Get the best of Oprah.com in your inbox. Sign up for our newsletters!
Beauty (124 posts) Back to Life Lift Home
Photo: Greg Kessler
Photo: Greg Kessler
Q: After a few minutes, most fragrances make me smell like a house of ill repute. What gives?

A: Nothing against big, sweet, heady fragrances, but the ones you've been trying may be too big, sweet, and heady, says Adam Eastwood, cofounder of luckyscent.com. He suggests you try something light and sheer with a citrus or white floral base (like gardenia or jasmine). But if you've already gone down that garden path and still smell a bit more indecorous than you'd like, you may be one of those people whose skin just doesn't tolerate fragrance. (Why the intolerance? There are so many variables in formulas and skin chemistry, it's probably impossible to determine.) 

Calice Becker, executive perfumer at fragrance and flavor company Givaudan, has a solution: Spray your favorite fragrance in your hair, where it won't react with your skin. And because hair contains oils, it's very good at retaining scent, she says. 

Keep in mind: Some fragrances are specially formulated for hair; try the sexy Serge Normant Avah Eau de Parfum ($60; sergenormant.com). For details see Shop Guide.
Topics: Beauty
Photo: Greg Kessler
Photo: Greg Kessler
Will I get a better mascara or eyeshadow if I spend more?

A: Yes, you can get better eye makeup if you pay more for it—up to a point, says cosmetic chemist Jim Hammer, founder and president of Mix Solutions in Uxbridge, Massachusetts. There are terrific options at the drugstore, home of big brands with great research and development teams. Because they're vying for your loyalty, these companies are constantly developing cutting-edge applicator and pigment technologies. At the department store, says Hammer, you'll see diminishing returns on your money: What you get is very similar to high-end drugstore brands.

Very similar, maybe, but not the same, says Anne Carullo, senior vice president of global product development at EstÉe Lauder. "The arsenal of ingredients and processes available to us aren't available to less expensive brands," she says. "We create our own pigments and coat them in a way that makes the application smoother and the wear longer, and we use a higher concentration of color." Department store brands are also likely to have more-durable packaging and include more bells and whistles. (A weighty gold compact does not equal better eyeshadow, but pulling it out of your bag can feel pleasingly luxurious.)

Keep in mind: Whether you're thrifty or extravagant, don't forget to replace your mascara every three months and your eyeshadows every two years, because they can become a breeding ground for bacteria.

Topics: Beauty
Photo: Marko Metzinger/Studio D
Photo: Marko Metzinger/Studio D
When sisters commiserate about complexion problems, the conversation usually ends with a sigh, maybe a trip to Sephora. For Rachel and Liz Edlich, it ended in a lab. The two women already knew the skincare business—they ran a company that created products for other brands—so they decided to assemble a stable of chemists to solve their skincare woes.

"At work it was all about packaging, marketing, and advertising," says Liz. "But once we decided to make products just for us, we thought about only one thing: efficacy." Their goal was to include the highest possible levels of various antioxidants, peptides, fruit acids, and moisturizing sodium hyaluronate. More than a year later, Rachel and Liz left the lab with their dream products in clear vials labeled with a Sharpie. Before long, Liz's fine lines were fading, Rachel no longer needed antibiotics to control her rosacea—and their friends wanted what they were having.

Now everyone can; their Radical Skincare line is available at Barneys New York stores and barneys.com, as well as their own site, radicalskincare.com. The packaging has been upgraded, but it's still simple. "We wanted to keep all the value inside the bottle," says Rachel. "A fancy jar or celebrity endorsement isn't going to transform your skin."
Topics: Beauty, Love That!
Photo: Marko Metzinger/Studio D
Photo: Marko Metzinger/Studio D
After a recent makeover of its packaging, Caswell-Massey looks pretty great for its age (at 260, it's the fourth oldest company—of any kind—in the United States).

Its new Botanicals collection comes in three scents—Fig & Bamboo, Vetiver & Cardamom, and Coriander & Mandarin—and consists of seven body-pampering treats (from a rich sugar butter scrub to a moisturizing soufflé) the likes of which you might expect to find in a thoroughly modern spa rather than an old-timey apothecary.

I especially like the delicate fragrance of the hydrating Coriander & Mandarin Hand Crème and Body Lotion ($16 and $26; caswellmassey.com).
Topics: Beauty, Love That!
Photo: Kevin Cremens
Photo: Kevin Cremens
If you're looking for something that's easy on the eyes—and cheeks and lips—may we suggest the new Aerin fall color collection? Aerin (that would be Aerin Lauder, granddaughter of Estée) believes wearing makeup should be "effortless" (or at least look that way). To that end, she has created a couple of can't-go-wrong palettes—one for workday, one for weekend—each containing two eyeshadows, a blush, and a highlighter. (Fall Style Palette in Weekend shown here, $70; esteelauder.com.) And to dress up your mouth: two lusciously moisturizing lip glosses and two universally flattering lipsticks ($30 each).
Topics: Beauty, Love That!
Photo: Marko Metzinger/Studio D
Photo: Marko Metzinger/Studio D
I don't mean to brag (okay, I do) but I can play a mean two-part invention on the piano. Why is it, then, that when it comes to applying eyeliner, I am completely butterfingered? In spite of detailed and patient instruction from the world's best makeup artists, I always wind up with a situation that might generously be called inequitable distribution.

My problem appears to have been solved, though, by the new Clarins 3-Dot Liner ($26; clarinsusa.com). The tiny applicator brush at the end of the pen has three points, which I dot along my upper lashline; the result looks like a continuous line, very neat and consistent. Brillante!
Topics: Beauty, Love That!
Photo: Marko Metzinger/Studio D
Photo: Marko Metzinger/Studio D
Goody Heat Wave Creator
($35, drugstores)

Why we love it: Wrapping small sections of hair around the grooved barrel creates soft, natural-looking—instead of tight, Shirley Temple curls. And the ceramic iron heats up evenly and quickly, reaching 410 degrees in just 30 seconds: speed styling!
Topics: Beauty, Love That!
Photo: Greg Kessler
Photo: Greg Kessler
Q: I recently noticed small, whitish bumps on my forehead; what are they, and how can I get rid of them?

A: If each bump has what looks like a dilated pore in the center, you probably have sebaceous hyperplasia (enlarged oil glands), says Deborah S. Sarnoff, MD, clinical professor of dermatology at New York University Medical Center. These bumps are very common and usually develop in people over 40. And, from the Things Could Be Worse department: They are benign and treatable. A doctor can cauterize the pores with an electric needle; the cauterization melts the oil gland and a scab forms, which falls off in a week or less. (Doesn't hurt, and it worked for me.) Or she can apply a clear chemical solution to be absorbed by the oil glands, and then activate the solution with a laser treatment, which shrinks the pores.
Topics: Beauty
Question: Help! Nothing works on the dark circles under my eyes.             

Answer: Dark circles are to complexion problems as frizz is to hair problems. Which is to say almost everyone is plagued by them. Circles can be caused by puffiness (often from allergies), hyperpigmentation, and blood vessels showing through the skin, says Elizabeth F. Callahan, MD, a dermatologist at Sarasota Memorial Hospital in Florida. Puffiness can be treated by taking an antihistamine and reducing your salt intake. Intense pulsed light treatment works well on hyperpigmentation; the Vbeam laser very effectively zaps blood vessels.

But if you've really tried everything and nothing has worked as well as you'd like, then concealer is your best friend. Choose a concealer one or two shades lighter than your skin, says makeup artist Carmindy. Pat it directly on the discoloration and set it with a translucent powder.            

Keep in mind: An eye cream can help reduce puffiness and shadows; try one containing niacin, caffeine, or green tea.

Topics: Beauty
Got a question about haircare, skincare or makeup for O's beauty director, Val Monroe? Now's your chance! During the month of August, Val is answering your burning beauty questions!

Jody asked: I'm looking for a new fragrance for fall. What do you recommend?

See Val's video response:



Do you have a question for O's beauty director Val Monroe or O's creative director Adam Glassman? Ask away here!
Topics: Beauty
1
...
Advertisement
about   Life Lift
The Oprah blog is a place where you can find engaging news coverage, fresh inspiration, and the straight talk you've come to count on. A place that provides the tools you need to make a change—if not in the world—then at least in your little corner of it. It's a place that will raise your energy, lower your blood pressure and occasionally make you laugh—in short, a place of possibility.
Advertisement
Advertisement