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Fashion Show – Alexander McQueen: Spring 2010 Ready-to-Wear

Runway, backstage, and front-row footage from the Paris show. Watch the Alexander McQueen Spring 2010 ready-to-wear fashion show footage from Style.com. Want more? Visit Style.com for more runway shows, fashion trends, shopping guides, and news about models and designers.

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Fashion Show – Alexander McQueen: Spring 2010 Ready-to-Wear

Starring: Alexander McQueen

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Video

Melissa McCarthy Takes a Lie Detector Test | Vanity Fair

Melissa McCarthy takes a lie detector test for Vanity Fair. Who’s the funniest person she’s ever met? Is political correctness killing comedy? Does she believe in the Illuminati? Find out all that and more and watch Melissa take a polygraph exam. Melissa McCarthy stars in “Life of the Party,” out in theaters May 11th.

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Arts and entertainment, business and media, politics, and world affairs—Vanity Fair’s features and exclusive videos capture the people, places, and ideas that define modern culture.

Melissa McCarthy Takes a Lie Detector Test | Vanity Fair

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Women's Fashion

Meet Victoria Kakuktinniq, the Canadian Inuk designer honouring the legacy of Inuit women and Canada’s North

Kakuktinniq spearheads Project Atigi’s third installation inspired by her people, her land and her roots

Canadian lifestyle brand, Canada Goose, has been focused on uniting sustainability and values-based initiatives to “keep the planet cold and the people on it warm” through their HUMANATURE platform for a few years now. Rooted in HUMANATURE, Project Atigi—a collaborative undertaking aptly named with the Inuktitut word for parka—is back for the third year in a row. 2022’s installation of Project Atigi is especially exciting with the launch of the first-ever limited-edition women’s capsule created in collaboration with Canadian-Inuk designer, Victoria Kakuktinniq, honouring the legacy and traditions of Inuit design in Canada’s North.

This collection features three limited-edition outerwear styles—the Heavyweight Parka, Lightweight Down and Wind Jacket. Kakuktinniq drew inspiration from her past and present experiences, her community, and the land she calls home—from the Northern Lights and the snow covering the Tundra to the gold shimmer along the water in the spring.

We sat with Kakuktinniq to learn about her journey into fashion and how she’s keeping the traditions of the North alive.

You are an Inuk designer who has honoured the legacy of Inuit women in so much of your work. Now you’re working on the first-ever limited-edition women’s capsule for Project Atigi. How important is this moment for you, and how does it feel to see it all come to life?

To be honest, it feels a bit surreal. To be chosen among so many incredible Inuit seamstresses is such an honour. To me, it’s about what this moment represents: It shows the world that we Inuit can do anything and that we are resilient. Our history and traditions are not lost. They are ever-evolving. We are bringing forward a new generation of activism through fashion that showcases the importance of traditional techniques and fabrics in winter wear for warmth.

On that note, what does getting your designs on this global stage and this project mean to you?

This is such an empowering project for myself, my community and other Inuit women. Sewing traditional garments, a skill passed down from generation to generation, is an integral part of life in the North, especially for Inuit. We are artists, and we tell our stories through our products. It’s more than just our livelihood, it’s a way of life.

Bringing my designs to the global stage is essential because it celebrates, educates and inspires. I’m grateful for this opportunity, platform, and to be a voice for my culture and to give back in such a profound way.

When did you realize that you wanted to take these traditions further and be a designer?

I knew from a young age that I wanted to develop my sewing skills to preserve traditional techniques and materials. I was always so inspired by the line of strong Inuit women I was raised by. My mother, grandmother and sister all used their traditional sewing knowledge to handmake beautiful traditional garments for our family to help keep us warm. My grandmother, Lizzie Ittinuar, is a well-known seamstress who creates beautiful traditional beaded amautiit, among other traditional clothing, that can take up to a year to complete. Her hard work and dedication truly inspired me.

You’ve beautifully fused the traditional Inuit sewing and design techniques that you learned from elders in Iqaluit with your experience studying fashion at MC College in Winnipeg. How have your experiences in both life and as a designer contributed to your conceptualizing and executing this collection?

I have always really enjoyed fashion and artistic expression through fashion. But, living somewhere remote can somewhat isolate you from opportunities to be fashion-forward. Growing up in Rankin, Inlet—a remote northern Arctic community—traditional fabrics, furs and sewing styles are used in most of the clothes people wear on the land to keep them warm. So I spent a lot of my time on the land thinking about how I could innovate the classic parka designs, colours and fabrics to be ready to wear for the city and the land.

So it would be safe to say that your upbringing and roots in Kangiqliniq, Nunavut, are reflected in elements of this collection.

My upbringing has definitely inspired my collections. My most recent collection (pre-pandemic) was showcased at NYFW and was inspired by my grandmother’s captivating traditional beaded amautiit and arctic landscapes. I used thick Melton wool, leather, and lots of beadwork to honour my grandmother in that collection.

Similarly, my collection with Canada Goose is also inspired by my upbringing and tells my story in many different ways. Like my personal collections, the colour palette mirrors the Northern Lights—a tribute to the night sky from my hometown of Rankin Inlet—layered in through choiceful colour blocking, a detail I often include in my designs. The tattoo trim is not only my story but the story of my culture and heritage. Inuit have a long history of traditional tattooing, and these designs and their meanings vary between people and communities. This specific design represents memorable events in my life, my strength and is a tribute to my parents and daughter.

What has the design process been like working with a heritage brand like Canada Goose?

This has been such a special collaboration for me. Canada Goose initially reached out for their first Project Atigi in 2018, but I had my store in Iqaluit and couldn’t dedicate the right amount of time to the project. We stayed in touch, and when they reached back out for this third collection, I knew I had to take it.

I’ve always wanted to be a part of this project because it was developed to create social entrepreneurship opportunities for Inuit designers by leveraging Canada Goose’s global platform and showcasing Inuit craftsmanship and unique designs. In addition, all the proceeds will go to the Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami (ITK), a national organization that advocates for the rights and interests of Inuit in Canada. Project Atigi really does celebrate my heritage, my community and my craft. It’s so inspiring and motivating.

The design process for this collection has taken about a year and a half. The process itself is a source of inspiration for me and allowed me to bind my creativity, ideas and background to design beautiful pieces that bring my stories to life.

If you had to choose, which piece is your favourite one from this collection and why?

My favourite item from the collection is the Kakuktinniq Parka. It follows a traditional silhouette and style that is my signature. I started my career making Parkas, so this piece’s cut, colour, and trim accents resonate with me. I feel very proud and excited about this piece.

What’s next? What are you looking most forward to once this collection launches?

My collection with Canada Goose launches at the end of January! I’ve spent the last year and a half working with the brand and am so excited to see it finally all come together and launch globally. It’s such an empowering project for myself, my community, and other Inuit women. I’m honoured to bring my designs and my culture to the world in such an impactful way.

Beyond the collaboration, I want to expand Victoria’s Arctic Fashion, my business. I am passionate and proud of the company I’ve built, so I want to expand my shop and hire more designers to produce more products and distribute my creations widely. There are so many places I want to take my brand, and I think in 2022, you will see us working to achieve these goals.

What advice do you have for younger generation designers?

Lean on your community. Know that who you are and where you come from. Know that how you were raised is your strength, not your weakness. Be proud, be proud to be Inuk, know what it means to live on the land, and have the skills of your ancestors running through you in everything you do. Do not let the past failings of our Government or the traumas of our past define your future. Take whatever inspires you and build upon it, and work within the community to support and build capacity in the things you are passionate about. This is how the future can be bright.

Click here to explore Victoria Kakuktinniq’s collection with Project Atigi.

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Fitness

Folks, We’ve Got a New Milk: Potato

I know that you read this headline and probably laughed. “Potato milk? Isn’t that just vodka?” you thought to yourself. You thought whole milk was making a comeback. You thought — silly you! — that we’d collectively reached a saturation point on alternative milks.

Folks, it’s 2022, and we have yet to reach that limit. At the risk of referencing “Mean Girls,” I’m starting to think it doesn’t exist. Years after the arrival of nut milks (Almond! Cashew!) and amid the ongoing dominance of oat milk, a new hero has risen. Potato milk isn’t just coming. It’s already here.

Well, technically it’s in the United Kingdom and Sweden. At least, those are the only countries where you can buy Dug, the only commercially available potato milk on the market. Shipping outside of the UK is currently suspended, in fact, but we’re going to bet that’s temporary, based on how big plant-based milks are right now in the US right now. (Making up 10 percent of the total milk market!) What’s the next big thing? What unexpected yet somehow-just-works alternative milk will we see next? Potato. Potato milk is the answer. It always has been.

And the more I think about it, the less surprised I am. I mean, almond milk sounded weird when you first heard about it. Pea milk still sounds strange, but that’s because peas are gross. The point is, we’re long past the rigid definition of milk as a liquid that’s only produced by organisms with nipples and mammary glands, if you’ll excuse the sudden anatomical terminology. And frankly, you’d be hard-pressed to find a more versatile food than a potato. This is not a vegetable I would bet against in any context. We mash them, we fry them, we bake them, we crisp them up into crunchy little salt shards (chips, I’m talking about chips). Now we milk them. Honestly, I can see it. It makes sense to me.

Dug, for what it’s worth, describes itself as a “delicious, creamy and vegan-friendly plant-based drink.” It also bills itself as being 75 percent more climate-friendly than cow’s milk, along with various other sustainability benefits; potatoes require 56 times less water than almonds and are twice as efficient as oats in terms of land use. It’s happening, isn’t it? You’re coming around to potato milk. Let me quickly reference another meme, because look at us. Who would’ve thought? Not me.

Of course, I hate to say it, but the sustainability and apparent health benefits of potato milk just aren’t going to work if the taste isn’t there. I vehemently do not want my glass of milk to taste like potatoes. I can’t stress enough how much I don’t want that. Now, according to the marketing manager of Dug’s umbrella company, this milk has a “very balanced taste” due to the potato’s naturally “neutral taste profile,” but I do think this is an opinion we’re each going to have to form for ourselves.

Look, you can question it. You can fight it. But I have to be honest with you, I think potato milk is happening. Personally, my plan is to buy the first carton of it that I see in my grocery store, once it finally hits the US. I was late on almond milk and oat milk, and let me tell you, I won’t let the alternative milk market leave me behind again. I’m kidding, but I’m also not. I’ve fully talked myself into potato milk. Pour me a glass of Dug, and let’s do this.

Categories
Culture

Project Runway Season 19, Episode 14 Recap: The Finale

Christian Siriano is pouring himself an extra glass of champagne tonight—and not only because he somehow survived another season hosting Project Runway. He deserves a second serving as thanks for his mid-season premonition, forecasting how tonight’s momentous finale might wrap. But, really, couldn’t we all see it coming?

Tonight’s episode begins as our remaining designers—Shantall, Coral, Chasity and Kristina—arrive in New York City to present their 10-piece collections for New York Fashion Week. A few months prior, Christian jetted around the country to visit each hopeful as they prepared their collections, starting with Shantall in Miami. As we watch, she welcomes him to her studio in a chic white suit, already embodying the accomplished businesswoman, and her collection is a sophisticate’s urban dream: blacks, whites, reds, yellows, all knitted together with inspirations from the Mexican mythological quetzalcóatl and the art deco architecture of southern Florida.

That isn’t to say Christian has no critiques. In fact, he wants her to ditch her pale yellow hues entirely, and rather than work with a woven print, he suggests she physically criss-cross the fabric, so as to display her skill and precision. A little panicked, she struggles to stifle laughter: “I’m basically starting from scratch.” But Christian stresses the issue isn’t the design; it’s the execution. “If she gets there, the collection is insane.”

At Chasity’s home in Houston, he dons his sorority-cum-couture “cowboy outfit”—white crocodile boots and a vest—to sort out why she’s completed so few of her looks so far. As it stands, she only has a mish-mash of black and purple ruffles to show him, and what does exist is missing a cohesive narrative. As Christian restrains himself from flirting with the designer’s fiancé—“look at this gorgeous person,” he notes to no one in particular—he helps her settle on a theme for her pieces: the black sheep who blossoms.

In Los Angeles, he drops by to visit Coral, whose airy workspace is stuffed, unsurprisingly, with macrame: macrame planters, macrame citrus bags, macrame dresses. Her collection, influenced by the embroidery of indigenous peoples in Mexico, spurs Christian’s jealousy: “I’m from Maryland. What do I got? Blue crabs?” As she gives him a literal peek behind the curtain, he gasps at her works in progress; so much is already finished! Still, there’s a twinge of concern in his voice as he takes in all that macrame. Surely she has some ideas that can spark shock and awe, something a bit more high-fashion?

Finally, he lands in Queens to see “crazy-cool artist” Kristina. “Look at me, I’m in Queens!” he cries, as if such a trip belongs in an absurdist fantasy novel, not in his actual life. Kristina, either failing to catch or outright ignoring the insult, admits she has more ideas than finished work, but what she does have is artfully technocratic. Working with a graphic designer, she’s dreamed up digital prints and then Photoshopped them onto mock-ups of jackets, pants, and skirts, all of which Christian finds brilliant: “Maybe I should start doing this.” Although most of her textiles are drawn from a poppy, one print features a lime-green celery stalk, which makes me cackle; the girl’s devoted to her veggies.

project runway    finale episode 1914    pictured l r shantall lacayo, chasity sereal, kristina kharlashkina, coral castillo    photo by greg endriesbravo

The four designers competing in the finale: Shantall, Chasity, Kristina and Coral.

Greg Endries/Bravo

When the ladies finally land in Manhattan for the run-up to runway day, they exchange embraces before getting down to business. They divvy up models to start: Chasity wants strong Black women, Shantall is looking for similar diversity, Coral wants “warriors,” and, well, Kristina’s coveting a hoverboard. In fact, that’s her only special request. She needs someone with experience “skiing, snowboarding or dancing” so they can float down the red carpet on a motorized scooter, sans handlebars. Sure!

As the minutes tick by, the collections materialize, and it becomes evident who needs room for alternations, both figurative and literal. Shantall’s in great shape, but Coral needs to modernize her finale piece. Chasity has beading to finish up, but Kristina’s hitting snags as she reckons with the shock-value of the human form. Her sheer looks aren’t, well, sheer; completely see-through might be a more apt term. After one of her models walks out, breasts in full view, Christian rocks back on his heels. “One person you’re gonna have to convince is gonna be Nina Garcia, so I’m gonna put her in your mind, and you decide what to do,” he says. “But if it comes up—I told you so.” No comment on my end.

After Kristina opts to stitch together an itsy-bitsy teeny-weeny bra top, Shantall runs into issues of her own: Her clothes aren’t falling right on the models she’s selected. Christian breezes by, tossing out ideas like darts. Make the pants longer! Tear slits in the sleeves! Send her model down the runway wearing just the jacket! Shantall has learned to trust her Siriano savior by now and follows his advice. Same goes for Coral, who hears his recommendation to open her collection with menswear, and takes it.

The next morning, they have two hours to make finishing touches, but no surprise that the time soars by with all the grace and elegance of a woman on a hoverboard. As all the guests gather around the runway at Hudson Yards—including the previously eliminated designers and guest judge Tommy Hilfiger—you can almost feel the temperature in the room kick up as the tension bakes in.

For tonight’s looks, I’ll spend less time assessing each individual outfit and will focus, like the judges, on the collection as a whole. For the last time this year—sob—let’s dig in.

  • Kristina sends out her collection first. Already, this is a noticeable departure from many of the full-coverage clothes she’s designed in previous challenges. Her opener, that sheer sheath with the bra top and miniskirt underneath, is simple but whimsical, simultaneously urban and resort-ready. Her prints are what stand out the most: The digitized style modernizes what could have been an antiquated floral print, and I have to admit I love the funky celery pattern. The movement of her silken fabrics is exquisite to watch, in particular on the oversized button-down top. Her finale piece makes it down the runway on a hoverboard, though her model’s trying so hard not to fall that it stiffens the overall impact. Still, I’m impressed by what Kristina has accomplished here. Nothing is ubiquitous. Everything looks and feels like art.
  • Next is Shantall, and by the time her first model steps out from behind the partition, I’m giggling like a lovestruck teenager. The jacket-turned-minidress opener, paired with thigh-high boots and sumptuous cat-eye sunglasses, pays homage to some of the great supermodels of the 20th century without ripping off their styles. Shantall accomplishes this through her clever woven patterns, which take black and white waves and intersect them along peek-a-b0o cut-outs. I have a new favorite piece each time another model walks by. The fringe detail on that pencil skirt? Arresting. The button-up polka-dot collar? Sublime. This feels like old-school couture, but with an innovative new interpretation no one else would dare imitate.
  • Chasity comes next, and immediately her collection stands out for its focus on high-end evening wear. There’s no question Chasity could design for the stars: She has an dazzling point of view, especially in her use of glittering details. Her tiered pants, fishnet tights, beaded necklines and overflowing skirts are the stuff celebrities drool over. In particular, I’m enchanted by the striking purple fringe on her maxi pencil skirt, as well as the transitional black ruffle coat that ties into a skirt. I wouldn’t say this is the most unique collection I’ve ever seen, but it’s unquestionably gorgeous. Some of these dresses could compete with Siriano staples for a place in Lady Gaga’s closet.
  • I remain flabbergasted that Coral never won a single challenge this season. This tiny woman is a force to be reckoned with. The “warrior vibe” of her collection is evident from the moment her menswear opener struts down the catwalk. As her looks breeze by, they fall into one of two categories: primarily macrame or primarily zippers, and both have clear strengths and weaknesses. Still, her intelligent use of hardware and handiwork is jaw-dropping; no one else is making clothes like these. The penultimate look, with its sheer skirt and trailing purple coat, is one of my favorites of the night. But it’s the finale ensemble that could have convinced me to hand Coral the winner’s ticket. The yarn headpiece, paired with the mind-blowing multi-colored floral jacket, buckled belts, and tiered tulle skirt? It’s a revelation.

    My gut reaction, after finishing the runway shows, is that Shantall and Coral are vying for the top spot. In my opinion, Coral has several of the best individual pieces, but Shantall boasts the strongest overall collection. As the judges dig into deliberations, they seem to follow this pattern of thinking. Tommy, in particular, seems thrilled by the new crop of up-and-comers: “This group is oozing with talent,” he tells them.

    project runway    finale episode 1914    pictured l r brandon maxwell, nina garcia, christian siriano, tommy hilfiger    photo by greg endriesbravo

    This week’s judges panel included guest judge Tommy Hilfiger.

    Greg Endries/Bravo

    When analyzing Kristina’s work, they praise her showmanship and creativity, especially when it comes to styling. Kristina is an effortless stylist; she rarely misses the mark when it comes to pairing chunky boots with long dresses or sleek hairstyles with edgy fringe. But Tommy and Nina both worry that the prints in her collection are too abstract, and that they’d therefore struggle to sell. As Tommy puts it, they’re “relevant for today, but are they going to be relevant for tomorrow?”

    For Coral, Nina and Brandon can’t say enough about the “soul” of her show. But Tommy pinpoints a clashing problem: There were two different ideas in this collection, the zippers and the macrame, and the obviously stronger pieces were the tailored ones featuring zippers. Nina agrees, arguing it’s time Coral left black behind her and embraced colorful embroidery. “The pieces where you did show color took my breath away,” she tells Coral.

    Chasity gets bucketfuls of praise from Tommy, who thinks she has a celebrity styling career ahead of her. (Brandon, for his part, wants to wear her ruffled pants.) But Nina takes the praise down a notch, commenting that the abundant use of beads and ruffles didn’t display Chasity’s creativity or range.

    Finally, we get to Shantall. Her wavy black-and-white coat with the black sheath dress was “one of the most stunning things that went down the runway tonight,” Brandon says, and Nina and Tommy agree that the whole collection screamed “couture.” The cut-outs? “Impeccable.” And while they didn’t love the red pants and red belt look, they feel the overall style of the waves is a timeless staple. “Prints are only one season, one drop,” Tommy says. “The snakes, the cut-outs? You could carry on and on and on and on.”

    So, really, is it any wonder that Shantall would be our winner? After Nina finally announces the Nicaraguan designer as season 19’s shining star, it seems, in retrospect, like the only correct decision. After Christian rescued her from elimination with his Siriano save in episode 7, she came sprinting back into the show with visibly renewed drive, as if such a narrow brush focused her mind and sharpened her vision. Suddenly, she had a signature look, a new point of view. That sort of singularity is rare, and there’s no doubt it’s what won the judges’ attention in the end.

    I still have plenty of criticisms for the reality competition model. Project Runway is far from a foolproof model for sourcing the brightest designers of tomorrow. How often can you really expect to uncover the best of the best, when you toss only a handful into a pressure cooker, then force them to undergo silly games that reveal little about their real skills? But when it does work, it works. By some miracle, season 19 did its job. Shantall deserved this win, and Christian knew it seven episodes before we did.

    Drink your champagne, honey. You deserve it.

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    Women's Fashion

    You Can Buy This Silk Dress Before Kate Middleton Does

    Photography courtesy of Ellipsis

    I mean, it’s not a race, but…

    For a small UK designer, Kate Middleton’s approval is about as good as it can get. Nicole Christie, founder of Glasgow-based sustainable luxury womenswear brand Ellipsis, can attest to this.

    After Daily Mail royal editor Rebecca English tweeted that the Duchess of Sussex eyed one of Christie’s dresses (a caramel number handcrafted in silk satin backed crepe with draping sleeves and high split cuts) on a royal outing, social media praise started to roll in. “I hope the Duchess of Cambridge will wear this beautiful dress,” one user wrote on Ellipsis’ Instagram. On Twitter, another lamented to English, “She’d look fabulous in both dresses. I wish I had the figure for them, they are stunning.”

    The Duchess of Sussex, the Prince of Wales and the Duchess of Cornwall (a rare royal pairing to be sure) visited several London locales on February 3. As part of the outing, the trio visited the Prince’s Foundation’s Trinity Buoy Wharf, a centre for arts and cultural activities located on the River Thames, before meeting students from the Foundation’s School of Traditional Arts. Inside the school’s Future Textiles studio, Kate, Charles and Camilla visited students’ sewing and pattern-cutting stations.

    There, Christie, a graduate of the Foundation’s Modern Artisan project, presented her designs to Kate  and Camilla. She wrote on Instagram: “Today I had the honour to present Ellipsis to His Royal Highness, Prince Charles, Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall, and Kate, Duchess of Cambridge. It was the most surreal and incredible experience and…I was able to gift both the Duchess of Cornwall and the Duchess of Cambridge with a handmade silk Ellipsis bag along with a silk hair accessory for Princess Charlotte.”

    Founded in 2020, Ellipsis (its name derived from the punctuation mark indicting more is yet to come and Christie’s lucky number three) creates garments and accessories with the mandate to slow fast fashion. The brand’s clothing is manufactured in small batches to reduce overstock and, in turn, create less waste.

    It’s a mission that aligns with Charles’s own values. The 73-year-old heir to the thrones of Britain, Canada and 13 other realms has been a vocal advocate for the fight against climate change for decades, writes Patricia Treble in FASHION’s upcoming April issue.

    For his fashion efforts, that means being not only a proponent of using ethically-sourced natural fabrics, such as wool or linen, but also ensuring they are made in local textile mills and manufacturing sites, and, especially, by skilled workers who thus keep their often-rural communities going. “It’s the skill set that he’s interested in preserving, the idea that these craft forms, whether it’s for the heritage environment or within luxury fashion, that they don’t get lost,” Jaqueline Farrell, education director for the Prince’s Foundation at Dumfries House in Scotland, told Treble. “And it’s easy to lose them in mass production, but we can’t lose them forever because these things are actually so invaluable for the future security of the planet.”

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    Fitness

    The COVID Vaccine Doesn’t Affect Fertility, but COVID Itself Does

    The COVID-19 vaccine does come with side effects, and there have long been rumors and misinformation that infertility is one of them. A prospective study published last month aims to put some of those fears to rest. The study, led by researchers at the Boston University School of Public Health (BUSPH), found that the COVID-19 vaccine did not impact fertility in men or women, but that contracting COVID-19 itself led to an 18 percent decline in fertility in men.

    Published Jan. 20 in the “American Journal of Epidemiology,” the prospective study used survey data from participants in the Pregnancy Study Online (PRESTO), an NIH-funded study of women trying to conceive. Specifically, they looked at data on COVID vaccination and infection, as well as fecundability (the probability of getting pregnant within one menstrual cycle), from 2,126 women in the US and Canada, following them from December 2020 to November 2021. Among other information, the women also provided characteristics about their partners.

    Using the self-reported data, researchers calculated that fertility rates among women participants with one vaccine dose were “nearly identical” to those who were unvaccinated, according to a press release on the study. The same was found among the participants’ partners who were men: fecundability was similar between vaccinated and unvaccinated men. What did impact fertility among men was COVID-19 infection. Men who tested positive for COVID-19 “within 60 days of a given cycle had reduced fertility compared to men who never tested positive” or tested positive at least 60 days before, the press release stated. These COVID-positive men had a temporary, 18 percent drop in fertility.

    In other words, while COVID-19 itself may cause a “short-term decline” in fertility among men, the COVID vaccine “does not impair fertility in either partner,” the study said. Lauren Wise, professor of epidemiology at BUSPH and the study’s senior author, described it as “reassuring evidence that COVID vaccination in either partner does not affect fertility among couples trying to conceive.” The prospective study is also large and surveyed a diverse segment of the population, Wise said, which makes the findings even stronger.

    “Our study shows for the first time that COVID-19 vaccination in either partner is unrelated to fertility among couples trying to conceive through intercourse,” added lead author Amelia Wesselink, research assistant professor of epidemiology at BUSPH, in the press release. It’s good news for anyone concerned with potential side effects, as well as another reminder that the virus itself presents more of a threat than the vaccine.

    Categories
    Culture

    Jennifer Lopez Kicked Off Her Day Wearing Two Chic Print Outfits

    Jennifer Lopez’s Marry Me press tour is in full swing, and the actress started her Thursday in New York City making two press stops and wearing two different looks. Lopez began the day in a Fendi marbled coat, dress, and purse for her visit to The Today Show.

    jennifer lopez in new york on february 03, 2022

    MediaPunch/Bauer-GriffinGetty Images

    jennifer lopez in new york city on february 03, 2022

    GothamGetty Images

    On another stop, she wore all snakeskin, wearing a black and white snakeskin coat, dress, tights, and heels.

    jennifer lopez in new york city on february 03, 2022

    GothamGetty Images

    jennifer lopez in new york city on february 03, 2022

    GothamGetty Images

    Lopez spoke to People for its cover story released earlier this week about her rekindled romance with Ben Affleck. I honestly believe that love rules all. Love always conquers everything—relationships, kids, work, work relationships,” she said. “It’s all about how loving, open and accepting you can be. Not having an ego about things and just embracing all the good, always looking at the positive. When you’re in a good, healthy relationship, everybody benefits from that. Everybody.”

    With Affleck in particular, “I just feel very happy and lucky to be in a relationship that’s happy and loving, and I want to do everything I can to protect that and keep it safe. It deserves that, it really does. … We hold it sacred,” she added.

    She also spoke glowingly of Affleck’s personal growth: “I’m so proud of the him, I’m so proud of the man he’s become that I’ve watched from afar. Being honest with each other, being loving, that’s just the basis of everything. I feel like he’s at a place in his life where—just like how I feel about myself—it’s been a journey of learning yourself and figuring yourself out, getting to a place where you feel really good on your own and who you are so you can be in a happy, healthy relationship.”

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    Beauty

    The Ultimate Beginner’s Guide to Getting a Sew-In Weave

    Frontals, closures, microlinks, and I-tips—trying to keep up with all the latest hair trends is as exhausting as actually sitting down in the salon chair for hours waiting for your desired style to be installed. For many Black women—myself included—traditional sew-ins served as our first foray into weaves before the style took a backseat to frontal/closure styles and wigs. But after a while, too much lace glue can weaken your edges (if not properly cared for), and the difference in lace quality and size make it harder for wigs to remain the get-up-and-go protective style it once was. If you’re one of the few people returning to traditional sew-ins, we don’t blame you—life was much easier with a sew-in.

    Before you start shopping for hair or making an appointment, here’s a refresher on everything you should know before getting a sew-in.

    What is a sew-in weave?

    A sew-in “is a hair extension service consisting of small cornrow braids that are used as anchors then attached with hair wefts by use of needle and weaving thread,” says LeAna McKnight, celebrity hairstylist and founder of SL Raw Virgin Hair. You can choose between a sew-in with “leave out,” which keeps the perimeter of your hair loose to cover the tracks, or a full sew-in where all hair is tucked in.

    SL Raw Natural Wavy Hair

    slrawvirginhair.com

    $99.00

    What should you consider before getting a sew-in?

    If you’re a first-timer, before heading to the salon, you might want to consider what purpose you want the sew-in to serve. Do you desire more volume or length? “Maybe you’re considering that new hair color or haircut, or you’re you want to save time in the morning on hairstyling,” says McKnight. “Determining the purpose of your sew-in weave will help decipher what kind of sew-in weave you will receive from either a partial sew-in, full head sew-in, or a closure sew-in.” This is where your professional stylist comes in. “Once you know what you’re trying to accomplish, you want to consult with a salon professional to see if your hair is strong enough to take on any mild tension to avoid any breakage or damage,” she adds.

    What are the benefits of a sew-in weave?

    Sew-ins are the easiest style to do when you want to switch up your look. McKnight loves the style because it protects your hair. “You get the benefit of your hair being tucked away allowing you to avoid most weather conditions and more styling freedom with heat tools,” she notes. “I like to install sew-ins as a protective style to help grow out many of my client’s hair, especially those who’ve suffered from heat damage or mothers who have suffered from telogen effluvium [post-partum hair loss].” What’s more, McKnight adds that sew-ins are great for those who frequent the gym because they help prevent being deterred by their hair sweating out.

    How long should a sew-in typically last?

    The installation’s longevity depends on what style you choose. McKnight suggests keeping a partial sew-in installed for up to six weeks; for a full head sew-in or one using a lace closure, up to seven weeks is fine.

    What is the best way to care for a sew-in weave?

    “After-care for a sew-in is fairly easy. Assuming you’re wearing 100 percent virgin human hair extensions, you’ll want to wrap or pin curl your hair extensions every night, and preserve your hair using a satin bonnet,” McKnight explains. High-maintenance styles like sew-ins with leave out require heat protectant whenever hot tools are necessary. “If heat styling is needed you’ll need to use heat protectants such as Mielle Organics thermal spray, Chi 44 iron guard, or Kenra thermal styling spray,” McKnight advises. “For those who wear curly hair extensions, I suggest braiding or twisting your hair at night time to avoid tangling and matting, just as you would care for your real hair, and using a satin bonnet or scarf.”

    Mielle Organics Mongongo Oil Thermal & Heat Protectant Spray, 4 Ounces

    Mielle Organics
    amazon.com

    $12.71

    How do you take care of the hair underneath a weave?

    Before installing a sew-in, it’s wise to give your natural hair a little extra TLC. McKnight suggests doing a pre-treatment to keep your hair moisturized and hydrated before any tension hairstyles. “By moisturizing your hair before a sew-in this will allow your hair to lock in any moisture needed while your hair is braided and during the duration of your install (moisturizing before an install will also seal hair ends to prohibit split ends),” she says. Don’t be alarmed: You can still wash your natural hair while your hair is in the protective style. “I advise that you cleanse your hair underneath once a week or once every 10 days to maintain a healthy scalp. If you are a DIY kind of person, then you can get a nozzle and fill it up with shampoo and directly apply the product onto your scalp, and gently rub and then rinse.

      If you’re not comfortable doing it by yourself, you can visit a professional to take care of your hair underneath by scheduling a maintenance appointment. During this maintenance session, your salon professional will use products tailored to your specific hair type and also care for the extensions used.

      What is a common misconception most people have about sew-ins?

      The biggest misconception about sew-ins is the tighter the sew-in, the longer it will last— this is false. “Actually, the tighter the sew-in the more breakage and discomfort you will have. If a sew-in is installed correctly and properly maintained, you can achieve some amazing hair growth,” says McKnight.

      Sew-in weaves offer as much versatility as your natural hair, if not more. Keep in mind that the pre-treatment of your natural hair is equally as important as caring for the actual weave hair while you wear the protective style. When in doubt consult with your hairstylist.

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        Categories
        Women's Fashion

        BeautyTok Products That Are *Actually* Worth The Hype

        Photography via TikTok/@meganlavallie/@dermdoctor

        Including a lip sleeping mask to swear by.

        It’s no secret that TikTok is a goldmine of life advice. From helping you build a capsule wardrobe to teaching you some unconventional (but effective) skincare hacks, the app is the gift that keeps on giving. But arguably, one of the best sides of TikTok is…BeautyTok. Gone are the days of watching 20 minute makeup tutorials on YouTube. BeautyTok is complete with quick mini how-tos, product recommendations and, best of all, honest content from real people (step aside, Facetuned Instagram influencers!). However, if you’re new to the beauty side of TikTok, it can be overwhelming. So fear not, if you’ve been loving BeautyTok’s product recommendations but don’t want to spend your money on a viral disappointment, allow us to help.

        Charlotte Tilbury Hollywood Contour Wand

        Over the years, many of us have ditched contouring in favour of glowy, natural skin. But if you’ve dedicated more time than you’d like to admit to your trusty contour palette, I have some good news: Thanks to BeautyTok and fan favourite brand Charlotte Tilbury, contouring is back. The Charlotte Tilbury Hollywood Contour Wand features a blendable head and creamy pigment, perfect for an effortlessly sculpted face. P.S Madison Beer swears by it too.

        @meganlavallieUsing Charlotte Tilbury Contour wand in Light♬ More Than A Woman – SG’s Paradise Edit – Bee Gees & SG Lewis

        Rare Beauty Soft Pinch Liquid Blush

        I’m a huge blush girl, but I’m also a celebrity beauty brand skeptic. So imagine my surprise (and excitement) when I saw videos of TikTokers trying out Rare Beauty’s Soft Pinch Liquid Blush, and the product could actually hold its own. It’s pigmented, dewy and lasts all day.

        CeraVe Hydrating Facial Cleanser

        While CeraVe has been a drugstore staple for some time, it’s definitely not been a viral beauty product until much recently. Thanks to TikTok dermatologists and skincare aficionados, this has become the perfect cleanser for everyday use. As someone who has never truly stuck to one brand or cleanser my whole life, I can proudly say I’m a changed woman and — in my humble opinion — the CeraVe Hydrating Facial Cleanser is the only cleanser worth being loyal to.

        @dermdoctor #ad New @cerave Hydrating Cream-To-Foam Cleanser Review #CeraVe #CeraVepartner #dermatologist #skincareroutine #skincare ♬ Shallow Water – Clutch

        Dior Addict Lip Glow Oil

        This lip oil has taken the internet by storm, and honestly, I sort of get it. Firstly, it’s Dior and who doesn’t want a little Dior in their life? But more importantly, the product actually works! It’s the perfect lip for any makeup look and leaves you looking effortlessly chic. Bonus points for its gorgeous and sleek packaging. The Dior Addict Lip Glow Oil is definitely something Elle Woods would approve of.

        Paula’s Choice 2% BHA Liquid Exfoliant

        As someone who has struggled with visible pores, nothing has helped my skin as much as this product. The Paula’s Choice 2% BHA Liquid Exfoliant is truly a gamechanger that literally unclogs and shrinks your pores as promised. The product also contains properties designed reduce the appearance of redness and tackle blackheads by penetrating through accumulated oil on your skin. It’s even backed by TikTok-famous dermatologist Dr. Shah!

        @sephora @dermdoctor teaches BHA 101 with the @paulaschoiceskincare 2% BHA Liquid Exfoliant. #PCxSephora ♬ original sound – sephora

        Laneige Lip Sleeping Mask

        Not to be dramatic, but there is nothing worse than the feeling of waking up with dry, chapped lips. But naturally, with Canada’s occasionally brutal winters, it’s hard to keep your lips supple and soft. Cue your new holy grail, and the only thing that never leaves my bedside table: the Laneige Lip Sleeping Mask. If there’s only one product you decide to purchase off this list, let it be this! This lip sleeping mask has miraculously transformed my lips. It’s worked better than any balm or mask I’ve used before, and a little bit goes a long way, so it’s worth every penny.

        Revlon Oil-Absorbing Volcanic Face Roller

        This is probably the only product on this list that, in my opinion, is one of a kind. I had never seen anything like this before it went viral on BeautyTok. The Revlon Oil-Absorbing Volcanic Face Roller does exactly that: soak up excess oil. But it’s a million times better than the average blotting paper or powder. Wondering why? Well, for starters, its incredibly affordable, lifts oils from your skin in one swipe and doesn’t remove any of your makeup! Even makeup mogul Huda Kattan was impressed.

        @hudabeauty #hudabeauty #foryou #tiktokmademebuyit ♬ original sound – Huda Beauty💄

        Olaplex No. 3 Hair Perfector

        This product has often been called the best hair treatment by the masses on BeautyTok, and it’s easy to see why. The Olaplex No. 3 Hair Perfector works for all hair types and aids with reducing breakage and strengthening your hair. Pro-tip: make sure to research how to apply this the right way because it’s a treatment, not a conditioner.

        The Ordinary AHA 30% + BHA 2% Peeling Solution

        I’ve always been a big fan of The Ordinary but surprisingly never tried my hand at this product until it basically took over TikTok for a good few months. Even if the name of the product doesn’t ring a bell, think back to a time when you saw people on your For You Page applying a red liquid that almost looked like blood to their face, and you might know what I’m talking about. The AHA 30% + BHA 2% Peeling Solution is a 10-minute exfoliating facial that helps improve the texture of your skin and the appearance of fine lines, among many other things. It’s the perfect quick fix since you’re not supposed to leave it on for more than 10 minutes (or even less, depending on your skin type).

        Categories
        Fitness

        Taking Too Much Melatonin Could Be Dangerous, Study Warns

        woman taking pill

        Many people take melatonin to fall asleep faster or avoid waking up during the night. In fact, Americans used more than twice the amount of melatonin in 2018 that they used in the previous decade, according to research published in “The Journal of the American Medical Association.” The study warns that taking too much melatonin could cause health risks, and that there’s not much evidence to support “melatonin use for sleep disturbances.”

        Although short-term use of melatonin as a sleep aid seems safe, the study points out that “data on long-term use and high-dose use are scarce,” so it’s unclear whether long-term use is safe. Many participants in the study reported using more than the recommended five-milligram dose. This is cause for concern, since over-the-counter melatonin products may contain much higher doses than advertised. According to the study, “[T]he actual content of melatonin in marketed supplements may be up to 478% higher than the labeled content.”

        Since it’s considered a dietary supplement, melatonin is regulated less strictly than prescription drugs by the FDA. In a previous interview with POPSUGAR, Dr. Alcibiades Rodriguez, an assistant professor at the Department of Neurology at NYU Grossman School of Medicine, said to check the label of melatonin supplements for any added ingredients. He recommended looking for products that contain only melatonin.

        Dr. Rodriguez also warned against casual usage of a melatonin supplement, saying that taking too much melatonin before bed can cause headaches and even nightmares.

        Without knowledge of melatonin’s long-term effects, it’s best to create effective sleep habits to ensure a good night’s sleep. Make your bed and bedroom as cozy as possible with these sleep products, and limit screens before bed. To induce calmness naturally, try meditation, stress-relieving yoga, a warm bath, chamomile tea, this counting trick, or reading before bed.

        Categories
        Culture

        Dakota Johnson Is Reportedly in Talks to Star in a Spider-Man Spinoff

        Dakota Johnson is having a banner year.

        After starring in Maggie Gyllenhaal’s awards contender The Lost Daughter, she appeared in two Sundance films in January and is set to lead Netflix’s adaptation of Jane Austen’s Persuasion sometime in 2022. Now, the latest addition to her list of projects? A possible Spider-Man spinoff: Johnson is reportedly in talks to star as the titular role in Sony’s Madame Web, according to The Hollywood Reporter. (Insiders told Variety the deal is not yet final.)

        The character was first introduced in The Amazing Spider-Man comics in the ‘80s and is “a clairvoyant mutant who specializes in predicting the future of Spider-themed superheroes, having mentored not only Peter Parker’s alter ego, but also multiple generations of heroes calling themselves Spider-Woman,” per THR. Also known as Cassandra Webb, she’s portrayed on the page as a blind and paralyzed elderly woman aided by a web-like life support machine. We’ll see if or how the screen adaptation will reinterpret the character.

        The film is set to be helmed by S.J. Clarkson, who has directed Marvel TV projects like The Defenders and Jessica Jones, and written by Morbius screenwriters Matt Sazama and Burk Sharpless.

        Speculation about a Madame Web film began in 2020 when Clarkson’s directing gig was announced. This would be Sony’s first Marvel superhero movie with a female lead, as Variety pointed out. The studio’s other Marvel titles include Venom, starring Tom Hardy; Morbius, starring Jared Leto; and of course three Spider-Men: Tobey Maguire, Andrew Garfield, and Tom Holland.

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        Categories
        Beauty

        Skin Scents are Spring’s Biggest Fragrance Trend

        We all have a unique scent—that natural cocktail made up of our body chemistry mixed with the products we routinely use on our skin, hair, laundry, and more.

        It’s the subtle but distinctively-you smell left behind on a T-shirt—or on your bed sheets. If you think of a traditional fragrance formula, worn overtly, then a personal scent is more like lingerie—detectable only during intimate contact. To catch a whiff, you must come close.

        Recognizing the potential appeal of bottling a scent so inherently sensual, beauty brands have begun experimenting with fragrances that either attempt to mimic the natural smell of human skin, or use ingredients that take your individual elixir and amplify it. The result: a burgeoning category of eau de parfums and toilettes referred to as skin scents. Not unlike a tinted moisturizer or lip balm—or a styling product that plays up your hair’s natural texture—these understated fragrances aim to make the most of what you have (and emit), naturally.

        [pullquote align=’center’]”People are emerging from deep social isolation and want to connect emotionally, socially, and intimately. Skin scents can help give us all those things.”

        Most skin scents are soft, lightweight formulas that cling close to the body—similar to how our own natural aromas behave. Tania Sanchez, coauthor of Perfumes: The Guide, describes skin scents as something “light enough for people to think of not as perfumes, separate entities traveling along with you, but as somehow part of you, emanating from you…I suspect most rely heavily on slow, dry-down materials like musks, woods, and ambers and less on very forward, identifiable materials like berry notes, heavy florals, or grapefruit.”

        Skin scents are also typically gender-neutral, and most could be described as warm, inviting, sexy (but not heavy), and clean (but not sterile). Some fragrance experts suggest one reason skin scents are so appealing is because they pay homage to intimacy, something many of us lacked during months of social distancing.

        “[The pandemic] put restrictions on being with other people and limited our ability to get very close to someone,” says Rachel Herz, PhD, a neuroscientist at Brown University and an expert in the psychological science of smell. “So getting this secret hint of somebody’s presence provides an added layer of intimacy that has a psychologically meaningful dimension at this particular time. People are emerging from deep social isolation and want to connect emotionally, socially, and intimately. Skin scents can help give us all those things.”

        How can a perfumer conjure something so personal? Some blends, such as Glossier You Eau de Parfum or The Maker Naked Eau de Parfum, include notes like pink pepper, which infuses the scent with a subtle spiciness that is surprisingly similar to the smell of human skin.

        Other skin scents utilize very soft florals to evoke human skin—but they do it in a subtler way than you’d find in traditional florals. The scent By Rosie Jane Rosie Eau de Parfum, for instance, uses just a whispery hint of rose to give the fragrance a velvety plushness suggestive of warm, damp skin. Glossier You complements its piquant pink pepper note with just a touch of iris to make the blend’s spiciness a bit cozier.

        The secret weapon in a skin scent like Molecule 01 by Escentric Molecules is an ingredient called Iso E Super, which magnifies other notes. Alone, Iso E Super smells slightly woody and is almost imperceptible. But spray it on bare skin, and suddenly it can intensify your own natural skin scent.

        “We discovered that Iso E Super, the only [active] ingredient in Molecule 01, creates an individual aura for each person who wears it,” says Geza Schoen, master perfumer and founder of Escentric Molecules. Schoen suggests it was this unique characteristic that helped Molecule 01 become one of the brand’s best-selling blends, as many people have been craving an opportunity to express their individuality, as well as find a fragrance that’s an alternative to mass-market, generic scents.

        Skin scents can also be deeply sexy. Secretions Magnifiques by Etat Libre d’Orange utilizes aldehydic notes (key components of Chanel N°5, where they create that classic scent’s soapy, clean characteristic), mixed with musk, sandalwood, and marine ingredients, such as salty seaweed. The effect is erotic, yet still surprisingly subtle. Like most skin scents, Secretions Magnifiques is best smelled up close.

        Get Personal

        Play up your body’s natural eau by spritzing on any of these skin scents.

        This article appears in the February 2022 issue of ELLE.

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        Categories
        Women's Fashion

        Couture Took Us To Infinity and Beyond

        spring 2022 couture

        Courtesy of the designers; Getty Images; Fendi: Pascal Le Segretain; Valli: YANNIS VLAMOS

        style points

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

        The worlds of sci-fi and couture might not, initially, seem to have much overlap. Except, of course, for the fact that both are rarefied realms with obsessive devotees who gather periodically with Comic Con-level enthusiasm, and where the most minute details are endlessly fixated upon. But that’s where the similarities usually end. Which is why it was such a delightful surprise to see references typically reserved for the D&D table pop up at the most recent couture shows.

        Take Fendi, where Kim Jones cited the house’s home city (“the eternity of Rome, the spirituality of Rome, the celestial Rome”) as his primary inspiration, but also drew on the lore of Dune and Star Wars. Jones recently made his way through the 800-page behemoth that is Frank Herbert’s book, and, he told WWD, “I’ve always loved Star Wars. I still have Star Wars toys all over my study.” The show opened with a glittering cassock-like gown that Padmé Amidala might’ve worn, backgrounded by a moody sci-fi set.

        spring 2022 couture

        Fendi spring 2022 couture.

        Pascal Le Segretain

        Another Dune convert was Daniel Roseberry of Schiaparelli, who took the house’s trademark Surrealism in a sci-fi direction with his first physical show since the beginning of the pandemic. “After two years of thinking about the Surreal,” Roseberry explained in his show notes, “I found myself instead thinking about the empyreal: The heavens as a place to escape from the chaos of our planet, but also the home of a mythical high priestess, at once goddess and alien, who might in fact walk among us.” His alien goddesses wore Barbarella-by-way-of-Madonna pointy breastplates, or massive disks around their heads and wrists; a Saturn-like ring of gold literally orbited one model.

        spring 2022 couture

        Schiaparelli spring 2022 couture

        Courtesy of the designer.

        Science fiction is the ultimate escapist genre (and it helps that lockdown gave many the time to finally pick up volumes like Herbert’s.) With the recent remake of Dune, the latest chapter in the Matrix saga, and upcoming releases like After Yang, we seem to be in a boom time for the genre at the multiplex. For moviegoers, the appeal of imagining alternate worlds right now hardly needs explanation—for designers, whose job is in a sense to create their own fantasy realms, it’s no surprise that reference points from Blade Runner to 2001: A Space Odyssey pop up all the time.

        spring 2022 couture

        Giambattista Valli spring 2022 couture

        YANNIS VLAMOS

        But science fiction, for all its escapism, has also smuggled in metaphors for some of the darkest parts of our existence, from climate change to American imperialism. Roseberry found himself pondering how to create in such a fraught time, explaining that his last couture collection, an exuberant yawp of gold and otherworldly florals, “was conceived in a brief period of hope: It was April. Vaccines were becoming widely available. Travel was becoming a possibility once again. We could begin to imagine that our collective nightmare was behind us, or at least would soon be.

        “And yet, now, braided with that hope is a sense of loss. The loss of people, most wrenchingly. But also, the loss of certainty; our loss of surety; the loss of our collective future. There is also the pervasive sense of exhaustion we all feel: That churn of red-carpet appearances, award shows, even fashion presentations—something about it feels lackluster. Aren’t we all exhausted by all of it? Fashion has insisted upon its relevance over these past two years, and yet I can feel that even some of its practitioners are no longer convinced. What does fashion mean, what does fashion have to say, in an era in which everything is in flux? And, with regards to this Maison, what does surrealism mean when reality itself has been redefined?”

        spring 2022 couture

        Valentino spring 2022 couture

        Courtesy of the designer

        When imagining the future feels so charged, sometimes it’s comforting to go back to rosier past visions of what it would be like. While Jones and Roseberry delved into the planetary darkness and uncertainty of this time, other couture collections time-traveled to a more optimistic era, namely the ’60’s embrace of space travel and its attendant Space Age design. The ’60’s-fest we saw at spring 2022 ready-to-wear continued here, with Mod white suits at Dior, space cadet cutout leggings at Valentino, and a ruffled gown at Giambattista Valli that was spliced together with a silver leg—Princess Leia meets C-3PO. Remember optimism? Excitement? Technology filling us with a sense of hope as opposed to existential dread? Not since NASA-wear briefly took over fashion circa 2016 has the space race felt this au courant.

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        Categories
        Video

        Saint Laurent Spring 2015 Ready-to-Wear – Fashion Show – Style.com

        Runway, backstage, and front-row footage from the Paris show. Watch the Saint Laurent Spring 2015 Ready-to-Wear fashion show footage from Style.com. Want more? Visit Style.com for more runway shows, fashion trends, shopping guides, and news about models and designers.

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        Saint Laurent Spring 2015 Ready-to-Wear – Fashion Show – Style.com

        Starring: Saint Laurent
        Featuring: Tim Blanks
        Director: Harris Levinson
        Executive Producer: Harris Levinson

        IDM Productions / indigital.tv Produced by: Emoticon Productions

        Categories
        Video

        Rhett & Link Test How Well They Know Each Other | Vanity Fair Game Show

        Rhett and Link of Good Mythical Morning’s Rhett & Link test who knows one another best in Vanity Fair’s “Rhett & Link Game Show.” They are on the 21st season of their show, but how much do they actually know about each other? What time does Link go to sleep? What word or phrase does Rhett overuse? What would Link do for a living if he wasn’t creating YouTube videos?

        Rhett & Link are celebrating their 10-year anniversary and the 21st season of their show, Good Mythical Morning. http://youtube.com/goodmythicalmorning

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        ABOUT VANITY FAIR
        Arts and entertainment, business and media, politics, and world affairs—Vanity Fair’s features and exclusive videos capture the people, places, and ideas that define modern culture.

        Rhett & Link Test How Well They Know Each Other | Vanity Fair Game Show

        Categories
        Women's Fashion

        All the Best Street Style From Copenhagen Fashion Week

        Photography courtesy of ImaxTree.

        It was a truly colourful Scandinavian affair.

        Copenhagen Fashion Week (the undeniable Cool Girl of all fashion weeks) is back for 2022! The city’s streets are abuzz again with industry insiders, fashion lovers, photographers and more for the Fall/Winter season. As per usual, the Danes take pleasure in dressing to the next level. Instead of succumbing to the cold and gloomy weather, they brought their style A-game to brighten up the mood (literally). Laid back yet edgy styles were on display, featuring this season’s brightest hues and unexpected colour combinations. If you’re looking for winter outfit inspiration or just want to see what the Copenhagen locals are wearing this season, you’ve come to the right place.

        Notable trends include statement coats such as Penny Lane-style shearling jackets, wide-leg pants, and headwear to keep out the rain and snow (think fluffy bucket hats, balaclavas, scarves and berets).

        From simple monochrome looks to playful ensembles, take a look at our roundup of the best street style from Copenhagen Fashion Week Fall/Winter 2022.

        Categories
        Fitness

        How to Handle Pimples Near the Vagina, According to Healthcare Experts

        African-American female doctor doing gynecological examination

        There’s a chance you’ve developed some sort of plan of attack for treating a pimple on your chin or forehead. Perhaps it involves not picking at it (right?!), a spot treatment you swear by, a special antiacne cleanser, or specific guidance straight from your dermatologist. But do you know what to do when a pimple pops up near the vagina — like on your vulva or near the genital region?

        If you’re in the dark about vaginal pimples (these pimples that occur on the vulva, near the genital area, or on the groin), keep scrolling to learn more about the common causes behind them and how to safely treat them.

        What Causes Vaginal Pimples?

        First, let’s break down the relationship between having “acne-prone” skin and experiencing pimples on the vulva or in the genital region. “Just because you’re prone to acne on your face doesn’t mean you’ll be prone to getting acne in the groin area — and similarly vice versa,” explains Marisa Garshick, MD, FAAD, a board-certified dermatologist.

        In fact, the pimples you may experience in both spots can be triggered and related to different factors. “The way on the face we tend to see these little whiteheads and blackheads, we don’t necessarily see it to the same extent in the groin. So you’re not necessarily getting your traditional acne spots in the way you are on the face,” she says.

        According to Dr. Garshick, pimples that occur on the vulva or in the genital region typically appear as red bumps called papules, pustules (which have pus), or nodules (which are deeper in the skin and may feel firm). These pimples are most commonly categorized as folliculitis, or what can be described as “inflammation of the hair follicle.”

        This skin condition can be caused by a bacterial or fungal infection, she explains, or injury to the hair follicle — like from shaving, waxing, or wearing tight-fitting clothing that traps heat and moisture. (Sweaty workout clothes might come to mind here!)

        However, Dr. Garshick says there are other possible explanations and causes behind pimples in the genital area, like cysts and a condition called hidradenitis suppurativa, which is related to a blockage of the hair follicle. While it’s not common, Dr. Garshick says, it is often under-recognized and often occurs in areas where the skin experiences friction, like the underarms, the groin, under the breasts, and near the buttocks.

        Navya Mysore, MD, a physician at One Medical in New York City, says another cause for pimples near the vagina could be dermatitis. “This is where the skin in the surrounding area can get irritated from products you may be using, like soaps, bubble-bath products, tampons and liners, douches, etc., and can appear like little red bumps,” she says.

        There are also other health conditions that cause spots and growths that may be mistaken as pimples. Dr. Garshick says an example of this is a viral infection called Molluscum contagiosum, which can cause little red bumps or growths that have a little dot or umbilication in the center. “While it’s not like a traditional, sexually transmitted infection, it is something that in close contact can be spread sexually,” she says. Shaving can also cause its spread.

        Dr. Mysore says STIs like genital herpes and genital warts may also look like pimples.

        How Do You Treat Vaginal Pimples?

        First rule of thumb: do not squeeze it or attempt to pop it!

        “The temptation may be to try to pop the vaginal pimple. Please DON’T!” Dr. Mysore says. “This can potentially make the condition worse depending on what the diagnosis is and can introduce bacteria from your fingers or the surrounding skin that can give you a secondary infection.”

        Dr. Garshick also strongly recommends avoiding prodding and squeezing these pimples. “In this area, the skin is pretty delicate, and more often than not, you’re not going to get anything out of it,” she says. “Even if you do feel like you’re getting something out of it, you’re going to trigger a lot more inflammation. That’s going to make it take a lot longer to heal and may make it more likely to leave a scar.”

        Because there could be different causes behind a pimple or pimple-like bump in the genital area, both experts recommend checking in with a healthcare provider for an examination and diagnosis.

        How Do You Prevent Vaginal Pimples?

        To prevent pimples caused by folliculitis, Dr. Garshick says it may be helpful to change out of workout clothes quickly after exercise, as this can help decrease the amount of sweat on the skin. She also recommends showering regularly and after exercise, plus cleansing the area with a gentle product.

        For those prone to folliculitis, Garshick says it may be helpful to avoid tight-fitting clothes and undergarments and opt for loose, breathable options instead.

        Altering some of your hair-removal habits may also assist in prevention. If you shave, Dr. Garshick recommends shaving when the skin is damp, using a cream to create a barrier to minimize friction, shaving in the direction of the hair as opposed to against the hair, and making sure your razor blade is fresh.

        You can also ask your doctor for specific prevention tips based on the cause of your pimples and pimple-like bumps.

        Categories
        Culture

        Gigi Hadid on Life With Her 18-Month-Old Daughter Khai: ‘She’s Just So Smart’

        What’s Gigi Hadid and Zayn Malik’s daughter Khai like as she approaches two years old? Hadid spoke to InStyle about their life together for its cover story on her. Khai was born in September 2020; she’s about 18 months old now.

        When asked what she appreciates most about Khai, Hadid replied, “She’s just so smart, and she’s so aware. She watches everything, she’s always learning, she’s always looking. She’s just awesome.”

        Hadid also spoke about how she doesn’t plan on having Khai model for Baby Guess like she did when she was younger. “Yeah. No. You know, she’s going to do what she wants to do. She could be an astronaut. I don’t know,” she said.

        Sometimes, Hadid is still surprised by the fact that she had a baby. “I still can’t believe it. It’s wild,” she said. “A lot of my mom friends feel like that, and we’re nearing the first couple years [with our kids]. You’re obsessed with them, but sometimes you turn and you’re like, ‘Oh my god. Where did you come from?’”

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        With her mom friends, “We only talk about babies and sleeping and what bottles don’t leak. One of them was like, ‘Hey, do you ever want to get dinner without the kids?’ I was like, ‘Yeah, girl. Let’s go.’”

        She ended the interview by teasing some of her future travel plans—and how Khai will be picking up one winter hobby very soon. “I’m really excited to take Khai skiing one day, because I learned to ski when I was, like, 2,” she said. “We’re getting close. Somewhere that I’ve always wanted to go is Greenland; it looks so beautiful. And New Zealand would be kind of epic. I’ve been to Japan, but I want to go back.”

        You can read Hadid’s full interview here.

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        Categories
        Women's Fashion

        Reimagined Chainmail is the Next Regencycore Trend

        Photography courtesy of Dave Benett/Getty Images

        Time to armour up.

        A chainmail mini dress has long been the It Girl party uniform. But in 2022, we’re wearing flat-out armour.

        Quick history lesson: in 1999, supermodels Naomi Campbell and Kate Moss famously stepped out in coordinating Versace metalwear dresses. In 2002, Paris Hilton donned a thin-strapped, shimmery dress to her 21st birthday party. And over a decade later, Kendall Jenner, inspired by Hilton, wore an almost identical slip to hers.

        This past year, Angelina Jolie and Zoë Kravtiz donned floor-length slinky chainmail dresses to a red carpet premiere and the Met Gala, respectively.

        But what was once something only seen on supermodels is now becoming a fixture of everyday dressing. In lieu of glitzy mini dresses, we’re seeing reimagined chainmail wardrobe staples like purses and fingerless gloves resurface on TikTok and Instagram, in addition to epaulet collars and headpieces reminiscent of the medieval period.

        Made of metal or metal-like material linked together, chainmail fashion sits somewhere between a disco and a battlefield, evoking feelings of celebration and strength. The trend is fitting as we enter our third pandemic year hopeful but armed with hindsight.

        The metal-heavy style is a natural progression of 2021’s Regencycore trend that popularized pieces like corsets, pearls and formal gloves.

        Clearly, we’re still yearning for a time before COVID-19 ushered us into an age of protective dressing (take this season’s balaclava trend, for instance). Gone are the days of maskless shopping trips and hand sanitizer-free outings. At the same time, fashion is entering a period of celebration and vitality, with many holding out hope for a second Roaring Twenties.

        With its battle-ready structure, chainmail clothing is protective and yet provocative, channeling the boundary breaking fashion set to define 2022.

        Categories
        Fitness

        How One Runner Conquered a 21-Minute Plank

        For most of us, planks don’t typically last a long time. Your core starts shaking, your arms start wobbling, your abs are on fire — about 30 seconds in, your body is yelling at you to wrap this up. But for marathoner and running coach Lorena Millan, planking became a personal challenge she knew she could overcome. Millan wanted to push her boundaries, and so she decided to hold a plank for as long as she could. That ended up being 21 minutes.

        Yes, a 21-minute plank. I mean, a two-minute plank is enough to make my abs tremble. How did Millan do it, and more importantly — why?!

        Her goal, she tells POPSUGAR, was partially a simple one: to strengthen her core. As a runner of 10 years and now a running coach, Millan knows that “strength training is a huge, important component in order to be faster and stronger.” Core strength, she explains, gives runners “more stability and balance to run faster.” Millan also loves the feeling of hitting new PRs and hitting her goals. “You just get so hooked,” she says. “You want to be better and better.”

        How did that turn into a 21-minute plank? Millan says this is a goal she’s been working towards for three years. Though, it was unintentional at first. She does one or two core routines a week, with three-to-four sets of one- or two-minute plank holds as well as side plank holds. Initially, Millan started doing longer planks “as a way to find strength in the pain, because that’s what we need to practice as endurance athletes.” She worked her way up to longer times, starting with a seven-minute plank, then progressing to 10, 12, 15, and finally 21 minutes: her new personal record.

        The 21-minute plank, surprisingly, “wasn’t as bad as I thought it [would] be,” Millan tells POPSUGAR. She says she was mentally prepared to suffer, “but really, I just focused on listening to a playlist I made for it.” The playlist was 17 minutes in length, and she was surprised when it ended and she was still feeling strong. When she finally looked at the stopwatch, she saw she’d been holding the plank for 20 minutes — longer than she’d planned. “I knew I could go deeper, so I did that,” Millan wrote in an Instagram post. “Finally broke when my little one came [in].”

        “It wasn’t easy for me to do this, but I proved [to] myself I could.”

        Millan came out of the experience even more inspired than before. “It wasn’t easy for me to do this, but I proved [to] myself I could,” she tells POPSUGAR. “It will never be easy, and it’s more of a mental limitation than a physical one! I encourage everyone to do the uncomfortable — you can really get to know yourself more if you don’t avoid it.” It won’t happen overnight and we definitely don’t recommend trying a 10-minute plank right out of the gate. But if you’re inspired by Millan’s accomplishment or just want to push your own boundaries, you can build up to longer holds in the same way she did. Build up slowly, work consistently, and you might be surprised by what your body can do.

        And if you were wondering what’s next for Millan and her plank holds, well, you probably already know the answer. “I want to try a 30-minute plank,” she says, “and more for sure!”

        Image Source: Lorena Millan

        Categories
        Culture

        Backstage with Project Runway: The Judges Talk Memories, Debates, and Fashion’s Future

        This season of Bravo’s Project Runway brought nothing but the crème de la crème. The lauded panel of judges lent their impeccable taste, unbeatable track record, and eye for top talent to the 19th season of the acclaimed fashion competition series.

        The judges include ELLE Editor-in-Chief Nina Garcia, journalist and New York Times bestselling author Elaine Welteroth, fashion designer and creative director Brandon Maxwell, and revered mentor and—Project Runway season 4 winner—Christian Siriano.

        Under the gaze of this powerful group, gifted designers from across the globe sew their way to success. The last contestant standing is awarded a quarter of a million dollars (courtesy of Pilot FriXion Erasable Pens), a runway show at the iconic New York Fashion Week, a photo spread in ELLE, and more. It’s fair to say the designers have a lot at stake, and the judges have a grand decision to make.

        Joining a Zoom call with the Project Runway judges felt like sliding into the extra seat at a lunch table filled with a group of laughing friends. Together, along with finale guest judge Tommy Hilfiger, they told ELLE.com all about their heated backstage battles, the runway moments that induced tears of joy, and what the fashion industry desperately needs right now.

        project runway season 19

        BravoGetty Images

        This season of Project Runway brought sophistication, innovation, and flare like no other. What was the most awe-inspiring moment from this season you can’t help but reminisce about?

        Elaine Welteroth: For me, it was the unconventional challenge. What they made with absolutely random materials they just found somewhere at a bar completely blew me away! It was one of the only times that I full-on cried—yes, cried—when I saw what one of the designers put down the runway. I was completely enamored by Shantall [Lacayo, Nicaraguan-born designer] and the dress that she made out of straws. It was completely made out of black straws that she hand-sewed together and made this beautiful textile.

        I feel like that was the turning point for her that actually re-routed her directly to the final four. After Christian saved her with his Siriano save, she came back with vengeance. She came to win. And she ended up in the winners’ circle! I love a redemption story and that’s exactly what we got from the unconventional challenge.

        Christian Siriano: The challenge with Coco [Rocha, who served as both guest judge and a model-muse for the final five designers] was so amazing. That is why we have the final four of these unbelievable women. What they made in that challenge in basically a day was insane!

        Nina Garcia: In 100-degree weather, I might add!

        Brandon Maxwell: It was not even 100, it was 130!

        Christian Siriano: It was so hot, and they were amazing! It was so beautiful to see what they made. That was my favorite moment.

        project runway season 19

        BravoGetty Images

        With no shortage of brilliance walking down the runway, it’s no wonder things could get a little heated when deciding which designer to send home. How did you come to the same conclusion when you had strong conflicting opinions on who should be in and who should be out?

        Welteroth: Everyone sees the designers battling it out on the show. What you guys don’t see is how much we battle it out behind the scenes with each other to arrive at that unified front and to make that final decision.

        We take our jobs really seriously as judges. Sometimes, usually, Nina has to say, “We gotta wrap this up, you guys!” She forces us to make a decision. In the end, we always feel good about where we land. But it is a process, and we don’t always agree.

        Maxwell: All of us always have different opinions. Always. Hands down. All 15 models can have the same black dress on and we will still disagree. We will disagree about the earrings or about the hair. But we will find something to disagree about. If you leave it to us, we can talk about it for 15 hours.

        project runway season 19

        BravoGetty Images

        What is one piece of advice you were given that you would want new trailblazers in the fashion industry to know?

        Maxwell: My grandmother gave me my best advice. She always said, “Don’t listen to anybody, just do what you think is right for yourself.” I didn’t realize until I got much older just how applicable that advice really is.

        That’s exactly what happens a lot in the fashion industry, especially when you’re starting out. There are a lot of conversations about who you are, who you should be, and who you shouldn’t be. It is really easy to lose yourself in all of that.

        “Don’t listen to anybody. Just do what you think is right for yourself. ” —Brandon Maxwell’s grandmother

        We have such a talented group of designers in the finale. Of the many things I love about them is that they each have such a strong sense of self. They each have a strong identity both in their person and their work.

        So my advice would be to stay true to who the hell they are on this journey forward, whether or not they win, stay true to that.

        project runway season 19

        BravoGetty Images

        What role do you think sustainability needs to play in the future of fashion?

        Garcia: A very important one. I mean, I’ve been in this business for a very long time and I am very optimistic about the future because I see how differently this new generation of designers thinks about fashion and thinks about the industry. They think about how to be more transparent and how to think sustainably. So, it is of utmost importance that we continue to think in this way so that we can protect our industry and our Earth.

        When I see the graduating classes of FIT or Parsons, when I see their curriculum, when I see what we do at ELLE to support sustainability, I see that the industry is moving toward that direction. Maybe not fast enough, but we’re getting there.

        “It is of utmost importance that we protect our industry and our Earth.” —Nina Garcia

        What excites you most about the direction the fashion industry is heading in?

        Tommy Hilfiger: Inclusiveness is paramount. I really believe that if we’re not sustainable, we’re going to harm the Earth even more than we have already. Those two things have to be the main focus of companies with an awareness of what needs to be done in the future.

        We at Tommy Hilfiger have planted a flag into the ground heralding sustainability and also inclusivity. We really believe that those two paths are the paths that every company has to take. And every designer has to keep that in mind in doing what they’re doing. Look, the competition is exciting, the ad campaigns are exciting, the fashion shows are great, but there’s a lot that goes on behind the scenes that are maybe even more important than all of that.

        project runway season 19

        BravoGetty Images

        The Project Runway season 19 finale airs on Feb. 3 on Bravo at 9 p.m. ET / 6 p.m. PT.

        This interview was edited and condensed for clarity.

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        Categories
        Beauty

        Who’s Afraid of Hormones?

        You know those bridesmaid-font t-shirts and mugs with sassy slogans like, “Powered by coffee and wine?” If I were a slogan-merch person, I’d add one item to that list: Mirena. As a person with naturally hellish periods, I am so grateful for my hormone-releasing IUD—and the nearly-nonexistent menstruation that comes with it—that I shudder to think what my life would look like without it. Me and hormonal contraception: It’s love.

        In the background of my love affair, though, has been an unsettling feeling that maybe it’s all too good to be true. I keep hearing about people quitting hormonal birth control and wondering: Wait, should I be worried?

        After a little digging, I realized I’m kind of lucky: Hormonal contraception has been causing unpleasant side effects for some users literally since it was invented. The earliest trials for birth control pills in the 1950s had large numbers of test subjects (mostly poor Puerto Rican women who, by the way, weren’t even told what they were taking) drop out because the side effects were so intolerable—so researchers began testing on women they could force to participate, such as residents of a Massachusetts mental asylum and medical students, also in Puerto Rico (sense a theme?), who were told they’d be expelled if they didn’t. The amount of hormones in oral contraception has been significantly reduced since those early versions, but for a minority of users, unpleasant side effects like unwanted weight gain or loss, pelvic pain, yeast infections, or bloating still abound. It’s not just oral BC: Though it’s less common, some users of hormonal IUDs, implants, and other long-acting hormonal methods also experience side effects they don’t love.

        I keep hearing about people quitting hormonal birth control and wondering: Wait, should I be worried?

        “On average, young, healthy people who take hormones might have some uncomfortable side effects as their body gets used to it for a few weeks, but in general those minor side effects will go away and they will have a good experience with it,” says Raegan McDonald-Mosely, MD, CEO of Power to Decide, a national campaign to reduce unplanned pregnancy which runs Bedsider.org, a comprehensive resource for contraception information. Still, “It’s important to recognize that there are a small subset of people for whom hormones would not be a good idea, whether because of their family history or because they just had a bad experience.”

        But side effects and contraindications aren’t the only reasons hormonal BC isn’t universally adored. In recent years, a cultural shift toward “natural” health and wellness practices has led some to question the safety of using hormonal birth control over the long term, fostered in part by the rise of wellness influencers and people sharing negative stories on social media. Users seem to be turning away from the Pill in particular: about 14 percent of women who use contraception reported taking the Pill in the CDC’s 2017–2019 survey versus about 19 percent back in 2002.

        This noise has gotten louder with the arrival of Phexxi, a new nonhormonal birth control method. This contraceptive gel was approved by the FDA in 2020, and then came Phexxi’s irreverent ads, starring The Pill Pia (who raises an eyebrow about using birth control “even while exercising”) and Condom Cait (who “doesn’t like relying on her man”). In a promotional video starring Annie Murphy, who’s now the official spokesperson, the Schitt’s Creek actor says that “I went on the Pill when I was 16, and that meant taking hormones every day. I didn’t ask questions, and I didn’t get educated about it. I just took what I was given.” Murphy goes on to describe the other hormonal methods she was prescribed, and her decision to try the pull-out method after she chose to stop taking hormones altogether, before discovering Phexxi. She never says exactly what gave her pause about hormones (and the Phexxi team canceled my interview with her when I wouldn’t give them sufficient details about the angle of this story), so it’s hard to know exactly what led her to quit them.

        As the ads made their way into my social feeds and streaming apps over the past year, I appreciated the taboo-busting of it all (and I love Annie Murphy). But I was still a little skeptical of the way the messaging seemed to dunk on other types of birth control (“No way would [Condom Cait] put hormones in her body!”). Why avoid hormones when they can be so miraculous, so life-alteringly helpful? In addition to easier periods, hormonal BC can help clear skin, regulate your mood, and, for longer-acting methods, free you from having to remember to take or use something every day or before sex. Mileage may vary, and again, some people using birth control do experience unpleasant side effects. But Phexxi’s ads seem aimed at those leery of hormones as a concept.

        Wherever someone’s hormone hesitancy might stem from, Phexxi, of course, isn’t the first hormone-free option out there. You’ve got the copper IUD (popular for its extremely low failure rate, less so for its tendency to cause heavier periods); barrier methods such as condoms, cervical caps, and diaphragms; spermicides; and fertility-awareness methods (which aren’t generally recommended because of the high failure rate).

        Phexxi is designed to be used right when sex is on the table: If users insert the gel and then don’t have sex within an hour but still plan to, they must insert another dose of Phexxi before intercourse. They also need to insert a new dose before each instance of intercourse even if they’re going to have sex more than once in a short time frame. The method may not be as set-it-and-forget-it as something like an IUD, but the ephemeral nature of Phexxi is part of the point, according to Saundra Pelletier, CEO of Evofem: The as-needed use allows for “sex on demand,” as she calls it. “Not all women have sex every day—doesn’t it seem weird that they put a synthetic hormone into their body every day?” Pelletier says.

        “Not all women have sex every day—doesn’t it seem weird that they put a synthetic hormone into their body every day?”

        For Selina Sandoval, MD, an OB/GYN, contraceptive specialist, and spokesperson for the American College of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Phexxi has been a helpful new option for her patients who aren’t candidates for estrogen-based methods and for patients who plan to start trying to conceive within a few months but need an effective method to use in the meantime. Phexxi is 93 percent effective with perfect use, and 86 percent effective for typical use, about the same as for condoms. And while there can be some side effects—the most common are vaginal burning or itching, or yeast infection—less than 2 percent of patients dropped out of a Phexxi trial because of them, Sandoval notes (the trial excluded those with a history of urinary tract infections, for whom Phexxi isn’t recommended).

        Listen, I’m not here to diss Phexxi. And I actually loved the way Pelletier talked to me about the importance of advocating for yourself and asking the hard questions. But, while none of the manufacturer’s marketing materials for Phexxi say outright that hormones are bad, or dangerous — it feels implied, and that’s not cool. “I am not sure where this idea of hormonal contraception being unsafe for an extended period came from. In my practice, I’ve heard it from patients themselves, and patients who say their doctors told them to get off a certain hormonal method ‘to give their body a break’—so this misconception is among not just patients but some doctors as well,” says McDonald-Mosely. “The ‘natural wellness’ movement seems to capitalize on people’s concerns about taking certain medications and putting ‘foreign’ things into their body, and unfortunately hormonal birth control has been pretty centered in that movement.”

        That’s not to say that there are zero longer-term health risks associated with taking hormonal contraception: For one thing, smokers and people who’ve had blood clots, breast cancer, heart problems, migraines with aura, high blood pressure or diabetes may not be able to use it safely. And there are very rare but serious complications on the record for the Pill (clots, heart attack, and stroke, among others; although it’s unlikely that those without contraindicatory underlying conditions would experience these outcomes). When it comes to breast cancer, “The data can be conflicting and it’s hard to give a 100% answer,” Sandoval says. “Most data points at [hormonal contraception] not increasing breast cancer risk, but some studies have shown a small increase in risk.”

        “I am not sure where this idea of hormonal contraception being unsafe for an extended period came from.”

        But by the same token, you could say there are rare potential health risks for those who don’t take hormonal contraception: People who take the Pill have a significantly reduced risk for ovarian, colon, and uterine cancer, Sandoval says.

        Though the hormones in the Pill are technically “synthetic,” a concept that scares some people away, they are identical to the hormones the body naturally makes on its own, says Sandoval. To be crystal clear: Over decades of research involving millions of users, no convincing evidence has been found that hormonal contraception is unhealthy or dangerous for long-term use for those without contraindications, and even initial adverse side effects tend to quiet down over time.

        It’s important not to “disparage people for being informed consumers,” McDonald-Mosely says. “But we have to be careful not to overemphasize the potential side effects and concerns — that could actually have a negative public health impact of causing more unintended pregnancies or more people cautious about using birth control.”

        When I asked Evofem about their messaging, they note “a significant faction of the population” is dissatisfied with current birth control options, and say the goal of their marketing materials is to ensure women are aware of all the options available so they can find the right birth control for them. And while it’s heartening to see people advocating for their own reproductive health and freedom, sharing publicly the good and the bad of their reproductive journeys, and making the choices that help them live healthfully and confidently, there’s something about a pharma company potentially fostering more unnecessary anxiety in people that raises my hackles. The thing is, well, we’re also living in a nightmare of a never-ending pandemic fueled in part by people “doing their own research” and intentionally avoiding a safe, effective, life-saving vaccine. So even subtle nods to vague, murky drawbacks of otherwise excellent interventions that could scare off users who could really benefit from them? They give me pause.

        Of course, the critical difference is that while there’s no safe alternative to getting a Covid-19 vaccine, there are plenty of good options for those who don’t want to take hormonal birth control. And having more birth control options on the table will always be a good thing: There are so many bodies and conditions and needs and priorities out there that pharma will never run out of totally valid use cases for new contraceptive products. People with penises—who currently get to choose between condoms or vasectomy (that’s it!) if they want to be in charge of birth control—could use some better options, too. So Phexxi, and whatever new method debuts next, may not be for me, but could be a game-changer for other people. Just leave me and my fellow Mirena stans out of it.

        “I’m super glad Phexxi’s on the market. But what we don’t want to do is make people question the safety of a contraceptive method that’s working for them or potentially would work for them,” McDonald-Mosely says. “It’s ok to be excited about a new nonhormonal option and still validate the importance of all of these other hormonal methods that many people have tried and loved.”

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        Categories
        Women's Fashion

        Hill House Home’s Fan-Favorite Nap Dress Now Has Pockets

        We’ve known and loved the one and only Hill House Home Ellie Nap Dress since it dropped in 2019. The epitome of comfy and chic, this dress quickly became a fan-fave fashion piece for its comfortable, loose fit, perfect for frolicking in a field or brunching with friends. I mean, what’s better than a dress that’s so soft you could snooze in, but stylish enough to wear out. Well, the dress just got better—It now has pockets.

        In Hill House Home’s latest collection, Victorian Romance, they not only upgraded their popular dress but also added new styles and whimsical prints to some of their existing ensembles. Bless the fact that the brand really bumped up their cottagecore energy and incorporated graphics that were inspired by classic paintings and dramatic florals in this capsule.

        It may not sound like much, but the pocket detail of the design is a total gamechanger. The small but mighty feature transforms alrady perfect dress into one that’s now convenient. Imagine all of the snacks you can store without having to carry around a purse.

        Whether you were already practically living in your Ellie Nap Dress or you were a bit hesitant to purchase one, this 2.0 version will have you busting out your debit card fast. The five-star-rated dress retails for $150 and comes in sizes XXS to 2XL and, like many of its previous styles, is expected to sell out quickly.

        hill house home

        Hill House Home

        Shop their newest Ellie Nap Dress drop and a bunch of their other releases (tops, jackets, skirts, and more) in their Victorian Romance collection—including the limited edition Ellie Nap Dress in a sheer tulle and sheer lace fabric—below.

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