them sexually, or worse, acting on those thoughts. Attitudes like these are not just offensive and sexist; they are dangerous and perpetuate rape culture. It’s time to recognize that restricting what women wear is nothing more than a poorly disguised effort to control them.

    Categories
    Culture

    Who Is Whatchamacallit on The Masked Singer?

    Fox’s The Masked Singer features everything that makes a weird and wacky show weird and wacky: costumes with multiple components, a judge (Ken Jeong) who always has an outlandish thing to say, and characters with names that sound fake. An example? Whatchamacallit.

    Tonight, Group B will perform for the third time during season 4, and we will see Whatchamacallit (who wears a costume that can really only be described by that name), Crocodile, Serpent, and Seahorse. Two characters have already been eliminated from this group; Gremlin turned out to be Mickey Rourke, who, in true Mickey Rourke fashion, unmasked himself, while Baby Alien was NFL player Mark Sanchez.

    This character has seriously stumped the judges in weeks past. “I love a bedtime story, and I’m an open book, so, Ken, you should know exactly who I am,” Whatchamallit said to the comedian in episode 4. This definitely stressed out Jeong, who takes pleasure in coming up with the most unreasonable guesses. But now it seems he really needs to take this one seriously.

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    Panelist Jenny McCarthy said she thought this hairy character was NFL player Cam Newton, though Robin Thicke mentioned Newton would be too busy playing football to be on the show. Thicke’s guess, though, was also a football player: Terrell Owens. Jeong went in the other direction and guessed Armie Hammer. “It ain’t no damn Armie Hammer, but it was a damn good performance,” host Nick Cannon said of Whatchamacallit’s performance of “Money Maker” by Ludacris.

    We already had a football player on the show in the form of Mark Sanchez, so it seems like an NFL player is an incorrect guess.

    Here’s what the fans think.

    Lonzo Ball

    los angeles lakers v new orleans pelicans

    Jonathan BachmanGetty Images

    This seems to be the top guess, according to the internet. First off, this character is tall, and fans think his height matches Ball, who is 6’1. This person has a very good voice, but as ScreenRant points out, the New Orleans Pelicans player also has two albums, Born to Ball (2018) and BBA (Bounce Back Album), which he released this summer.

    Kenan Thompson

    the tonight show starring jimmy fallon   season 8

    NBCGetty Images

    The longstanding Saturday Night Live cast member is pretty busy trying to stay healthy to be on TV in New York City every weekend, so it’s a little confusing why he would fly out to Los Angeles to film this talent show. But some commenters on YouTube are convinced he’s behind this costume.

    50 Cent

    starz  curtis "50 cent" jackson present "power book ii ghost" hamptons premiere event

    Jamie McCarthyGetty Images

    Some people are pretty certain this character is a professional rapper. There was a hint featuring 50 cents in the clues package, but that seems a little too on the nose. Still, there’s a chance…

    Kevin Durant

    oklahoma city thunder v brooklyn nets

    Mike StobeGetty Images

    There is a clue that references a children’s book, and Durant is the subject of a children’s book by Michael Sandler. The NBA player also rapped with LeBron James in a song called “It Ain’t Easy,” which was recorded during the NBA lockout in 2011 and released in full in 2018. The clues package also mentions the singer’s mom, and Durant’s mother, Wanda Durant, and been a huge influence on him.

    Perhaps tonight we’ll finally learn who’s under Whatchamacallit’s mask.

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    Categories
    Women's Fashion

    The Rise of the Congressional Consignment Shoppers

    Before Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez was sworn into Congress as the youngest woman to ever serve in the legislative body, she was already expounding the values of thrift shopping. “There’s so much pressure to present ourselves in the world a certain way, and, sometimes, that means looking a lot more expensive than what you can afford in a moment,” she told ELLE.com back in December 2018. “I am a thrift shopping queen,” she added, sharing that she also started using Rent the Runway after her friend gifted her a subscription. (In 2019, the Washington Post reported that women on Capitol Hill were utilizing the service, which allows you to rent work wear and other clothing, so much that nearby mailrooms were filled to the brim with RTR garment bags.)

    In the two years since that interview, Ocasio-Cortez’s clothes have become a constant source of conversation, for both her supporters and her haters. And thrifting on the Hill? That’s only become more popular.

    Last Tuesday, Congresswoman-elect Cori Bush made news when she tweeted: “The reality of being a regular person going to Congress is that it’s really expensive to get the business clothes I need for the Hill. So I’m going thrift shopping tomorrow.” At the time, Bush was gearing up for orientation for the freshman class of the 117th Congress; she’d recently been elected as the first Black congresswoman from Missouri.

    Pretty soon, her tweet went viral. Its message was clear: Traditionally, American politics has been a place for the very rich, and even more traditionally, for very rich men. (It’s been reported that a majority of those in the current 116th Congress are millionaires.) There are extra obstacles for officials like Bush, or as she says, “regular people,” and the price tag on the dress code is another product of that unbalanced playing field.

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    But the response to Bush’s declaration proved something else—those demographics are slowly changing. The group of progressive congresswomen known as The Squad, who will be welcoming Bush into their cohort come January, quickly shared their own thrifting secrets: Rep. Ilhan Omar responded to her tweet, writing that “thrifting is the way to go” and that she specializes in “$50 or less outfits.” She even offered to pick up a scarf from a Somali shop in her district for Bush to wear. Rep. Rashida Tlaib wrote that she still wears “some of my maternity clothes under those blazers,” before adding that she gets the most compliments from her thrift shop finds. Ocasio-Cortez chimed in too, writing about her strategy of “thrifting, renting, and patience” for building a congressional wardrobe. It was a welcoming gesture, but also a signal to other working class women looking to ascend to elected office one day: You belong here, too.

    And companies took notice as well. thredUP, a popular online thrift store, started The Hill Thrift Box just days after Bush’s tweet, inspired by her and Ocasio-Cortez. When you order the new box, thredUP will send you a personalized style box filled with workwear items, essentially a secondhand Stitch Fix. “For every thrifted outfit on the Hill, we’ll save 35 pounds of carbon,” the company announced. Erin Wallace, VP of integrated marketing at the company, told ELLE.com via email that the popular tweet made them realize “these leaders have a relatable problem: new job, new dress code.” She said, “It’s amazing to see women having candid conversations about thrifting as a way to rotate their wardrobes without waste.”

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    Bush seems keenly aware of the power of publicly embracing thrifting; the day after her original tweet, she shared her finds in a Twitter thread that doubled as a fashion show. Bush modeled her new pieces, walking to Beyoncé and Cardi B, with captions that laid out the hard, sometimes unspoken, truths of being in Congress:

    “Most members of Congress aren’t working class. So when a regular person like me runs, it’s hard to handle everything from how much it costs to run, down to the clothes I’ll need to wear at work.”

    “If elected to Congress, the first paycheck you get comes at the end of January. If you’re living paycheck to paycheck when you run, you have to find a way to make it months without income. We’ve got to make Congress more accessible to regular people.”

    “This is also about the pink tax. The clothes I wear in the Capitol could make headlines, but a man does not have to worry about that. We’ve got to spend more on our wardrobes, and then caring for them costs more on top of that.”

    She then thanked her “siSTARS,” the members of The Squad, for their support. What began as a discussion about wardrobe tips turned into a reflection on who these leaders are—women that more closely resemble the constituents they’re representing—and what they believe in—not shying away from their congressional struggles, financial or otherwise, or their sisterhood.

    Rep. Grace Meng, who also responded to Bush’s tweet with a suggestion for a consignment shop in Washington D.C., told ELLE.com that standing up for one another is essential. “Many of us didn’t grow up seeing people we knew in suits or clothes that congressmembers wear,” she said. “For many of us, we don’t have connections to luxurious designers to borrow clothes or accessories or budgets to afford high end items, and we don’t need it either…Like others before her, Cori is demystifying Congress and showing anyone can succeed, including by thrifting.”

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    Categories
    Women's Fashion

    Toronto-based Brands Hania Kuzbari and Narces Are Doing a Holiday Pop-up

    Imagery courtesy of Hania Kuzbari.

    You can book in-person or virtual appointments now.

    Aiming to inject a little glamour into life after this very, very hard year, jewellery designer Hania Kuzbari is teaming up with the luxe label Narces for a three-day pop-up housed in Narces’s Yorkville-neighbourhood boutique.

    “As an independent brand, it’s important to create collaborative events with other independent designers, which allow us to connect with our clients, amplifying their lifestyle with our artistic vision,” says Narces founder Nikki Yassemi Wirthensohn. “Showing Hania’s designs in our Atelier is exciting and we cannot wait to work together.”

    From November 19th to the 21st, you can shop a selection of both brands’ pieces including items from Narces’s Spring 2021 collection and a variety of Canadian-made gift ideas. And in the spirit of the holiday season, 15 per cent of proceeds from the pop-up’s sales will go to the Anishnawbe Health Foundation.

    “Our pop-up event is a celebration of luxury Canadian design that is both safe for our customers and also in support of an incredible local charity,” says Kuzbari, highlighting the importance of staying connected to community even while we’re isolating. “The Anishnawbe Health Foundation provides improved health and well-being for the Indigenous community in Toronto.”

    To visit the pop-up IRL or virtually, book by emailing haniakuzbari@mattepr.com.

    Categories
    Beauty

    20+ Subscription Gifts That Are Actually Thoughtful

    Because nothing says “I know you so well” like a charcuterie subscription

    We all know the stress that comes with the typical holiday season. Trying to figure out whose side of the family you’re going to visit, calculating the logistics of fitting a holiday turkey inside your tiny condo oven and—most importantly—finding the *perfect* gifts for everyone on your holiday list. But what do you do when you can’t figure out exactly what the perfect gift for your step-dad is? Why not try a subscription service in lieu of a gift card?

    Long thought of as the easy and impersonal way out of gift giving, subscription services have gained a meh reputation over the years as the choice of the lazy and uninventive. And we want to throw that stereotype right out the window. Because yes, there is such thing as a thoughtful subscription service (or gift card, for that matter). Whether it’s a monthly charcuterie subscription that shows your BFF just how well you know her (and her tastebuds) or a streaming service for the Anglophile on your list, we’ve rounded up the most thoughtful subscriptions for this holiday season.

    Prepare to impress!

    Read this next: 30+ Holiday Gifts That You Can Feel Good About Buying

    Categories
    Fitness

    Winter Is Here, and These 28 Cold-Weather Workout Clothes Are Seasonal Essentials

    Once upon a time, we would see people running outside in the depths of winter and shake our heads as we drove to our heated yoga studio or packed, sweaty indoor-cycling class. Well, 2020 has changed all that, and now we’re looking for any excuse to get outside, no matter the temperature. We’ve gone from marveling at the fortitude of the winter runners to looking for tips about how to keep comfortable when the weather outside is anything but. If you’re working out outside this season, you need some new workout clothes.

    These 28 pieces are going to be your new staples, so much so that you may find yourself doing laundry just so that you can wear them again. From warm leggings to puffer vests and lots of layers, these are the pieces you’re going to want to move in. Go ahead, get sweaty; we’ve got you covered.

    Categories
    Culture

    Actually, People’s Sexiest Man Alive is the Depressed Rockefeller Center Christmas Tree

    There are many rumors swirling around the internet that People has declared Michael B. Jordan the 2020 Sexiest Man Alive and I need to shut all that conversation down because it is not true. I’m not saying that Michael B. Jordan isn’t very sexy, but I do take issue with People coming in here late and loud acting like they discovered this fact when actually I was the first to report on the “Michael B. Jordan is sexy” beat in 2017. Can we get some respect in the field of thirst journalism, here? Additionally, the rumors that People is breaking new ground with this announcement are unfounded because everyone knows that the only choice for 2020’s sexiest man alive is the massively depressed Christmas tree that just shambled into Rockefeller Center.

    In a media landscape hungry for evergreen content, this ramshackle collection of branches is king. Though this tree puts the blue in blue spruce, it is trying its best and I think that’s brave. I also think this crestfallen conifer is the closest thing we’re going to get to sexy this year. I mean, look around you. This is the year that grey sweatpants season lasted nine months yet none of us were outside to see it. We spent all of election week thirst-tweeting about a pair of GAP khakis. We’re spiraling! And you know what else is spiraling? This tree that does not have a discernible center of gravity.

    2020 christmas tree delivered to rockefeller center for holiday season

    Cindy OrdGetty Images

    We went from the Glamour Duck in Central Park in 2018 to the Struggle Tree at 30 Rock in 2020 and, truly, nothing is more apt. This tree is the visual representation of a heavy sigh. This tree is whatever the opposite of a deep fake is. “Yes,” you might say to me, “all that is true. But why is this tree the sexiest man alive, though?” My answer: It’s tall. Next question. How do we know this tree is a man? Well, it’s deeply mediocre yet it got a promotion, so you do the math.

    There is truly nothing more apropos for this year than putting up this try-hard tree for public viewing in a city where public gatherings are banned for safety reasons. Let’s celebrate marking yourself as “present”!

    This tree is the like starting a Zoom meeting by asking “How’s everyone doing today?” This tree is permanently on mute. This tree is like logging on to Netflix looking for Gillian Anderson in Sex Education and getting Gillian Anderson as Margaret Thatcher in The Crown. This tree showed up like Happy Holidays Question Mark.

    2020 christmas tree delivered to rockefeller center for holiday season

    Cindy OrdGetty Images

    Why am I reading a tree for filth? I’m not! I love this tree! This tree looks like how I feel and I am both attacked and enamored. And that’s sexy. I saw this tree and my only reaction was “Huh.” Honestly, that’s the most positive emotion I’ve had in months. This tree boosted my serotonin level by a fraction of a percent and I’m out in the street banging pots and pans.

    You ever see a tree so deeply un-enchanted? This tree, which is nature’s version of putting up sad song lyrics on an AOL Instant Messenger Away screen, was already offered a slot competing on the next season of Nailed It! the baking show for people who have literally never seen a baked good or an oven before. And you know what’s sexy: staying booked and busy so let’s hear it for this very sad, gainfully employed tree!

    Also, this struggle tree was hiding this gorgeous ingenue owl in its branches, which is like when you find a good dessert at a lackluster buffet. Maybe there’s hope for the future yet. Hot Owl 2021!

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    Soon, they’re going to put this Miss Vanj-tree in holiday drag and make it lip-sync for it’s life. No, it will not wow us, but, yes, we have already become obsessed with it for no reason whatsoever. This is the tree of life as it currently stands. I love this melanchol-tree!

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    Women's Fashion

    Balmain x (RED)’s Limited-Edition Sneakers Benefit Fight Against AIDS and COVID-19

    In 2020, supporting fashion with a purpose has never felt better. That’s the idea behind Balmain’s (Balmain)RED B-Court sneakers—a limited-edition launch that benefits The Global Fund‘s fight against HIV/AIDS and COVID-19. Designed by creative director Olivier Rousteing, the unisex accessory continues a long-standing partnership with the Global Fund and (RED) to provide funding and resources to countries impacted by both viruses.

    Courtesy

    B-Court sneakers

    BALMAIN x (RED)
    balmain.com

    $595.00

    The coronavirus pandemic has reduced access to healthcare for many fighting against AIDS, meaning it’s never been a more vital time to support the cause. In a statement to ELLE.com, Rousteing recalled being introduced to (RED) by Bono, who inspired him to design for the initiative. “Having begun my life in an orphanage, the struggles of vulnerable children across the globe is something that’s extremely personal for me,” he explains. “With AIDS killing more young people (aged 15-29) and more young women (aged 15-49) than any other disease worldwide, there are now almost 14 million children worldwide who have lost a parent to AIDS. Most of those children live in sub-Saharan Africa, and the work (RED) does is critical to the education, empowerment and protection of those children and their families—which is why I am thrilled to do anything that I can do to support it.”

    Rousteing admits he became a bit “obsessed” with designs for the (Balmain)RED B-Court sneakers, jotting in sharpie on prototypes of the product. “Finally, we all realized that all my scribbles, notes and measurements were the ideal reflection of the devotion required from all of us to face this critical moment,” he recalls of the shoe’s graphic red-and-black look.

    The (Balmain)RED B-Court sneakers are now available exclusively at Balmain’s new storefront on Madison Avenue in New York City, Balmain.com, and as part of the (RED) Shopathon event, for $595. 25% of all sales will directly benefit the Global Fund’s COVID-19 Response Mechanism. The organization hopes to raise $5 billion in the next year to fight against COVID-19 and provide healthcare for those impacted by the pandemic.

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    Women's Fashion

    H&M’s Latest Conscious Collection Explores the Beauty of Waste

    image courtesy H&M

    “For A/W ’20, we really wanted to be trailblazers – pushing the limits of creativity and sustainable fashion – by focusing on waste.”

    In 2010, fast fashion behemoth H&M launched its first Conscious Collection, made with sustainable materials such as organic cotton and recycled polyester. 10 years later, the line is taking its ethos further with a new collection made from waste.

    Crafted out of sustainably sourced materials and experimental textiles (including a fabric made from responsibly sourced wood pulp) and using innovative processes that transform food crop waste into natural fibres, the pieces in H&M’s Conscious Exclusive A/W ’20 collection all have unusual origin stories.

    image courtesy H&M

    “For A/W ’20, we really wanted to be trailblazers – pushing the limits of creativity and sustainable fashion – by focusing on waste,” Ann-Sofie Johansson, creative advisor at H&M, said in a statement. “As a result, the pieces in this collection are crafted from truly amazing materials produced from waste. Working with this kind of transformation and being able to speak to our customers through beauty, we hope that waste can be part of the future of sustainable fashion.”

    The womenswear collection contains pieces such as jacquard dresses, tailored suiting and voluminous tops with floral and ruffle detailing. Menswear also makes a return to Conscious Exclusive this season with classic suiting and shirting. Accessories include bold choker necklaces, earrings and shoe clips in recycled metals, vegan leather shoes, and a pair of sunglasses crafted from Made of Air, a material partly made from waste biomass.

    h&m conscious
    image courtesy H&M

    One of the models featured in this season’s H&M Conscious campaign is Zinnia Kumar, who is also an ecologist and published scientist in human evolutionary biology and ecology.

    “I’m thrilled to be a part of this Conscious Exclusive campaign, especially as H&M is paving the way for sustainable collections to become the industry norm,” said Kumar in a release. “As consumers, we will no longer need to differentiate between fashionability and sustainability, as they will become one and the same. As an ecologist working in fashion, this fills me with hope.”

    Conscious Exclusive A/W ’20 will be available online from December 3.

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    Fitness

    Why Taking a Semester Off During COVID-19 Was the Best Thing For My Mental Health

    This summer was a waiting game for many college students. I was holding my breath worrying about whether school would resume in person, if tuition would be raised, and what this would all mean for my ability to learn. For me, this stress manifested in a very physical way. I was sick all summer with a cold. I had heightened allergies, panic attacks, and a constant uneasy feeling in my gut.

    I got tested for COVID-19 on multiple occasions because of the seemingly endless cold, but I never tested positive. After receiving my third negative test, I finally reached out to my doctor to ask about what could be going on. Of course, I had done some of my own googling (please don’t do this because it never helps) and had a laundry list of things that I thought could be to blame. My doctor patiently heard me out, then came back with an answer that changed the trajectory of my life for the next six months — I was suffering from anxiety. She went on to explain that it’s very common for anxiety to translate into physical illness, then suggested taking time to focus on my mental health.

    I knew I needed to make some changes, so I grabbed a journal and decided to write down all the things I was worried about. It was quite overwhelming at first to see everything that was causing me so much stress on a single page. But it made me very aware of the fact that college — paired with the pandemic — was at the center of many of my concerns.

    I was worried about everything to do with school. I worried if going back to college would lead to a COVID-19 outbreak, or adversely, if I would struggle to learn virtually if the campus remained closed. Then it was the stress over how I could get home if there was an outbreak. Right then and there I made the decision to take some time off. I reached out to school counselors about taking a semester long leave and finally filed all the paperwork. To this day, I’m so glad I did because my mental health and well-being became a top priority in my life. It was the first time I had ever put my mental health first. Here are five ways I’ve benefited from the decision to take the semester off.

    1. I have never had so much free time. At school, I kept myself so busy that I attributed all my stress to my academics. It wasn’t until I had nothing else to blame for the endless anxiety that crept into my thoughts that I realized something was wrong. It was a scary realization, but a necessary one to move forward. I needed this free time to come to terms with the fact that I’m dealing with a mental illness that needs to be addressed or it will get worse.

    2. I was able to seek professional help. I’m privileged enough to have access to healthcare and was able to find the right therapist for me. Having more time to speak with a therapist, develop tools, and identify triggers has made my day-to-day life considerably easier.

    It wasn’t until I had nothing else to blame for the endless anxiety that crept into my thoughts that I realized something was wrong.

    3. I’ve been able to build trust with myself. I’ve had time to understand how my anxiety manifests both mentally and physically. When I was constantly sick, I never felt like I had control over my body. Now that I’ve had time to sit with my anxiety and analyze it, I’ve become more aware of how to identify it. Being able to label specific reactions as part of my anxiety makes me more confident that I can address them properly.

    4. I now know that I have options. Not only has this time helped me address my anxiety, but it has also made me aware of the things in my life that I can and cannot control. Before addressing my anxiety, I was in a constant state of stress. I couldn’t decipher between things that were adding unnecessary stress to my life and things that may be difficult but were ultimately beneficial. These lines have become clearer. It’s easier for me to decide what I can and cannot handle, which has allowed me to cut out unnecessary stressors in my life.

    5. Most importantly, this time off has reminded me that I need breaks. I am a driven person and love to take on big projects, learn new things, and continuously push the boundaries of my abilities. This is something I love about myself, but the pressure to constantly be productive is not sustainable and is not helpful to my mental health. COVID-19 made me sit down and relax for a while, giving me a break I haven’t had in a very long time. Extending this break through the fall semester made me realize how much I needed to stand still and focus on myself. I have rekindled hobbies, strengthened friendships, and worked on my mental health. A lot of necessary growth has happened for me while remaining still.

    Categories
    Culture

    Charles Described 1983 Royal Tour of Australia with Diana as ‘Great Joy’

    In March of 1983, Prince Charles and Princess Diana embarked on their first overseas royal engagement as a couple: an ambitious six-week tour of Australia and New Zealand. Per The Telegraph, this royal tour is now remembered as the moment when “Dianamania” first took root worldwide, as the princess drew adoring crowds in every city they visited. And in season 4 of The Crown, the tour is depicted as a tipping point not only for Diana’s development as a celebrity, but also in her rocky relationship with Charles. Here’s what you need to know about the real-life tour.

    How did Charles and Diana get along during their 1983 tour of Australia?

    In the show, the tour gets off to a rocky start, as Charles (Josh O’Connor) and Diana (Emma Corrin) are both awkward in front of the press and miserable in private. Their public stumbling is accurate—Charles made a couple of gaffes that went down poorly down under, including a joke about feeding Prince William “warm milk and minced kangaroo,” which reportedly upset animal lovers.

    In his infamous 1992 biography Diana: Her True Story—In Her Own Words, Andrew Morton called the tour “a test of endurance for Diana.” The couple were greeted by hysterical crowds in many of the cities they visited, and Diana was “jet-lagged, anxious and sick with bulimia,” per Morton.

    royal tour of australia, 1983,

    Diana cries outside the Sydney Opera House on March 28, 1983. Prince Charles is seated to her left.

    MirrorpixGetty Images

    Diana’s turmoil was not particularly well-hidden, and at one point she burst into tears during a public appearance outside the Sydney Opera House. A photographer who captured the moment, Ken Lennox, described it during the documentary Inside the Crown: Secrets of the Royals, per Vanity Fair:

    I’m about four feet from the princess and I’m trying to get a bit of the opera house in the background and some of the crowd, and Diana burst into tears and wept for a couple of minutes. Charles I don’t think has noticed [Diana crying] at that stage. If he has, typical of Prince Charles to look the other way.

    So although we don’t know exactly what happened behind closed doors, it seems safe to assume that Charles and Diana really were fighting in private, as the show depicts. One source of tension, according to Morton in his biography, was Charles’s jealousy—Diana was overshadowing him, and he knew it:

    While Diana looked to her husband for a lead and guidance, the way the press and public reacted to the royal couple merely served to drive a wedge between them. The crowds complained when Prince Charles went over to their side of the street during a walkabout… In public, Charles accepted the revised status quo with good grace; in private he blamed Diana.

    But there were some notable high points, including Charles and Diana’s dance together at a charity ball in Sydney. The public impression of the couple was, at this time, that they were very much in love.

    diana and charles in the crown vs real life

    Left: Emma Corrin and Josh O’Connor in The Crown; Right: Princess Diana and Prince Charles dance at the Wentworth Hotel in Sydney, Australia in March 1983.

    Netflix / Getty

    Was there pushback to Charles and Diana bringing Prince William to Australia?

    Not quite. Onscreen, Diana very reasonably refused to leave her 10-month-old son behind in England for weeks. She insists on bringing William along, angering Charles and many royal advisers in the process. Royal protocol dictates that two heirs should not travel together on the same trip in order to protect the line of succession—then, as now, Charles was first in line to the throne while William was second. This meant bringing William was breaking protocol.

    But in real life, Diana didn’t push the subject. In fact, according to Morton’s biography, she was “all ready to leave William. I accepted that as part of duty, albeit it wasn’t going to be easy.” It was only when the former Australian prime minister, Malcolm Fraser, suggested they bring William that they realized it was a possibility.

    prince charles, princess diana and prince william of wales visit to australia and new zealand 1983

    Diana and Charles with Prince William in Auckland, New Zealand on April 18, 1983.

    Anwar HusseinGetty Images

    And though William was separated from his parents for much of the tour, the family did enjoy some happy times together in Australia. In in her biography of Prince Charles (per Vanity Fair), Sally Bedell Smith describes a letter Charles wrote to a friend in which he recounts a particularly blissful moment with Diana and William. “The great joy was that we were totally alone together,” he wrote, recalling he and Diana watched William crawling around “at high speed knocking everything off the tables and causing unbelievable destruction,” as they “laughed and laughed with sheer, hysterical pleasure.”

    Did Charles and Diana’s visit really prevent Australia from abolishing the monarchy?

    charles and diana visit australia

    Charles and Diana at Ayers Rock on March 21, 1983.

    John Shelley Collection/AvalonGetty Images

    The Crown depicts Charles and Diana’s visit as having major political implications. In the show, newly-elected prime minister Bob Hawke is forced to make a U-turn in his plan to remove Australia from royal rule as part of the Commonwealth and turn the country into a republic. Why? Because Diana is so extraordinarily popular that public opinion has turned in favor of the monarchy.

    Diana: Her True Story—In Her Own Words

    bookshop.org

    $18.40

    “She’s made us both look like chumps,” Hawke tells Charles. “No offense, but if it’d just been you, I’d have got my wishes. But then she comes along!”

    Though there’s no evidence that a conversation like this actually took place between Hawke and Charles, the implication is otherwise pretty accurate. Throughout the 1970s, the popularity of the monarchy had been in decline in Australia, and Hawke was a staunch republican who made no secret of his feeling that the country would be better off as an independent nation.

    But Diana was so beloved across the nation by the end of her tour with Charles that the republican cause had been set back by “two decades.” When the country held a referendum in 1999 to vote on the possibility of becoming a republic, the public voted no. Today, though, polls suggest that public opinion in Australia is once again shifting away from the monarchy.

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    Categories
    Women's Fashion

    Montreal’s Lecavalier Is a Finalist For The 2021 International Woolmark Prize

    Photography by Ksenya Poggenpohl

    “It is really an honour to represent my country and I do hope this will inspire the younger generation of designers to really push their boundaries and their creativity.”

    The finalists for the prestigious International Woolmark Prize were announced this morning, and among the impressive roster was Montreal-based brand Lecavalier, helmed by Marie-Ève Lecavalier.

    “I’m actually really proud to be the first Canadian to be a finalist in a prize that has such a big legacy,” Lecavalier says of the news. “It is really an honour to represent my country and I do hope this will inspire the younger generation of designers to really push their boundaries and their creativity. I’m also really touched to have such an amazing opportunity in these uncertain times; it does gives me the extra energy to surpass myself for that upcoming collection.”

    lecavalier
    Photography by Ksenya Poggenpohl

    Lecavalier joins Bethany Williams (UK), Casablanca (France), Kenneth Ize (Nigeria), Matty Bovan (UK) and Thebe Magugu (South Africa) as a finalist vying for the top prize of US$143,000 to augment business practices. This year’s competition has the theme of “Less is More”, and centres around transparent and sustainable craft; the guiding concept certainly resonates this year, with so much focus being brought to how brands make their products.

    “As much as 2020 has been a rollercoaster, the good thing is that it shook everything we knew and we did in the fashion industry and I think that is a really good thing for the future,” Lecavalier says of what she’s optimistic about in terms of industry practices moving into the new year. “All the ‘rules’ of the fashion industry are not really relevant anymore, and there is now more space for the younger generations of creatives to set their own boundaries and work ethic. We can now write our own rules and show our creativity how we want and at the pace that we are comfortable with.”

    lecavalier
    Photography by Ksenya Poggenpohl

    Lecavalier has never been shy to show her authentic self through her designs–a quality that undoubtedly caught the attention of the Prize’s finalist judging panel, which included fashion journalist Tim Blanks and model Naomi Campbell. Her current collection, Cyclone, is “inspired by Joan of Arc–the mythical, unruly, and rebellious heroine,” she notes. “Combining impeccable and innovative craftsmanship, meticulous material research, and bold aesthetics, [my Fall] collection is comprised of loose-fitted silhouettes, printed silk featuring drawings by Carlotta Baily-Borg, balloon sleeves, topstitched denim, and intertwined leather–a technique recalling the medieval chainmail. Embodying the spirit of Joan of Arc, this new collection is a manifestation of perseverance and determination, and is made for the outspoken, stubborn, liberated, and eccentric human.”

    The International Woolmark Prize will be given away in early 2021 and the winner will join the ranks of talents ranging from Karl Lagerfeld (after whom an additional innovation-focused prize worth US$73,000 has been named), Yves Saint Laurent, Gabriela Hearst and Valentino Garavani.