Categories
Women's Fashion

Starface Drops a Collab with Sesame Street + More Beauty News

Photography Courtesy of Starface.

Including charming holiday fragrances, an anti-aging hair serum and a new eyeshadow palette that’ll make smoky eyes a no-brainer.

The Starface x Sesame Street collab is available now

Starface Sesame Street
Photography courtesy of Starface.

Inspired by the inclusivity of the show’s diverse storylines and cast of Muppets and guest stars, the feel-good brand that is Starface has dropped a limited-edition collaboration with Sesame Street. Best known for its acne-positive pimple stickers, the drop features Cookie Monster, Big Bird, Elmo and Oscar the Grouch sets, including pore strips and the famous hydrocolloid patches packaged in matching portable cases. The patches help to speed up your skin’s healing by shielding blemishes from bacteria while also absorbing fluid and reducing inflammation.

Byredo makes smoky eyes easy with a new eyeshadow palette and kajal eye pencils

If smoky eyes and Saturday night go hand in hand for you, you’re not going to want to miss Byredo’s new limited-edition gunmetal eyeshadow palette and jumbo kajal eye pencils. The shadows are a moody take on their oyster-shaped palettes and feature five shades of grey and black eyeshadows in matte and sparkling finishes. The super-sized kajal pencils are a nod to founder Ben Gorham’s Indian heritage and come in blue, brown, matte black and a limited-edition silver. They’re highly pigmented and perfect for getting in the waterline or smudging to the high-heavens for a sultry night on the town.

Jean Paul Gaultier releases his best-selling scents in not-so-ugly sweaters

Jean Paul Gaultier perfume
Photography Courtesy of Jean Paul Gaultier.

If you’re one of the many fans of Jean Paul Gaultier’s cult-classic ’90s fragrances, including Le Male, Scandal and Classique, you may want to consider bringing some holiday cheer to your vanity with these adorable new collector’s editions which have traded in JPG’s classic Breton stripes for made-to-measure red and white ugly sweaters. If you’re in the market for a new scent for the season (or need a cute gift), Le Male is appropriately warm and spicy with notes of cardamom, cedar and cinnamon, while Classique is equally fireplace-ready with vanilla, ginger and star anise.

A stunning new holiday compact from Hermès

Hermes face powder
Photography by Studio des fleurs.

Hermès Poudre d’orfèvre is one gift you’ll be tempted to keep for yourself. The illuminating powder comes dressed up in a Pierre Hardy-designed white lacquered case etched with the storied brand’s signature ex libris motif. The details continue inside the compact, which also features the embossed emblem. But the limited-edition powder isn’t just for show; its golden mother-of-pearl formula has a soft, radiant finish and can be swept over the lids or on the cheekbones. —Mishal Cazmi

Kérastase launches an anti-aging serum for your hair and scalp

Kerastase hair serum
Photography Courtesy of Kérastase.

If you’re looking to treat your scalp to the ultimate of beauty rituals, this new serum is meant to transform your hair and head from the inside out. Hyaluronic acid and vitamin E target dryness, irritation and brittle hair. Over time, the serum claims to not only plump up your hair fibre for more thickness, but also control frizz and prevent further damage by protecting against pollution and other environmental factors that do damage up top.

Categories
Fitness

Nicole Byer, Host of Netflix’s Nailed It!, Describes Her Journey to Finally Getting an ADHD Diagnosis

Nicole Byer (host of Netflix’s Nailed it! and Wipeout on TBS) sits down with Taraji P. Henson and cohost Tracie Jade in an upcoming episode of Facebook Watch’s Peace of Mind With Taraji to talk about her journey from being labeled a “busybody” as a child to her diagnosis with adult ADHD. In the exclusive clip above, Byer expands on her childhood signs and symptoms — such as having trouble focusing, rushing through her schoolwork, and being talkative — and how that led her parents to guide her toward acting. “My mother was like, ‘Go talk on stage,'” Byer explains.

Toward the end of the minute-long clip, in which Byer also discusses the impact ADHD has had on her career, Jade asks, “Do you think that being a Black woman with ADHD, you think that we have a different journey in terms of how we navigate?” Byer responds, “I think Black women have a harder journey with everything.” A representative from Facebook confirmed that psychiatrist Eraka Bath, MD, will also appear in the episode and share information about how ADHD is often not properly identified in the Black community.

Watch the clip above, and be sure to catch its Monday, Nov. 22, premiere on Facebook Watch.

Categories
Culture

My Unorthodox Life Season 2: Everything We Know

At the end of the first season of My Unorthodox Life, the reality show’s star Julia Haart sits down at the head of her family dinner and makes a toast. “I think that we are a very rare and usual group of people,” she says, looking out a table of her children, her ex-husband, his new girlfriend, and her colleague-turned-best-friend. “The relationships we’ve formed have withstood the test of religion, location, disagreement, and look at where we are. We’re sitting here connected and united, even though we are so very different.”

The speech encapsulates so much of what the first season of My Unorthodox Life set out to convey: how Haart’s decision to leave her ultra-Orthodox Jewish community at the age of 42 and enter the secular world, eventually rising to the role of CEO of Elite World Group, has affected her career, her family, and her perspective on the world. Now it’s been confirmed that the Haart clan is returning for a second season, which will most likely include all the ritzy fun of the first nine episodes (think: trips to Paris Fashion Week, designer clothes, yacht parties) as well as more discussions around religion, feminism, and personal freedom. Here, everything we know about season 2 so far.

Season 2 of My Unorthodox Life will feature all the Fs.

This September, Haart went on The Ellen Show to share the exciting news that My Unorthodox Life has officially been renewed for another season. Netflix also announced, via a press release, that season 2 will “feature more fashion, family, female empowerment, faith, fabulousness, and of course, Haart.” No release date has been set, but since the first season came out this past summer, it’s possible the second season is coming summer 2022.

This content is imported from YouTube. You may be able to find the same content in another format, or you may be able to find more information, at their web site.

Most of your favorite cast members should return.

Based on Netflix’s press release, it seems safe to assume the entire family will be returning for season 2, including Haart’s eldest daughter, social media influencer Batsheva; Haart’s eldest son, Shlomo, who we last saw dating and preparing to go to law school; Haart’s youngest daughter, Miriam, who’s studying software engineering at Stanford; and Haart’s youngest son, Aron, who still lives part time in the ultra-Orthodox community she moved away from. Season 2 will also, most likely, see the return of Silvio, Haart’s husband, and Robert Brotherton, the COO at Elite World Group and Haart’s right-hand man.

miriam, batsheva, and ben sitting around a pool at their home in the hamptons

Miriam, Batsheva, and Ben.

Netflix

However, it’s still unclear whether we will see Ben Weinstein, Batsheva’s husband, in the upcoming season. Their relationship was a key part of season 1, showing how the two have grown since Haart left the community in which the couple met and married. But this November, Weinstein and Batsheva announced they have separated.

The couple posted a note on their Instagram Stories, which read: “We have so much love and respect for each other but have realized that it is time to take some space to ensure that each of us live the most joyous, fulfilling lives possible. There are no secrets nor salacious events to blame. We are just two best friends who met at a very young age and have grown over the past 9 years each in our own way.” Weinstein also posted a solo Instagram photo of himself with the caption, “‘Officially not-famous.’” It remains to be seen if their split will be part of the show.

After the show aired, it garnered criticism for its depiction of Orthodox Jewish life. All that could be addressed in season 2.

After season 1 of My Unorthodox Life aired, a number of Orthodox and ultra-Orthodox women came forward to criticize Haart’s message that women in these communities are oppressed and expected to exist solely as wives and mothers. In an article about the controversy, the New York Times reported that Haart “agreed to address the debate over her show in an in-person interview if it could be filmed as part of her show.” However, the Times declined the agreement, and Haart and the newspaper were not able “to agree on an alternative.”

In a statement, she told the Times, “My sole purpose in sharing my personal story is to raise awareness about an unquestionably repressive society where women are denied the same opportunities as men, which is why my upcoming book and season 2 of my show will continue to document my personal experience that I hope will allow other women to insist on the precious right to freedom.”

Brazen: My Unorthodox Journey from Long Sleeves to Lingerie

bookshop.org

$25.76

It’s still possible that the topic could be covered in season 2, as Haart has discussed the issue in a number of interviews after the show’s release. Asked how she navigates these conversations during a time of rising anti-Semitism, she told ELLE.com: “My issue is that no man, no country, no philosophy, and no religion should tell women who they are supposed to be and what they’re supposed to be doing, otherwise they’re sinners and bad. This isn’t about God. This certainly isn’t about Judaism. This is solely and utterly about fundamentalism.”

Haart’s memoir is also coming soon.

If you need more Haart in your life and can’t wait for the second season to come out, there’s some good news: Her memoir, Brazen: My Unorthodox Journey from Long Sleeves to Lingerie, which also occupies a significant story line in the television show, will be out March 2022 and is now available for pre-order. According to the book’s publisher, the memoir will explore Haart’s meteoric career as well as her former “double life,” where she secretly gathered fashion magazines, sketched clothing designs, and started selling life insurance as she prepared to leave her community.

Watch My Unorthodox Life on Netflix.

This content is created and maintained by a third party, and imported onto this page to help users provide their email addresses. You may be able to find more information about this and similar content at piano.io

Categories
Women's Fashion

Whitney Lichty Celebrates the Beauty of Grey Hair

Photography courtesy of Whitney Lichty

And you should, too.

Since Whitney Lichty decided to go grey, she has received more compliments from complete strangers on the internet than from close friends. “I don’t get a ton of positive comments in real life,” she says. “Recently, though, I was with my husband when a young man came up to us and said: ‘I just want to tell you your hair is beautiful. I really wish more women would grow their natural hair colour out.’ It was shocking to me and refreshing to hear.”

Nearly seven years ago, Whitney Lichty began toying with the idea of not dyeing her hair (long before stars like Andie MacDowell, Jane Fonda and Tia Mowry leaned into their silvery strands). In fall 2019, she ditched the dye, and in the new year, she started documenting her grey-hair journey on her Instagram account, @silverstrandsofglitter. Her feed became a visual diary of her transition, serving up an inspiring combination of hairstyles and her reflections on her evolving relationship with her hair.

Photography courtesy of Whitney Lichty

The 41-year-old California resident, who lives with her husband and four sons, noticed her first silver hairs when she was in her 20s. As they steadily increased over time, she covered them in her thick brunette waves with regular visits to the salon. “Then I started to think ‘Wouldn’t it be funny if I stopped dyeing my hair?’” she says.

A few years later, this flickering idea was fully ignited by a conversation she had with a girlfriend. “Neither of us knew that we both had grey hair and had been dyeing it not for fun but to cover the grey,” says Whitney Lichty. The fun dye jobs she got during her teens became a necessity in her 30s. “I realized that all of my negative thoughts and feelings surrounding grey hair were never really my own but something I had been conditioned to believe by society and culture,” she says. That’s when she decided to go grey for good.

It’s joyful, it’s beautiful, it shines, it’s real and it’s freedom.

Her research led her to blogs where women shared their experiences, and she soon discovered an entire community she didn’t know existed on Instagram. “These women weren’t just documenting their transition; they were celebrating silver hair and aging, self-love and acceptance,” says Lichty. She decided to start her own account to document the progress as her grey came in and to encourage other women who might be embarking on a similar journey

Whitney Lichty’s transition to grey hair wasn’t easy, particularly during the first six months. “It’s that weird stage where it kind of looks like you missed a few appointments, especially when you have so much dark hair next to a little bit of silver,” she shares. She relied on root spray to lightly cover up the grey so she could ease into it but eventually used it less and less.

Lichty had initially planned to go completely grey to “get it over with” but then decided against it. “The slow growth really eased me into it,” she says. “If I had done it in 16 hours, it would have been too much of a shock.” It took about a year before she started seeing some semblance of a pattern with her white streaks.

Embracing grey has meant that Lichty has had to deal with her fair share of negative comments and unsolicited advice, even from her own stylist. “People said all the stereotypical things that we’re told to believe about grey hair,” remembers Lichty. She was told she would hate it and asked why she would purposely choose to look old when she was only in her late 30s.

Despite this, Lichty has been buoyed by the support from her husband and from people all over the globe. “Their highs and lows were the same highs and lows that I was experiencing,” she shares. She once wrote on her Instagram: “I’ve been told that grey hair is old, that it’s ugly, that it’s dull and unattractive. I believe that it’s joyful, it’s beautiful, it shines, it’s real and it’s freedom. Freedom to be ME.” It has helped her tap into a deeper well of creativity as she experiments with new hairstyles to complement her existing love of vibrant clothing and bright lipsticks.

Whitney Lichty isn’t on a mission to convince other women to quit colouring their hair but to encourage them to be their authentic selves. “You have a choice, and there is a gamut of women of all ages who are doing this and loving it,” she says. “If you love dyeing your hair, I’m all for that, too. But I want you to do it for you and not because you feel like you need to.”

Hairstyles to show off your silver strands

This article that first appeared in FASHION’s November 2021 issue.

Categories
Fitness

I Found My New Favorite Leggings at Lululemon, and of Course They Have Pockets

As POPSUGAR editors, we independently select and write about stuff we love and think you’ll like too. If you buy a product we have recommended, we may receive affiliate commission, which in turn supports our work.

Finding great leggings comes down to personal preference; some are buttery soft and great for lounging, while others are sweat-wicking and high-performance. If there was one pair that did it all, though, and had side pockets, they would be the ultimate leggings. Well, after a lot of searching (and I do mean a lot), I think I found the ultimate leggings: the Lululemon Invigorate High-Rise Tight ($128).

There are three factors that make these so special. First, the fabric. They’re made of Everlux, which is quick-drying and lightweight but still holds you in. These leggings are made for sweaty, high-impact activity, but you could also comfortably wear them for yoga, walking the dog, or just hanging in the house. Second, there are roomy side pockets. This, unfortunately, is not a leggings staple, but it really should be. Having roomy pockets lets you store your phone, keys, headphones, and mask easily. Lastly, the placement of the pockets is really game-changing. Normally, side pockets are useful but not flattering on the thighs. Lululemon has somehow managed to design these pants in a way that’s both streamlined and functional, and I’ll be buying another pair.

Categories
Culture

Inside the Making of Lorde’s Two Christian Dior Looks for the Guggenheim International Gala

lorde and her dior looks in construction

Dimitrios Kambouris/Sophie CarreGetty Images

As this year’s Guggenheim International Gala performer, Lorde had two big fashion moments: the first in a haute couture gown on the red carpet and the second in a gold suit on stage. For each one, Lorde opted to wear Christian Dior—and the story behind each outfit’s creation is as impressive as the looks themselves.

For her red carpet dress, the singer opted to wear a dreamy peach haute couture gown from Dior’s autumn/winter 2018 collection. That piece alone took 300 hours of work to create. Lorde used her own hair as a scarf in a literal twist on accessories.

lorde at the 2021 guggenheim international gala

Dimitrios KambourisGetty Images

Savoir-faire photos below show all that went into the top of the dress:

the making of lorde's red carpet dress for the gala

Sophie Carre

the making of lorde's red carpet dress for the gala

Sophie Carre

the making of lorde's red carpet dress for the gala

Sophie Carre

On stage, Lorde had her real golden moment in a metallic suit. The lamé jacquard look was custom-made, as the singer wanted “something gold and dazzling” to wear for the performance, per Dior.

lorde at the 2021 guggenheim international gala

Dimitrios KambourisGetty Images

lorde at the 2021 guggenheim international gala

Dimitrios KambourisGetty Images

Her classic “Bar” jacket was inspired by one of the house’s spring/summer 2022 ready-to-wear styles. It took 40 hours to make the outfit, and three people in the haute couture atelier tailleur worked on it. The images below show how the jacket was made, from sketch to gold finish:

the creation of lorde's suit

Sophie Carre

the creation of lorde's suit

Sophie Carre

the creation of lorde's suit

Sophie Carre

the creation of lorde's suit

Sophie Carre

the creation of lorde's suit

Sophie Carre

the creation of lorde's suit

Sophie Carre

the creation of lorde's suit

Sophie Carre

This is one of Lorde’s biggest moments on stage in years.

Lorde spoke to Vogue for its October issue about how she switches between living life in the public eye and living it away from it. “I’m great at my job, but I’m not sure I’m the man for the job,” she said. “I’m a highly sensitive person. I’m not built for pop star life. To have a public-facing existence is something I find really intense and is something I’m not good at. That natural charisma is not what I have. I have the brain in the jar.”

“But for whatever reason people have allowed me to say, Okay, I’m going to come and do the thing—do the shoot, do the red carpet, speak to the journalists, put the music out—and when I’ve done it to the point of total exhaustion, when I have completely quenched that thirst, I’m going to go home, and you’re not going to see me for two or three or four years,” she continued. “I’ll be doing the other thing, which is being there for every single birthday and dinner party and cooking every single meal and going on every single walk and taking every single bath. And when I’ve done that, and I’m like, all right, that’s enough of that for a little while, I’ll come back again.”

This content is created and maintained by a third party, and imported onto this page to help users provide their email addresses. You may be able to find more information about this and similar content at piano.io

Categories
Women's Fashion

Shein Responds After Undercover Report Alleges Labour Law Violations

Photography courtesy of @PanosPictures/PublicEye

The brand is no stranger to controversy.

Shein’s reputation has taken another hit.

The TikTok-famous fast fashion brand was embroiled in yet another controversy last week after an investigation by Swiss advocacy group Public Eye uncovered alleged labour law violations at its facilities in China.

Researchers — who remained anonymous for their own safety — visited 17 of the brand’s suppliers in the region of Guangzhou, China, a sprawling port city north of Hong Kong once home to Shein’s headquarters (the company is currently based in Nanjing).

The report’s alarming findings include 75-hour workweeks, hazardous work environments and other alleged labour law violations. Many of the manufacturing sites were described as “informal workshops” that posed fire hazards, with no emergency exits and barred windows.

In a statement provided to the BBC and other publications, a Shein spokesperson said: “Upon learning of the report, we immediately requested a copy and when we receive and review the report, we will initiate an investigation.

“We have a strict supplier Code of Conduct which includes stringent health and safety policies and is in compliance with local laws. If non-compliance is identified we will take immediate action.”

Photography courtesy of @PanosPictures/PublicEye

Per the report, garment workers in these factories sew for 11 to 12 hours each day, amounting to roughly 75 hours of work each week. Public Eye also stated employees are only provided one day off per month, and do not receive paid overtime or employment contracts, thus preventing the workers from accessing social security benefits.

But it’s not just Shein, these conditions are commonplace in the textile industry. In China, migrant workers come from outside provinces where wages are much lower to work in production facilities. “Many are only in the city for a limited time, without their families and with no responsibilities other than to earn as much money as possible,” a Public Eye researcher explained.

The precarious working conditions are the same for those employed at Shein’s main warehouse just outside of Guangzhou and the company’s logistics centre in Belgium, researchers said.

Shein adds roughly 1,000 new items to its site each day, superseding the production speed of other fast fashion giants like Zara and H&M. How? Well, the brand is able to do this by testing out new products in small batches, according to WWD.

If an item doesn’t sell on its website, Shein won’t make it anymore. But if it does well with consumers, the company will immediately begins large-scale production. Public Eye reported that most garment workers are paid for each item of clothing they make instead of a guaranteed minimum, fostering a motivation to sew as fast as they can to earn more money.

Photography courtesy of @PanosPictures/PublicEye

Shein’s trendy styles and extremely low prices appeal to young women with less cash to spend on on luxury clothing, and the online retailer is the most downloaded e-commerce app in the U.S. — but its been no stranger to controversy.

The brand has been called out several times for stealing and reselling designs from smaller labels at a cheaper price. And in October, a report released by CBC Marketplace found toxic chemicals in Shein’s clothing that can cause harm to the brain, heart, kidneys and reproductive system.

As for its environmental impact, Good on You, an organization that assesses and rates the ethics and sustainability practices of fashion brands, categorized Shein’s environmental efforts as “Very Poor” — the lowest score. “From hazardous chemicals to carbon emissions to microplastics, Shein is making zero effort,” the assessment read. It added that fast-fashion brands like Shein “perpetuate a throwaway fashion culture simply by existing.”

Photography courtesy of @PanosPictures/PublicEye

On social media, though, Shein is evidently winning. The brand is forever being promoted by influencers and featured in TikTok try-on hauls that have garnered millions of views. It even secured celebrity judges like Law Roach and Khloé Kardashian for its Shein x 100K Challenge TV show, where one up-and-coming designer won a cash prize.

But despite its hyper-visibility on social media, Shein lacks brand transparency. It’s difficult to find publicly listed information about its supply chain or financial earnings, and it remains an enigma that is mostly represented by the influencers who promote it.

“Shein’s business model is set up to control as much of the value chain as possible, while taking on as little responsibility as possible,” stated Public Eye in a report summary. “Through its combination of a cutting-edge online strategy and archaic working hours, the Chinese newcomer is perfecting the fast fashion industry in a particularly insidious manner. In doing so, it is taking the sector’s tradition of shunning responsibility to another level.”

The only way to put an end to these unethical practices, the group said, is by introducing requirements for supply chain transparency and imposing legislation that forces brands like Shein to take corporate responsibility. This was a major talking point at the 2021 COP26 summit, and Shein’s latest controversy demonstrates how badly these restrictions are needed.

Categories
Fitness

A Timeline of the Abuse Allegations, Protests, and Negotiations That Have Rocked the NWSL

The Washington Spirit and Chicago Red Stars will face off in the NWSL championship game on Saturday, Nov. 20, at 12 p.m. ET, capping off a tumultuous and transformative year for the nation’s only professional women’s soccer league. While the athletes have always had to fight for fair wages and better working conditions, an explosive report from The Athletic in September revealed that the NWSL had repeatedly failed to protect players from harassment, abuse, and discrimination.

The story centered on former Portland Thorns head coach Paul Riley, who had continued to find work in the league — most recently, as head coach for the North Carolina Courage — after being accused of verbal and sexual abuse. The Athletic‘s report set off a wave of protests from players who were outraged by the “institutional betrayal” of their own league. A lot has happened since then, including a number of high-profile resignations, the launch of three investigations, and finally, a victory for the athletes demanding meaningful change. Keep reading for a complete timeline.

Categories
Culture

Shawn Mendes Reportedly ‘Initiated’ the Breakup Conversation With Camila Cabello

While Shawn Mendes and Camila Cabello haven’t said anything about their breakup beyond their initial statement confirming it happened, more sources have spoken out about how and why the two decided to call it quits on their two-year romance. E! got intel from a source about how the conversation went down—and who started it.

Last week, Mendes “initiated the conversation” with Cabello, the source said. Although she was “very upset over the split,” she “agreed” it was for the best, that source added.

The two really meant it when they said in their statement that they plan to continue being close, just not romantically. They are “still in communication and want to be friends,” the source said. “[It] was not a bad breakup at all.”

“The relationship was getting stale and complacent and they decided they are better off being friends,” the source said.

This content is imported from Instagram. You may be able to find the same content in another format, or you may be able to find more information, at their web site.

Cabello is doing as fine as she can given the situation, by the way: “It was really hard for a few days but she has been spending a lot of time with friends and keeping busy,” the source said. “She has a huge support system and is feeling renewed now.” The source did not disclose how Mendes is doing.

Cabello shared an Instagram carousel of photos depicting her life solo now:

This content is imported from Instagram. You may be able to find the same content in another format, or you may be able to find more information, at their web site.

The dispatch from E!’s source comes after Entertainment Tonight got insight from a source yesterday about how Mendes and Cabello really decided together that things weren’t working anymore. “Shawn and Camila’s breakup was mutual,” the source said. “They realized they are in totally different places in their lives at this point, and it was time to end things. They’re both sad about the split, but doing their best to take care of themselves, stay busy and surround themselves by loved ones.”

In their statement announcing their breakup, Cabello and Mendes stressed their intention to remain in each other’s life.

Hey guys, we’ve decided to end our romantic relationship but our love for one another as humans is stronger than ever ❤️

We started our relationship as best friends and will continue to be best friends. We so appreciate your support from the beginning and moving forward ❤️❤️❤️

Camila and Shawn

This content is created and maintained by a third party, and imported onto this page to help users provide their email addresses. You may be able to find more information about this and similar content at piano.io

Categories
Women's Fashion

Von Dutch and the Conquest of Cool

the curse of von dutch

Getty Images; Courtesy of Hulu

style points

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

Paris Hilton, one of the most prominent Von Dutch wearers in the label’s heyday, is asked at one point in the Hulu miniseries The Curse of Von Dutch if she would ever re-wear their pieces. “Probably as a joke,” she replies.

When you think of the label, your mind probably travels back to the early aughts, the era from which high fashion is currently engaged in mining every going-out top, Juicy sweatsuit, and UGG boot. But Von Dutch, known for its trucker hats worn by everyone from Britney Spears to Anna Nicole Smith to Gwen Stefani, actually dates back much further: to midcentury hot rod artist Kenneth Howard, who made a name for himself with his surreal and gruesome artwork. (“Von Dutch” was his one of his nicknames.)

paris hilton wears von dutch

Hilton in the aughts trifecta: Von Dutch T, low-rise Juicy pants, and flip phone.

L. Cohen

In Andrew Renzi’s documentary, that fashion origin story gets interwoven with true crime: House of Gucci for the Kitson set. The talking heads behind the label, many of whom seem imbued with a SoCal-specific form of brain poisoning, lay out a tale of intra-brand rivalry, complete with gun-waving. murder, suitcases full of cash, and plenty of wrangling over who really “owns” Von Dutch. But it’s also a parable about the ever-roving re-appropriation of a fashion brand and how quickly style can travel from outsider statement to mainstream to a “joke,” and maybe back to the mainstream. (In recent years, Addison Rae, Megan Thee Stallion and Emma Chamberlain have been spotted wearing Von Dutch, in a move that may or may not be accessorized with irony.) The series also fits into the burgeoning trend of fashion-tainment: when a luxury name like Balmain is wading into territory like a scripted TV series, more mass entrants are likely going to follow. And Von Dutch has no shortage of stories to tell.

anna nicole smith wears von dutch

Anna Nicole Smith was an early adopter.

Kevin Winter

Even its origins are disputed; the Americana-heavy, car-culture-inspired brand has three different people claiming they “created” it based on Howard’s iconography: Ed Boswell, Mike Cassel, and Bobby Vaughn. By the 2000’s, Vaughan had sold Pamela Anderson on Von Dutch while on the set of her show V.I.P., a coup that led to dressing Tommy Lee for his Cribs episode. With the help of marketer Tracey Mills, who counted Kanye West and Halle Berry as friends, the styles caught on among the kinds of A-listers who appeared in the pages of US Weekly. They were proletarian cosplay for celebrities at leisure, studiedly casual and perfect for paparazzi-dodging (or courting.) Gifting became one of the hallmarks of the brand; big names could come to the store and walk out with whatever they wanted. And its customer base transcended genre: stars of pop, rock, and hip-hop all sported its logos, as did the new breed of celebutantes. Many of them mentioned being drawn to the brand’s authenticity and rocker edge. Hilton tells the filmmaker that Von Dutch “was free, it was playful, it was cute, it was iconic.” She and Nicole Richie stopped at the store and emerged with “50 shopping bags” before going to Arkansas to film The Simple Life; the pieces ended up comprising much of their wardrobe on the show.

Midway through the series, self-proclaimed “king of fashion” Christian Audigier enters the picture and sends the celebrity-chasing into overdrive. That tabloid exposure got the word out to a public who snapped up its ribbed tank tops and ultra low-rise jeans (“I like these because they don’t really have, like, a waistband,” says one shopper, shown in a news clip.) But Audigier overshot the mark, putting the logo on energy drinks and dog clothes. Von Dutch became the second-most-counterfeited brand in the world, but also one of the most diluted.

halle berry wearing von dutch

Halle Berry was a fan of the brand.

Kevin Winter

The arguments over authenticity and ownership only heated up from there. As it became ubiquitous, some of the original hot-rod fans took to calling it “Von Douche.” Cassel considered it “celebrity, name-dropping, cheap style” that “doesn’t last, doesn’t stick.” As with many surf, skate, and motorcycle brands, the spirit of the original subculture felt like it was being leached out. And while the documentary doesn’t delve that deeply into race, it’s hard for a viewer not to notice that many of those originally associated with the brand and responsible for its early success were people of color, while those who took over, reaping the rewards and dollars, were white.

When Howard, the artist behind the original Von Dutch, was posthumously exposed as a bigot in 2004, a backlash against the brand began brewing. But by that point, the Y2K fashion bubble had burst, and its stock was already headed on its way down. Now, it seems to be embarking on its fourth life, aimed at an audience that may or may not know its complex history—proof that in fashion, the story is never really over.

This content is created and maintained by a third party, and imported onto this page to help users provide their email addresses. You may be able to find more information about this and similar content at piano.io

Categories
Women's Fashion

Shawn Mendes and Camila Cabello Break Up

Photography by ANGELA WEISS/AFP via Getty Images

The internet is grieving.

It’s over. Shawn Mendes and Camila Cabello broke the hearts of Gen Z fans everywhere on Wednesday when the internet-famous couple revealed their break up to fans via Instagram stories.

“Hey guys, we’ve decided to end our romantic relationship but our love for one another as humans is stronger than ever,” the joint breakup note reads. “We started our relationship as best friends and will continue to be best friends. We so appreciate your support from the beginning and moving forward.” A moment of silence, please.

The news has rocked fans of the couple, many taking to social media to discuss the split. If you’re confused as to why, well, it all comes down to meme culture, to which Mendes and Cabello have contributed greatly.

Let’s take a step back. The relationship began in July 2019 after the release of Mendes and Cabello’s sultry viral hit “Señorita.” Ever since, the pair have never been far from the public eye.

To start, the couple’s unique street style often generated…mixed reactions on social media. At times colour-coordinating and other times sporting completely different vibes, it’s safe to say they didn’t take themselves too seriously — an admirable trait for a celebrity couple. But for the internet? Meme fodder.

Even more, since the start of the pandemic, Mendes and Cabello were regularly spotted taking long, notably slow-spaced walks together. One walk in particular — which Mendes later classified as a meditative stroll — gave rise to the Zombie Walk meme. It’s a classic, but the meme was soon usurped by the duo’s viral moment at the 2021 Met Gala.

Though Mendes and Cabello looked stunningly in-sync in skin-baring ensembles, their outfits were not what attracted widespread attention on social media. Rather, it was an innocent clip of Mendes complimenting his girlfriend on her dress.

During the four-second video, the Canadian singer lovingly compares Cabello’s sparkly gown to one of the most impactful style icons of all time, saying: “It’s giving… it’s giving Cher.”

Hyping up your girlfriend and giving Twitter viral meme material? It’s an A+ in our books. The phrase, much like many of the pair’s moments, has been forever immortalized in the pop culture history books. And on behalf of the internet, we thank them for their service.

On the bright side, the break up of Shawn Mendes and Camila Cabello comes on the heels of Taylor Swift’s longest breakup album in recent history, so at least the newly split friends (and their devoted fans) will have an extensive soundtrack to cry to.

Categories
Fitness

Why Your Boobs Get Bigger Before Your Period, According to Medical Experts

Three white bras with fruits inside, over colored background. Apple, grapefruit and watermelon are as small, medium and large breasts. How to orient in choosing of bra size

Have you ever felt like your boobs are bigger than usual in the days leading up to your period? During this time of the month, you may have even noticed that your bra cups fit a little snugger too.

Well, in case you didn’t know, breast swelling is an actual PMS symptom — one that’s quite common and may be accompanied by a little tenderness.

So what causes breasts to enlarge during this time? It’s the work of hormones.

“Before your period, your breast tissue is becoming more sensitive to changes in hormone levels,” Staci Tanouye, MD, a board-certified ob-gyn and U by Kotex partner, explained. “Hormonal changes that occur before and during your period can cause bloating and swollen breasts among other side effects.”

As you may have noticed, this is just a temporary PMS side effect. According to Sarah Yamaguchi, MD, FACOG, a board-certified gynecologist at DTLA Gynecology in Los Angeles, breast swelling usually goes down once the period begins. And while it is considered a common PMS side effect, she mentioned that not everyone experiences the same severity.

If the tenderness that can accompany the swelling is bothering you, there are a few things you can do to help ease the discomfort.

“Cutting back on salt and caffeine can sometimes help with pain,” Dr. Tanouye said. She also mentioned that loose clothing and over-the-counter pain relief medication may help in alleviating symptoms. (Remember to speak with your doctor before taking any new medications.)

Opting for different undergarments during this time of the month could be beneficial too. “I recommend a well-fitting bra which is sometimes a different size. It should also have good support,” Dr. Yamaguchi said.

Though breast swelling and breast tenderness typically resolve once menstruation occurs, never hesitate to bring up any and all concerns with your doctor. Dr. Tanouye mentioned that if your breast swelling and tenderness are persistent and accompanied by a missed period, check in with your healthcare provider and consider taking a pregnancy test.

She also mentioned that scheduling regular visits with an ob-gyn and a primary care doctor can help identify anything that may be abnormal.

Categories
Culture

The Dawn of Influencer Culture: A Conversation With The Curse of Von Dutch Director Andrew Renzi

There’s a telling scene in Hulu’s new docuseries The Curse of Von Dutch: A Brand To Die For, in which pop icon Whitney Houston arrives at the brand’s flagship store and departs with dozens of logo-adorned products, all gifted to her for free. It’s the early-aughts, nearing the peak of Von Dutch’s feverish strangle-hold on the fashion industry; the Americana brand was worn by just about anyone with tabloid sway. Paris Hilton, Nicole Richie, Britney Spears, Halle Berry, Jay-Z, Hilary Duff, Justin Timberlake, and Leonardo DiCaprio were all, at one point or another, spotted in the notorious trucker hat.

As The Curse of Von Dutch reveals, the brand’s explosive popularity amongst young A-listers was largely spear-headed by fashion entrepreneur Tracey Mills, a scrappy networker who knew the surest way to get Von Dutch in the hands of buyers was to get it in the hands of icons. His strategy worked, until it backfired: When Christian Audigier (of eventual Ed Hardy infamy) was brought in to steer the brand, he stamped the Von Dutch logo on so many products—and on so many celebrities—that its cultural currency lost all value. The company tumbled and has been something of a Y2K relic ever since.

Ironically, of course, that’s not the wildest story The Curse of Von Dutch has to offer: The real draw is a tale of murder, in which one of Von Dutch’s several self-proclaimed creators killed a friend in his own apartment. I won’t spoil who or what, precisely, spurred the crime, but the seedy drama surrounding drug-dealer-turned-designer Mike Cassel, art collector Ed Boswell, surfer-businessman Robert “Bobby” Vaughn, investor Tonny Sorenson, and French designer Audigier is fascinating to watch unfurl. The series attempts to cover a lot of ground in three episodes: It probes concepts of “selling out” and “influencer culture” while interweaving a cautionary tale of drugs, greed, and ego in an all-too-corruptible industry. But some of the most meaningful bombshells arrive in the final episode, which asks perhaps the most poignant question: What does a fashion brand actually stand for? And what does it mean when we, as consumers, tie our identities to that ethos?

To untangle these issues, The Curse of Von Dutch director Andrew Renzi agreed to discuss how the docuseries came together—and why he feels that, despite Von Dutch’s apparent resurgence in pop culture, he’s not convinced the brand is due for a comeback.

Where did your interest in this project stem from?

IPC, the production company behind this, told me about this idea, and once I heard about the characters that surrounded this company, I was so sold on it.

This is such an embarrassing story, and I kind of hoped it would never come out, but when I moved to L.A. when I was 18 years old for a summer, I actually got stopped in the street and modeled a Von Dutch hat for some money. So, this was a full-circle [moment]. I was very much like, “I have to do this.”

Did you know anything about this story before you got involved?

Zero. I knew the Christian Audigier, Ed Hardy connection to Von Dutch. I was aware of the latter years of the company, when it became what we know of it today: the bedazzled, really over-the-top brand. I knew the negative connotation the brand had, that it was a brand that burned out really quickly. But I had no clue there was a story that predated that. I didn’t even know that Von Dutch was a person, to be honest with you.

There’s such a huge cast of characters involved in this saga. And so many of them are central to the narrative. How did you juggle all their respective versions of the story?

I’m still juggling that. That is the biggest challenge, but also probably the most fun part of documentary filmmaking for me: I get to spend days in a trailer with Mike, and then I get to spend days in a car museum with Tonny. I don’t look at any character in this show as a bad guy or the good guy. So the hardest part, for me, was feeling like I needed to create a balanced narrative that gave them all respect but also didn’t let them off the hook.

Why revisit this story now? Von Dutch hasn’t been a major news-maker for a number of years. What was the impetus to look back?

There’s a couple answers to that. I’m a sucker for nostalgia, just in general. I’ll be the first to admit that, when someone said, “You wouldn’t believe the story behind Von Dutch,” I was like, “Hmm. Von Dutch. I never thought I would ever hear that name again.”

Also, there’s a really beautiful and cautionary tale at the heart of this about the perils of business, the perils of being creative, and also substance abuse. You’re just like, “This is so much bigger than this trucker hat.”

Having spent a year immersed in the psychology of this brand, I’d love for you, if you can, to pinpoint what went so wrong with Von Dutch as a cultural product. How did its mythos evolve into something that lost all meaning?

It is the story of that brand, where I think they started out when you have Mike Cassell and—even when Tonny came in to partner with Mike—there was this idea of this romantic vision of Americana. “We’re going to be Levi’s; we’re going to be high-end jeans, hard denim, work wear, James Dean. It’s going to be very specifically a simple heritage brand.”

What happened was, they weren’t getting it off the ground from a purely business perspective, and so when Christian Audigier came in, it all changed, because Christian’s idea of Americana was just so different. Christian’s idea of Americana was Michael Jackson; it was much louder, more flamboyant. That was the Americana he really responded to.

Frankly, Christian was kind of an amazing businessman as well. He went in there, and he just bulldozed everybody. Fortunately or unfortunately, however you look at it, [the brand] started selling and people started buying it. Then, I think, the tipping point was, Tracey and Caroline [Rothwell, VP of international marketing at Von Dutch] and the whole team were so good at getting people to wear it. They were doing influencing before that was even a thing. They were like, “Let me put this hat on every single celebrity that exists. Then, when people get their Us Weeklys once a week or once a month, they’re going to see this hat and they’re going to want it.”

Unfortunately, they just went too far. Every opportunity that came their way, they said yes to, and so then you see it on dogs, you see it on children, you see it everywhere. You can’t sustain that way. It burns too fast, too hard.

You mentioned something interesting there—these celebrities were “influencers” before that was even a term. Back in the early-aughts, celebrity still had an aura of mystery. Do you think Von Dutch’s campaign was a start of this concept of “influencers,” where celebrity has since lost much of its exclusivity—and, to some degree, its power?

I do believe that. I mean, you’d be hard-pressed to find another logo brand like Von Dutch that was as iconic as Von Dutch was for that period of time. I mean, you would see that hat on Leonardo DiCaprio. You know what I mean? It was such an iconic symbol of that time period. [The Von Dutch team] were like, “We have a logo brand; let’s make value out of that currency, and let’s get people to come in.” I think they were ahead of their time in a lot of ways with that. I mean, Tracey was really, really, really ahead of the time as a marketer.

Speaking of Tracey, I have to ask about that scene at the end, where he learns for the first time that the real-life Von Dutch self-identified as a nazi and racist. I’m curious why that was something you waited to address until the very last episode. Why not filter that through the rest of the project?

It’s something I wrestled with quite a bit. It’s such a bombshell revelation, and I didn’t want it to overshadow the character journeys. I’ve always looked at this show kind of like Pulp Fiction—it’s this whole universe of Von Dutch, and there’s all these little pieces that go into making it, but it all connects somehow.

At the end of the show, especially experiencing the moment with Tracey that I experienced, it always felt like the most poignant thing to leave people with. It was always the thing where I was like, “Let’s hold out on it.” Because it also isn’t the point; I didn’t want [the show] to be about who Von Dutch was and whether he was this or that. But I do think it makes you think more [about the face behind a brand] than you probably would’ve otherwise.

Do you think Von Dutch could make a real resurgence today?

It’s so complicated for me. Because, from a personal perspective, I probably won’t be caught dead wearing Von Dutch, unless it’s my Halloween costume next year. But then I go back to the Tracey moment. I would be so super supportive of it coming back when I hear him say stuff like that, where it’s like, “Maybe I’m brought in to be able to change this brand.” I’m super supportive of that. Who am I to say like, “No, don’t take control of that brand and make it your own message now?”

But the flip side of that, for me, is I’m really connected to Mike and Bobby and their stories. If that brand were to become the biggest brand in the world [again], that would be heartbreaking for them. I just hope that if it does make a resurgence, it’s with the right people at the helm.

I’m probably making a logical leap here, but I have to ask: Someone in the show mentions that a murder within the fashion industry sounds like a crazy idea. But there’ve actually been a handful of notable murders in fashion: Think of Versace and Gucci. So, with Von Dutch as another on the list, is there an actual pattern here?

I think that fashion, in general, tends to attract explosive personalities and explosive people. There’s a shadiness to fashion. I think it attracts personalities that feel like they can get into a business and really make it pop. I mean, it’s a manic business—there’s money being printed, and you kind of never know how much money should be getting paid out. From what I learned about this [Von Dutch] story, it just felt everybody was stealing from everybody all the time.

I think that that is probably pretty indicative to the business as a whole. I mean, I was watching that trailer for the Gucci movie that’s coming out and I’m just like, “Here’s another, this is so cool. I can’t wait to watch this.” It just feels like everyone’s just deceiving everybody else and stabbing them in the back, and I don’t know, unfortunately that seems to be kind of the way of that world.

I feel like with fashion, the whole point of it is to create iconography, so I think, as a result, people get obsessed, and it creates obsessive personalities. The Versace story is a great example. Fashion is meant to make people obsessed over it—as a result, you get unpredictable behavior.

What will your next project be about? Another murder in fashion?

Right now, I’m up in Big Sur, which is really cool, because I’m going to Antarctica next week. I’m climbing the highest peak in Antarctica for a project I’m doing for Netflix. It’s sort of another nostalgia story from the ’90s—about a lawsuit against Pepsi.

This interview was edited and condensed for clarity.

This content is created and maintained by a third party, and imported onto this page to help users provide their email addresses. You may be able to find more information about this and similar content at piano.io

Categories
Women's Fashion

Texture Talk: Blowout Curly Hair With Naeemah LaFond

Photography Courtesy of Amika

Welcome to Texture Talk, a column that celebrates and deep dives into the dynamic world of curly hair, from crowns of curls that are free flowing to strands that are tucked away in a protective style.

Perfecting a blowout for textured hair at home can seem like a challenge, but according to Naeemah LaFond, a celeb and runway stylist who’s worked with Whitney Peak and Christopher John Rogers, it’s all about making sure you’re considering every single step of the process, including the products you’re using in the shower. Here, LaFond, who’s also the global artistic director for Amika, lays out how to perfect your textured hair blowout routine, one step at a time.

Amika Naeemah LaFond
Photography Courtesy of Amika

“A blowout consists of three steps, the wash, the prep, and the blowdry. Each step is super important to the end result, as is using products that are meant to not only go with your personal hair texture, but also your end goal,” says La Fond. For example, if you have very curly hair, but want a sleek and straight blow out, be sure to wash your hair with a shampoo that will help you extend those silky results.

Once out of the shower, prep your hair right away, since the sooner your hair begins to air dry the harder it will be to work against your natural texture. “Make sure you prep the hair to not only protect it against heat damage, but to also make sure it’s moisturized and nourished,” says LaFond. Spritz on a detangling protectant spray from root to tip, and for an extra layer of protection, apply a couple pumps of a lightweight hair oil that will act like a barrier against heat. If you have highlights in your curls, LaFond says to target those areas specifically with the oil to ensure they stay extra protected. “When working with textured hair, you always want to make sure you’re not damaging your curl pattern with the blowout, so you can always restore your original coil afterwards.”

Amika Blowout Buffet
Amika Blowout Buffet. Photography Courtesy of Amika

One of the most important parts of ensuring a successful blowout is dividing your hair into sections before you get started. “Highly textured hair really expands as you’re blow drying it, so making sure you properly section, coil and clip up the hair you’re not working on ensures that the rest of your hair stays out of the way,” LaFond explains. Dividing the sections so they’re the same width as the brush you’re using will also allow you to completely dry one section at a time with more ease. An electric blowdry brush can make your life a lot easier since it does double-duty and frees up your hands. However, if you’re using a standard brush, consider how long it’s been lying around. “Women are always using brushes that they’ve had forever! If the bristles are bent or broken they’re going to damage your hair. Throw those old brushes out and invest in new ones that you’re able to glide through your hair easily. Sometimes it’s not your hair that is tangled; sometimes it’s the brush!”

Next, dry each section one at a time, working from top to bottom so you’re never putting wet hair on top of dried hair. “It’s important to start at the root first. It’s the area that is the toughest to smooth out, especially if it’s starting to dry on its own,” says LaFond. Once you’ve worked the root from all angles and you’re satisfied with the hair’s consistency, move to the end of the section, finishing with the middle (which tends to dry last). “Move like how you would brush your hair if it were dry. You can’t take a brush from the root and just move it all the way down. You have to start at the ends and work your way up to get those coils out and get it smooth.”

To get the most out of your completed blowout, smooth your strands with a few drops of hydrating hair oil. When you go to bed, wrap your hair into one large coil on the top of your head and keep it protected by covering it with a silk scarf. Be sure to wear a tight and secure shower cap to lock out humidity while you shower. Heading to the gym? LaFond suggests preventative measures: apply a dry shampoo to your roots and along your hairline, then cover with a sweatband to help absorb as much moisture as possible.

Categories
Fitness

Olympic Downhill Skiers Travel Faster Than the Interstate, and I Feel Unwell

PYEONGCHANG, SOUTH KOREA -FEBRUARY 22:   Mikaela Shiffrin #19 of the United States in action during the Alpine Skiing - Ladies' Alpine Combined Downhill at Jeongseon Alpine Centre on February 22, 2018 in PyeongChang, South Korea.  (Photo by Tim Clayton/Corbis via Getty Images)

Watch even a few minutes of downhill skiing, and it will probably come as no surprise that downhill is the fastest of the Olympic alpine skiing events. In this discipline, athletes try to clock the fastest time possible by racing down a steep slope in a tucked position, dodging gates, risers, and the mountain’s rigid terrain. Sounds pretty impressive, right? I thought so, too — and then I learned just how fast these speed demons actually fly.

According to the official Olympic website, downhill skiers reach speeds of about 80 mph, though they can travel up to 100 mph depending on the course. However, they don’t always maintain that speed throughout the run. Similar to other alpine skiing events, turns and even the condition of the slope can affect a skier’s momentum. Despite all of this, downhill still remains the fastest of the skiing disciplines. For reference, athletes who compete in giant slalom typically reach speeds around 50 mph, while slalom skiers clock in around 43 mph.

While downhill may be one of the most basic courses in alpine skiing, it’s also one of the most dangerous. The risers (or small hills) and vertical drop on the course help boost an athlete’s speed. However, turning too soon or too quickly — or worse, losing their balance — can cost a skier a spot on the podium or, in more serious cases, lead to an injury. To prevent the latter, downhill skiers try to remain in a tucked position throughout their run. This not only helps with balance but also makes them more aerodynamic, increasing their speed.

The level of athleticism and speed on display in downhill skiing always makes it one of the most anticipated events of the Winter Games. Be sure to tune in when the 2022 Winter Olympics in Beijing kick off on Friday, Feb. 4.

Categories
Culture

Why Shawn Mendes and Camila Cabello Broke Up: ‘It Was Time to End Things’

Shawn Mendes and Camila Cabello confirmed their breakup last night amid split rumors, but the two singers did not offer any insight into why they ended their two-year romance. Now, a source is giving a little background to Entertainment Tonight about what led them to decide it’s better to not date anymore.

It was both of them deciding it just didn’t work anymore, the source said: “Shawn and Camila’s breakup was mutual. They realized they are in totally different places in their lives at this point, and it was time to end things. They’re both sad about the split, but doing their best to take care of themselves, stay busy and surround themselves by loved ones.”

Mendes is 23, while Cabello is 24.

shawn mendes and camila cabello in new york city on july 23, 2021

Shawn Mendes and Camila Cabello in New York City on July 23, 2021

MEGAGetty Images

In identical statements posted to their Instagram Stories, Cabello and Mendes stressed that they intended to remain best friends. They wrote:

Hey guys, we’ve decided to end our romantic relationship but our love for one another as humans is stronger than ever ❤️

We started our relationship as best friends and will continue to be best friends. We so appreciate your support from the beginning and moving forward ❤️❤️❤️

Camila and Shawn

Cabello has since shared some Instagram Stories of how she’s spending her time healing, while Mendes has kept his activities off his Instagram:

camila cabello's post breakup instagram stories

Instagram

camila cabello's post breakup instagram stories

Instagram

Mendes did reveal the two argued regularly in their romantic relationship though back in August, but things were still “really good” then.

“We definitely fight, and we get in like the worst little arguments, but like, I think that we definitely are pretty good at picking up on when it’s just ego talking,” Mendes told SiriusXM’s The Morning Mash Up. “And we usually like, call each other out. It’s we have a really honest and open relationship, but, but yeah, no, we definitely fight. I think like, especially like, I think the longer the relationship goes, it’s like the easier it seems to be to fight. So, yeah, it’s definitely not that holding hands all the time, but we’re really good with each other. It never gets bad. It’s always like a little fight.”

This content is created and maintained by a third party, and imported onto this page to help users provide their email addresses. You may be able to find more information about this and similar content at piano.io

Categories
Beauty

Iman is Using Fragrance to Heal After The Loss of David Bowie

Love Memoir

IMAN
hsn.com

$84.95

In January 2020, just before, well, everything, first-name-only model Iman, traveled to the home she shared with her late musical legend husband David Bowie in upstate New York. A home she had not visited for more than just a weekend since his passing in 2016. “I came for what was intended to be a weekend and, of course, ended up staying for the whole year,” explains Iman to ELLE.com.

“I was by myself and all of a sudden grief knocked on my door, my grief that I thought I processed but I had not. I also have a teenager who lost her father so I was helping her process her grief and ultimately ignored my own.” Isolated in the home for the year, the feelings of loss came rushing back. “Every memory and every corner of the house reminds me of my husband,” she adds.

As she processed her grief, Iman began to utilize the isolation period to heal. “Memories are not supposed to be something we avoid because the person is no longer with us, it is what is supposed to sustain us because it is what we remember,” she says almost two years since first beginning her healing process. “The memories you had, you [should] rejoice in that. That’s how it has been for me.”

Iman is now taking the memory of her husband and channeling it through our strongest sense: smell. Love Memoir, the new fragrance from Iman, has both inspiration and a rich, layered scent. It combines notes of vetiver, bergamot, black currant, and vanilla to deliver a sexy, smoky, almost oud adjacent scent.

This fragrance launch is a clear divergence from where she saw the processing of her grief going. “Fragrance was not in the story, it was not even a byline,” she says. “I never ever thought of creating a fragrance and the reason being I always thought it was so private.” But these past five years, Iman has been wearing her husband’s fragrance so she could feel closer to him “in scent and in my heart all of the time.”

Every single aspect of Love Memoir is considered and intentional to honor David Bowie. Bowie loved to paint, Iman’s daughter also loves to paint, and Iman took up painting watercolors of the sunsets at their upstate home. The sunsets inspired the amber-hued glass used for the fragrance bottle and her watercolors inspired the box that the bottle comes packaged in. The box is lined with Iman’s musings on memories and love.

The bottle is shaped after the stacking rocks and stones Iman began collecting around her upstate property, stones she researched known as Cairns were used at memorial sites and as markers for hikers who have lost their way.

Iman noted that everything inside the bottle represents their memories and moments of love. The scent profile is inspired by David’s favorite scent of vetiver. At the beginning of their romance, they spent a lot of time in Italy on the Amalfi coast, Umbria, Tuscany, and were married in Florence. The notes of bergamot and black currant pay homage to the romantic times spent in that region.

iman and david bowie during 2005 cfda fashion awards   inside arrivals at new york public library in new york city, new york, united states photo by dimitrios kambouriswireimage

Dimitrios Kambouris

In an oversaturated beauty market it’s refreshing to see something inspired by something so pure— true love. The fragrance also serves as a reminder of how deeply personal scent can be. When asked if there was any pressure she put on herself while making such a deeply personal product, the model reiterated that she herself was surprised to have created a fragrance, but through her healing channeled her love to this latest project. “Would I make another fragrance?” she adds. “I really do not know.”

As for what she wants wearers of the perfume to feel, Iman explains in the content of her own healing: “One thing I have found out is that love is truly an individual relationship we experience and also universal. Grief is individual but it’s also universal. Memories are also individual but also universal. We all experience them. At the end of the day, that is what sustains us. Death is inevitable but what is eternal and never ever dies is love and memories. I would wish this scent evokes their own memories, especially if they are my age and older. For the young people, I pray to God they get a love experience as I’ve had. My daughter always says to me,’ I hope that I find someone to love me the way dad loved you.’”

Love Memoir is currently available on pre-order exclusively on HSN.com for $84.95.

This content is created and maintained by a third party, and imported onto this page to help users provide their email addresses. You may be able to find more information about this and similar content at piano.io

Categories
Women's Fashion

Emily in Paris Season Two Promises Jogging Appropriate Clothing

Photography courtesy of Netflix

Expect more luxe locations, handsome frenchmen and decadent looks.

I’ll just come out and say it: The fashion from the first season of Emily in Paris was a disappointment.

As one of 2020’s most anticipated new releases, it had all the makings to fill the Upper East Side-sized hole that Gossip Girl left in its wake. Legendary costume designer and Sex and The City fairy godmother Patricia Field, check! Audrey Hepburn look-alike and rising style icon Lily Collins, check! A glamorous and overly idealized location, check! But what fans got instead was a mismatch of cliché storylines, a white-washed cast, a parade of French stereotypes, unrealistic social media expectations and some extremely odd outfit choices. I mean, does anyone jog in a Chanel eyelet blouse?!

But despite the public displays of disdain, everyone, and I do mean everyone, couldn’t seem to turn away. It was Netflix’s most popular comedy series last year, with 58 million households streaming it in its first 28 days, and the sheer volume of posts, memes and articles that it spawned is nothing if not admirable. So with all this publicity, it came as no surprise that a season two was announced only a few weeks after its initial release.

While photos have been slowly trickling in over the past few months, the first trailer for Emily in Paris season two was released earlier today and has already racked up hundreds of thousands of views. So what’s next for the American expat? It appears more Gabriel drama, perhaps a new love interest, a Roman Holiday-esque Vespa and fancier designer clothing. The level of style has yet to be determined — I am happy to report that she has finally found some jogging-appropriate attire — but judging from the glimpses we’ve seen, I’m remaining slightly optimistic. Feel free to assess for yourself as all the on-set fashion we’ve spotted so far is listed below.

Categories
Life & Love

Carli Lloyd Did It Her Way

If Carli Lloyd’s career as a professional athlete could be summed up by one image, it might be the one that went viral during the Tokyo Olympics: Lloyd, on the field, alone, running wind sprints in the 93 degree heat.

The U.S. Women’s National Team had just suffered a crushing defeat to Canada and after four Olympics, four World Cups, and 17 relentless years as a professional soccer player who always felt like she had something to prove, Lloyd would not be going home with gold. “I knew in that moment, which no one else knew yet, I would never compete in another major tournament with this team,” she says.

Lloyd allowed herself to feel the weight of the loss only briefly. The bronze medal game was in two days—there was work to do.

It’s the “outwork everyone” mentality that’s made Lloyd a legend on a team of legends like Mia Hamm, Brandi Chastain, Abby Wambach, Alex Morgan, and Megan Rapinoe, who have all also become activists in their own right in the fight for women’s equality. Lloyd was first and foremost always there to work, developing a reputation as the kind of player who never compromised, addicted to the grind no matter the cost. She sacrificed time, her body, and relationships. “I never skipped a step. I never took a shortcut. I chipped away little by little every single day and built myself into the best possible machine I could build,” she says. She thrived with an “industrial-sized” chip on her shoulder. She was, as they say, not here to make friends.

carli lloyd, tokyo olympics

Lloyd’s teammates congratulate her for scoring a goal in the bronze medal match at the Tokyo Olympics.

JEFF PACHOUDGetty Images

But the same relentless pursuit of excellence that sometimes made her clash with players and coaches (Lloyd stood with her friend Hope Solo in 2007 when she was benched by the team for disparaging another goalie, even when Lloyd thought she might lose her own place on the roster because of it) also made her a reluctant icon. She played in 316 games and scored 134 goals. She won three Olympic medals and two World Cup championships. She was named FIFA World Player of the Year—twice. And she made sports history when she became the second player ever to score a hat trick (that’s three goals) in a World Cup Final. (The first, a male player, did it in 120 minutes of game time—Lloyd only needed 16.)

As her playing career comes to an end—just as the USWNT’s fight for equal pay comes to a head and the professional league she’s helped build faces a reckoning over a toxic coaching culture—Lloyd spoke to ELLE.com about being misunderstood, the lessons she’s learned on and off the field, and what she’s fighting for now.

You’ve made no secret of the fact that your goal was always to be the best soccer player, not the most popular girl on the team or the one who gets the most media attention. You’ve always been about the game. How did you navigate that on a team that has come to stand for so much more than soccer?

I’ve always just wanted my playing to do the talking. I never wanted to feel as if I had to dress a certain way or put on makeup and look pretty in order to get the attention of others or sponsors. I never wavered. There were some tough moments, but in the end, whether people have liked me or not, I think a lot of people respect the fact that I did it my way. It really makes you strong as a person to stick to your beliefs in a world where I feel like you can get pulled in so many directions.

This content is imported from Twitter. You may be able to find the same content in another format, or you may be able to find more information, at their web site.

When you walked off the field for the final time as a member of the U.S. Women’s National Team, you took off your iconic #10 Lloyd jersey to reveal a jersey with the name Hollins, your married name. What did that moment mean to you?

I had been going through that moment in my mind and what I wanted to do. Mia [Hamm] played the second half with her married name on the back of her jersey when she retired, but I’ve always wanted to be different—I’ve always done things my way. No one knew except for our equipment guy who had to print a second jersey to hang in my locker.

I’ll always be Lloyd playing on the field, but it was a way to honor my husband by walking off the field and making a gesture that this is about him and I. This is our next chapter together. He sacrificed so much, I’ve sacrificed so much. We have not had a whole lot of time together during the course of my career, but he has been the most supportive husband I could have ever asked for. It was just simply a moment where I could finally honor him and all that he’s done for me.

As you start to think about this next chapter, your first post-retirement partnership is with Agile Therapeutics, which is a contraceptive company. Why was supporting reproductive health at the top of your priority list?

Every partnership and sponsorship that I get involved with has to align with me as a person; this is a natural fit for this next chapter in my life. Obviously I’m shifting gears, and I think I’m eventually going to start a family. It’s about being able to have a choice.

Women have always had to make choices, it’s like either your career or a family. I chose not to have a kid while playing. I think you can have both but we’ve been taught that we can’t. I think it’s really important that I am partnering with companies who provide options for women’s health.

The NWSL is facing a reckoning after allegations of sexual misconduct and an abusive coaching culture have surfaced. What’s been your experience?

I’m shocked like everybody else. I had no idea. I was one of the first that read the article. Very, very disturbing, very sad. For Sinead [Farrelly] and Mana [Shim] coming out and putting themselves out there, I commend them. It was hard enough going through the situation at the time, I imagine, and then to bring it back up definitely stirs a lot of emotions.

A situation like this has put the NWSL in a position to hit the reset button, and things need to be better. All the players in the league deserve to be treated better. I really feel that this is going to be a positive change moving forward. I think it’s just a huge learning experience.

You’ve very much defined yourself by grit and hard work. Always the underdog, always with something to prove, always outworking everybody. Will you carry that mentality with you now that you’re retiring?

I’ve been telling a few people this: Retiring from being a professional athlete creates a void. There’s nothing that’s ever going to fill what we do. Playing in front of fans in a packed stadium —you don’t get that feeling anywhere else. And I’m okay with that. I’m okay stepping away from the game knowing that I’m not ever going to get that feeling again. I think where athletes go wrong in retirement is they try to seek to fill that void but I have so many other things that I’m about besides just soccer. I’ll probably pick up some golf, do some skiing.

“In the end, whether people have liked me or not, I think a lot of people respect the fact that I did it my way.”

You’ve talked a lot about feeling misunderstood as a player, even being made to feel not worthy at certain times. In this moment, as everybody’s reflecting on your career and all these tributes are pouring out, do you finally feel understood?

I do. I feel like my entire 17-year career, I was in quicksand trying to climb to the top. It did feel as if people didn’t quite understand what I was about as a person and as a player, and didn’t really see what I brought to the field. As I’ve wrapped up these last couple of months, the amount of support, love and messages—I’m sort of in a confused state because I’m like, “Where is this all coming from?”

For so long, I just felt like I had to constantly prove people wrong and prove my worth within this team. And it’s almost as if the world has now seen it.

This interview has been edited for clarity and length.

This content is created and maintained by a third party, and imported onto this page to help users provide their email addresses. You may be able to find more information about this and similar content at piano.io

Categories
Fitness

Selena Gomez Introduces Her Latest Venture: Wondermind, an “Ecosystem For Mental Fitness”

WESTWOOD, CALIFORNIA - JANUARY 11: Selena Gomez attends the premiere of Universal Pictures' Image Source: Getty / Axelle / Bauer-Griffin

Selena Gomez is turning her years of mental health advocacy into something more tenable. The star announced on Nov. 18 the forthcoming launch of Wondermind, a mental health company she’ll head with her mom, Mandy Teefey, and media entrepreneur Daniella Pierson, who previously founded The Newsette. Wondermind was described in a press release as a platform that “destigmatizes and democratizes mental health,” and Teefey said, “We hope to be the one stop shop for all mental fitness and conversation.”

“We hope to be the one stop shop for all mental fitness.”

So, what exactly will the “ecosystem for mental fitness” entail? The website will serve as the main hub with daily content, interviews with experts, and other tools and resources. There’ll also be a weekly podcast featuring a variety of guests, including therapists and celebrities who are known for their mental health advocacy. “We’ll talk to prominent psychiatrists and therapists who charge a thousand dollars an hour, and share their resources. We’ll also interview celebrities and ask them questions most people don’t ask,” Pierson said in an interview with Entrepreneur. “We want to be that place where people feel comfortable to talk about the things under the hood.”

Image Source: Cara Robbins

The eventual goal is to expand Wondermind into a production company that also releases books, exercise journals, and streaming content. Its founders have experience in that capacity, as Teefey was an executive producer on 13 Reasons Why along with Gomez. “Something I’ve always tried to do in my career is make sure I lend my voice to places where it matters,” Gomez told Entrepreneur. “And I have to give my mom credit for that because she taught me everything.”

The platform is personal for all three founders: Pierson has an obsessive compulsive disorder diagnosis; Teefey is open about her experience with anxiety, ADHD, and unpacking childhood trauma; and Gomez has spoken publicly about dealing with anxiety and depression. In an interview with Miley Cyrus last year, Gomez also shared her recent bipolar disorder diagnosis. “Every person has their own mental health journey,” Gomez said in the Wondermind press release. “If we ignore them, pretty them up or hide them from the world, it doesn’t change that they are very, very real.”

Wondermind is expected to launch in February 2022.

Categories
Culture

Meghan Markle on Her Secret Halloween Date With Prince Harry and What Lili and Archie Dressed as This Year

Meghan Markle showed the lighter, more personal side of her life during her interview with Ellen DeGeneres that’s airing today. In a new clip that came out ahead of the broadcast, the Duchess of Sussex spoke about a secret Halloween date she had with Prince Harry right before her relationship with him became public and what her children, Archie and Lili, were for Halloween this year. She and Harry spent Halloween with DeGeneres—a remark that reveals how much of a friendship the two have off-screen.

Meghan explained, “Yes, [we had to really keep our relationship quiet when we were dating.] We did [go to a Halloween party together]. He came to see me in Toronto, and our friends and his cousin Eugenie and now her husband, Jack, they came as well, and the four of us snuck out in Halloween costumes to just have one fun night on the town before it was out in the world that we were a couple. No, [the people at the party didn’t know it was us]. It was a post-apocalyptic theme so we had all of this very bizarre costuming on, and we were able to just sort of have one final fun night out.”

Of her Halloween this year, Meghan revealed they had a night in at their Montecito home. “We were home and we saw you guys [Ellen DeGeneres and her wife Portia de Rossi], which was great, but we wanted to do something fun for the kids, and then the kids were just not into it at all. Archie was a dinosaur for maybe five minutes.”

“Not even five minutes,” DeGeneres said.

“It was not even five minutes,” Meghan agreed.

“Finally Harry talked him into putting the head on, but Lili was a skunk,” DeGeneres revealed.

“She was a little skunk,” Meghan confirmed.

“It was so cute,” DeGeneres said.

“I know, like Flower from Bambi,” Meghan said.

The Duchess also spoke about her children’s book The Bench and Harry’s impact on the project. Watch both clips from the interview below:

This content is imported from YouTube. You may be able to find the same content in another format, or you may be able to find more information, at their web site.

This content is imported from YouTube. You may be able to find the same content in another format, or you may be able to find more information, at their web site.

This content is created and maintained by a third party, and imported onto this page to help users provide their email addresses. You may be able to find more information about this and similar content at piano.io

Categories
Women's Fashion

Shop Meghan Markle’s Minimal Ellen Show Look

Photography by Facundo Arrizabalaga – Pool/Getty Images

The Duchess of Sussex wore a feminine Oscar de la Renta blouse.

Meghan Markle will make an appearance on today’s episode of The Ellen Show for what we expect to be a relatively tame interview after her high-profile sit down with Oprah Winfrey in March — but that doesn’t mean we won’t tune in!

In a preview released by DeGeneres to Twitter, the Duchess of Sussex reflects on her early trips to the Warner Bros. lot for auditions.

“The security guards would always say, ‘Break a leg! We hope you get it!’” she recalled. “So, driving today was very different.

“I had this very old Ford Explorer Sport, and at a certain point the key stopped working on the driver’s side, so you couldn’t get yourself in through the door. So, after auditions I would park at the back of the parking lot and I would open the back of the trunk and climb in and pull it shut behind me and crawl over all my seats to get out. That’s how I would come to and fro.”

It’s a cute anecdote, but can we pause to appreciate her look?

The feminine, white-hued Oscar de la Renta blouse featured a rounded neckline, cut-out floral detailing, long puff sleeves and a straight hem. Paired with black pants and black heels, the minimal but effortlessly chic ensemble was on brand for Markle.

Since stepping back as members of the royal family, Prince Harry and Meghan have been busy with Archwell, the organization they co-founded. The pair also recently signed a major deal with Netflix, and Meghan’s children’s book The Bench hit No. 1 on The New York Times’ best seller list. To top it all off, Harry and Meghan welcomed their daughter, Lilibet Diana, in June.

In her conversation with Ellen DeGeneres, Meghan Markle is expected to discuss the book and dish on her experience of growing up and returning to California.

Until then, if you want to cop her style (who doesn’t?), we’ve curated a selection of look-alike blouses sure to fit nicely into your wardrobe rotation.

Categories
Fitness

Should You Mix and Match COVID Vaccines and Boosters? Here’s What We Know

Young woman getting COVID vaccine booster

With COVID-19 booster doses now available from Pfizer, Moderna, and Johnson & Johnson — and even more Americans becoming eligible soon — you may be wondering which brand you should get when it’s time to book an appointment. Should you stick with the shot you had originally, or choose to get a different brand for the booster?

In an update to its COVID vaccination guidelines last month, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) declared it safe to mix and match vaccines and boosters. “Any of the COVID-19 vaccines can be used for booster vaccination, regardless of the vaccine product used for primary vaccination,” the agency said. “When a heterologous or ‘mix and match’ booster dose is administered, the eligible population and dosing intervals are those of the vaccine used for primary vaccination.” The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) also approved mixing the shots.

In a recent study, no severe adverse reactions were reported when mixing and matching COVID boosters. However, as The Washington Post pointed out, the research is still early and data is limited. As for efficacy, no combination of brands has been proven to be the most potent yet, though research suggests that those who received the Johnson & Johnson vaccine may benefit most from getting a Moderna or Pfizer booster. Ultimately, experts recommend discussing the boosters with your doctor, who can help you make a decision based on your medical history. Beyond that, your choice in a booster shot may come down to what’s most convenient.

“Part of the beauty of the mix and match is it enables people no matter where they are — rural or in the city — to have a choice,” Kirsten E. Lyke, MD, one of the researchers who presented early findings to the FDA vaccine panel, told The New York Times. “They’re all safe, they’re all going to give you a boost, and they’re all going to protect you against severe disease and death.”

People who received the Moderna or Pfizer vaccines may be eligible for a booster shot six months after receiving their last dose. Currently the recommendation is for people over the age of 65, as well as those between the ages of 18 and 64 who have underlying conditions or work in high-risk jobs. People who received the Johnson & Johnson vaccine are eligible two months after their initial vaccine, as long as they’re 18 or older. However, the science is evolving, and the vaccine recommendations most certainly will as well. You can stay up to date on the CDC website.

Categories
Culture

Here’s When Every Episode Of The Sex Lives of College Girls Will Drop on HBO Max

As streaming services wrestle to nail down which episode rollout strategy will prove most fruitful, HBO Max has taken the “spaghetti at the wall” approach, cutting some series into mini half-seasons or, as is the case with The Sex Lives of College Girls, dicing up the show into seemingly arbitrary chunks.

This strategy might smooth over the debate between binge-watchers and appointment-television devotees, but actual viewers might struggle to piece together when, precisely, their new favorite Mindy Kaling comedy will air. The series stars Pauline Chalamet, Amrit Kaur, Reneé Rapp, and Alyah Chanelle Scott as freshman-year roommates randomly assigned to a dorm at the fictional Essex College, where they juggle French classes and soccer practices with their budding—or, in Kaur’s character’s case, insatiable—libidos. Despite its too-literal title, the series is a charming, even insightful look into the chaotic world of higher education, in which ever-shuffling priorities stir up a heady brew. The first two episodes lands on HBO Max in mid-November, with the remaining episodes dropping in bites through early December. Here’s when to watch.

  • Episode 1, “Welcome To Essex,” streaming November 18
  • Episode 2, “Naked Party,” streaming November 18
  • Episode 3, “Le Tuteur,” streaming November 25
  • Episode 4, “Kappa,” streaming November 25
  • Episode 5, “That Comment Tho,” streaming November 25
  • Episode 6 streaming December 2
  • Episode 7 streaming December 2
  • Episode 8 streaming December 2
  • Episode 9 streaming December 9
  • Episode 10 streaming December 9

    To tune in, all you need is a subscription to HBO Max, which you can purchase ad-free for $14.99 a month or with ads for $9.99.

    This post will be updated.

    This content is created and maintained by a third party, and imported onto this page to help users provide their email addresses. You may be able to find more information about this and similar content at piano.io