Quantcast
Channel: Style & Beauty
Viewing all 18689 articles
Browse latest View live

Nina Dobrev Shares Throwback Photos Before Her Final Episode Of 'Vampire Diaries'

$
0
0
Nina Dobrev is understandably getting a little sentimental. After all, it can't be easy to say goodbye to the character she's played for the past six seasons on "The Vampire Diaries," as well as the show's cast and crew.

In honor of the Season 6 finale, which will be the 26-year-old actress' last episode, Dobrev has been taking a walk down memory lane and posting #throwbackthursday photos, every hour on the hour, to count down to tonight's episode.

"It's been 6 amazing years... there have been a million great memories. Thank you to everyone who has joined me on this incredible journey. I love you all.... ❤️Love, Nina. Aka Elena," she captioned the first throwback photo she posted.







#TVDTBT @katgrahampics @steven_r_mcqueen @saradjcanning @iansomerhalder @candiceaccola @questionanders

A photo posted by Nina Dobrev (@ninadobrev) on


















"The Vampire Diaries" airs Thursdays at 8 p.m. on The CW.


-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.


These Stylish Instagram Moms Actually Make Me Feel Better About Life

$
0
0
I became a mother nine glorious months ago. I don't say that sarcastically. I'm literally having the time of my life, aside from the lack of sleep and the screeching halt of my social life, amongst other things. At the end of the day, there are just certain sacrifices you make in exchange for bringing one of the most awesome human beings you will ever meet into the world.

The one thing I didn't anticipate was my personal style taking a tailspin and crashing into Frumpyville.





Let's face it, it's no small feat trying to keep a kid alive (and well), while also attempting to look good. Plus, I've been so focused on making sure my little man is looking fly that I don't have the energy to do the same for myself. I can occasionally pull myself together when I know I have an important meeting or event. But for the most part I'm lucky if I can find a clean shirt to throw on. I've even become a pro at jazzing up a pair of sweatpants (good thing they are totally on trend).




However, there's always hope. When I'm feeling particularly down and out about my style, I do a few things. First, I remind myself that I'm totally magical and just birthed an entire person. This is usually followed up by looking at one of the 5,000 pictures of my son saved in my phone. Next, I take a moment to twerk -- either literally or in my head. A quick dance session can always brighten my mood. Last but not least, I scroll through my Instagram feed, which is filled with fashionable moms who remind me that I'm not alone in this frustrating, yet beautiful, struggle.




There is so much power in seeing images of women that are juggling kids, jobs and relationships (whether they be in a marriage/partnership or not) -- and doing it in style. These ladies, who are a combination of my friends and friends-of-friends, inspire me with their super-successful careers and incredible sartorial skills. And that doesn't mean they are dripping in Chanel and running around in stiletto heels with a child on their hip (although sometimes they do). It's about staying true to yourself and not losing your personal style in the madness of motherhood.




In celebration of that sentiment, here are just a few of the moms who continue to show me that motherhood is chic-er than ever.






A photo posted by LaTonya (@latonyayvette) on



A photo posted by Angie Marei (@angiemarei) on







A photo posted by @covetedthings on



A photo posted by June Ambrose (@juneambrose) on







A photo posted by tamumcpherson (@tamumcpherson) on



A photo posted by tabbycaaaat (@tabbycaaaat) on







A photo posted by Simone Gittens (@shesimone) on





A photo posted by Nicole Philip (@nicolep23) on





A photo posted by Latham Thomas (@glowmaven) on









A photo posted by Mrs. Freezy (@mechelle_chanai) on



A photo posted by Neffi Walker (@neffiwalker) on



A photo posted by @katepspencer on









A photo posted by T (@tashajoy44) on



A photo posted by Liz Anthony (@lizanthony) on



A photo posted by @kenyahunt on



A photo posted by M. Nicole (@mnikkib) on



A photo posted by @sarahshabacon on



-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

YouTuber Kalel Kitten Bravely Reveals Acne Struggle To Show Fans She's A 'Real Person'

$
0
0
"I am currently facing the absolute worst acne breakout of my entire life."

It sounds like something you’d never want to say on camera, but one YouTuber did. Then, she shared the video with her 1.7 million subscribers.

Over the last few months, a YouTuber known online as Kalel Kitten has posted videos including silly challenges with other YouTubers like Joey Graceffa. Her latest upload took a more serious turn though, and she decided to talk about her recent struggles with acne. What started out as a few cysts turned into something more, and it has taken a toll on her emotionally.

Disclaimer: This video contains some inappropriate language.



"I don’t know what’s triggering this, but I’ve just spiraled down so far," she said. "I went into a really deep state of depression."

The YouTuber explained that her acne became so bad that she didn’t even want to look at herself or leave her home. She noted her situation is a "first world problem" and told viewers she knows it could be worse, but it still has been difficult for her. Though she admitted she’s unsure if she wants to continue documenting her experience, she thinks it could show viewers a different side of well-known YouTubers.

"Do I want to just do that and just vlog because I think it’ll make me a stronger person and I think it’ll be cool for people to see me going through something like this, that I’m a real person?" she said. "I don’t know."

Viewers have responded with encouraging comments on the video calling her "beautiful" and "an inspiration." Kalel reached out on Twitter to let them know she appreciated their kind words.




Way to go, YouTube community.

Follow HuffPost Teen on Twitter | Instagram | Tumblr | Pheed |

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

British Lingerie Brand Panache Uses 'Role Models' In Place Of Models For Inspiring Campaign

$
0
0
Move over, Kendall Jenner. There's a brand new set of models on the scene, thanks to British lingerie company Panache's "Modelled By Role Models" campaign.

The ads feature six incredible women, whose achievements range from aiding in the fight against Ebola to running over 50 marathons in 53 days all over the UK. Panache hopes to use the campaign to shift the perception of what being a model truly means.

marquita

“In our research, we found that 75 percent of women felt they had few or no role models, and that’s what sparked our new campaign," Kay-Lin Richardson, Director of Sales at Panache, told The Huffington Post. "We want to shift the perception of what being a model really is –- being celebrated for contributions to society and personal achievements rather than physical attributes. We’re thrilled to feature these six amazing women as aspirational role models. And, their healthy approach to body image dovetails with Panache’s mission to make sure our customers are comfortable and confident in their own skin."

Among the women included is Marquita Pring (seen above), who aside from being a plus-size model is also one of the five co-founders of ALDA, a coalition that works to change standards of beauty in the fashion industry and for young women across the country. In an accompanying video for the campaign, Pring lists some of her many achievements, explaining, "I like to think there's so much more to me, than just the way I look."

hannah

Joining Pring in the ad are Rachel Elliott, Amy Hughes, Mica Paris, Hannah Crockoft and Martyna Kaczmarek, who each also sat down with the brand to discuss the shoot and what being a role model means to them.

mica

Check out the video above, and to learn more about the women and campaign, head to Panache's site.

martyna

rachel

amy

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Street Style Layers: Ideas That Aren't Just for Chilly Weather

$
0
0
When you think of layering, you probably automatically think of fall and winter clothing. But you don't have to - casual, light layers are also the perfect addition to your spring wardrobe, which should soon be transitioning into your summer one.

The trick to layering up when you're out and about is to make the layers look casual and easy. And if you're going to stay out running errands starting in say, the early afternoon, and heading to dinner with pals in the evening, you'll want to make sure that you plan to bring warm layers along. However, if you dress too warmly, that can be a whole other problem.

The looks showcased in our recent "Warm Up" photo series are layered styles that keep our models at just the right temperature for the ever-changing spring weather. Bright looks combined with light washes of denim and light grey give your layers a contemporary touch; and if you want to go for an all-American look, just add a denim jacket to a white undershirt.

Hoodies are also a big trend this spring, so be on the lookout for those cropping up amongst your favorite brands. The Bread & Boxers Hoodie, featured in our photoshoot, has a pullover design and a trendy neck cut.

And heck - if you even want to accessorize a bit more and throw on a lightweight scarf to take you to dinner, we won't complain.

2015-05-07-1431024129-3867191-headerLayers4BrandandboxerPerryEllis930x465.jpg

Click for more information about hoodies and layers, and check out The Underwear Expert for all of the latest men's underwear trends.

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Women in Business Spotlight: Kathryn Johann Brings Mermaids to Life

$
0
0
"It's been a passion of mine to help women feel as good as possible so they can enjoy their time at the beach." - Kathryn Johann


Buying a bathing suit is scary. Even the most confident, empowered, ball-busting corporate executive will admit it, if only to herself. It's scary. Because unlike lingerie, which only you and possibly a significant other will ever intimately know, or a power suit that intimidates and defines, wearing a swimsuit in public is the equivalent of letting your intimacy hang out there for all the world to see in all its vulnerable glory, and to hold your head up and fake the confidence you may not necessarily feel while you try to relax at the pool or on the beach. And though, yeah, intellectually you know nobody's really watching you or judging you or your body by what you wear, psychologically it feels like you're frozen in a huge spotlight, especially if the bathing suit on your body is just wrong, wrong, wrong, and you're uncomfortable in addition to being self-conscious. At least this is how it is for me.

And apparently, it's exactly what happened to Kathryn Johann too. As an un-waifish, normal, average-sized beautiful woman, she was constantly searching for a bathing suit she just felt comfortable in, as well as attractive, and especially sexy. A bathing suit with high quality "stronger, thicker fabric" that, as she puts it, "does miracles with sucking in any flaws." A bathing suit that had proven elusive so many times, she decided to solve this problem for herself, and she hoped for other women who were facing similar obstacles, by creating the Morada Blue swimwear line.

Islamorada, Florida, where her family keeps their vacation home, was the inspiration for the Morada Blue swimwear name, and like so many small businesses dreamed up from scratch, it started really small. Beginning with trunk shows at friends houses, and through word-of-mouth, it quickly grew into runway shows and bikini parties, eventually making its debut in swim shops in Michigan, California and Florida. It also flourishes as an online apparel store as well at moradablue.com. She plans to open her own full-scale beachwear shop within a few years.

Drawing from her formal education in art and design at Lafayette College and her studies abroad in Florence, Italy, Kathryn focuses on classic styles and slim lines with flattering accents ranging from contemporary shapes to fluttery romance for just the right touch of flair and individuality. She takes this further by selling all her suits as separates and adding cups and underwire for extra support and comfort. Her latest brainchild for this upcoming swimsuit season is her Swim Like a Mermaid campaign, where she will be doing underwater photo shoots with models that embody the spirit and joy of mermaids of the sea.

Building on the momentum the last year has brought to her business, Kathryn tells us, "I will be hosting model search events in Florida, doing runway shows and photo shoots and will be participating in a Maxim Magazine event in Miami during Swim Week [in July]." As an independent, empowered and driven woman she admits she "knew that eventually I wanted to be my own boss and start a company that I would be proud of." Working hard and enjoying what she does with gratitude for the opportunites she's had along the way, she doesn't worry about or "feel stress of the competition," seeing the work as its own reward and hoping to make even a small contribution to helping women "feel and look as good as possible."

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Why Smart Women Watch (And Love) 'The Bachelor'

$
0
0
Confession time: I've been watching "The Bachelor"... and I like it. I've been hopelessly and unfortunately trapped in the franchise's web of tears, overly-earnest declarations of love and tacky dresses -- and I'm far from alone.

I'm a relatively new devotee to this cultural phenomenon, which first hit the small screen in 2002, and has spanned spin-offs "The Bachelorette" (2003), "Bachelor Pad" (2010) and "Bachelor In Paradise" (2014). After avoiding the franchise successfully for nine years, I was invited to a viewing party by some women that I worked with during Ashley Hebert's season of "The Bachelorette," in May 2011. I was officially hooked, following Ashley through her engagement to JP Rosenbaum, watching all 18 "Bachelor Pad" contestants self-destruct and getting knee-deep in white wine tears on Ben Flajnik's season of "The Bachelor" -- despite the glaring fact that each of the series is objectively bad. Somehow, four years later, I've stuck with it, watching every season of "The Bachelor" and "The Bachelorette" since -- and live-tweeting and recapping along.

Most of my peers have a love-hate relationship with "The Bachelor" franchise -- specifically, we hate that we love it. The underlying messages of the shows are beyond terrible. We're essentially told that all women in their twenties should be desperately searching for a man to marry (most of the 30-something bachelorettes are portrayed as a particular breed of desperate), and that women are, in general, complete and utter nutjobs. Although, of course, this only applies to white women, as people of color rarely get cast.

Yet even knowing all of these things, season after season, droves of intelligent, successful women come back to ABC and host Chris Harrison for more. In the words of "Brokeback Mountain's" Jack: "I just can't quit you." So why do we do it to ourselves? Is it just pure masochism, or is there something else at play?

The Fake Reality Of "The Bachelor" Franchise Sheds Light On How We View Love
As a writer and pop culture obsessive with an academic background in Sociology, I was immediately fascinated by what "The Bachelor" and "The Bachelorette" say about the way our culture thinks about love and sex. As progressive as many Americans have become about these matters, we still find it hard to resist a good ol' retrograde romance. Slut-shaming? We've seen it on "The Bachelor." A near-obsession with framing romantic attachment as a fairy tale? We've seen it on "The Bachelorette." There's an entire industry built around making one's wedding day the only day that matters, we are still collectively embarrassed to speak honestly about sex and there is still a serious lack of representation when it comes to anything beyond white, heterosexual romantic partnerships. All of these things play a part in the narratives of "The Bachelor" and "The Bachelorette."

the bachelorette

It Allows Us To Feel Just A Little Bit Superior
I think the so-bad-its-good appeal of "The Bachelor" franchise is probably related to the morbid curiosity that impels people to rubberneck on the interstate. Watching the contestants of "The Bachelor" and "The Bachelorette" cry in limos, discuss their burgeoning careers as VIP cocktail waitresses, junkyard specialists, sex coaches and dental consultants, and threaten to physically harm each other over someone they barely know, is alternately horrifying and captivating.

We also get to feel good about the fact that none of us would go to such lengths to impress a romantic prospect. Tell another woman you'll cut her face off? Nope. Leave your Ph.D. program to move across the country to a small town? Not even if Ryan Gosling showed up in a limo holding a boom box over his head with two dozen roses and said "You're the one." (Well, maybe for Ryan Gosling...)

It's A Safe Outlet For Our Frustrations
Mondays are hard. Maybe you had a terrible weekend and are still feeling a little under the weather, maybe you had a crappy day at work, maybe your roommate is getting on your nerves or maybe you're just pissed off for no reason at all. Want a safe way to let out your anger without being hurtful to your loved ones? "The Bachelor" has you covered. Get a week's worth of snark out with a few well-timed tweets. You might piss off your followers, but they can always mute you.



It Makes Love Seem Simple...
If you are watching an absurdist "journey" for three months, you inevitably have to buy into it a little bit. Yes, there's still snark, but there's also a part of us that enjoys watching someone "find love" -- even when we kind of think it's bullshit. What if finding a life partner really was as easy as bouncing around the world for 12 weeks in a helicopter? What if we could control all the circumstances surrounding love and end up happy? Love isn't a 12-week competition of white wine and tears that you can "win" -- but there's something kind of satisfying about imagining that it could be.

...But It Also Makes Us Grateful For The (Oft-Painful) Real Thing
"The Bachelor" and "The Bachelorette" are shows that trade on the manufacturing of "true love." After all, in what world would 25 random girls all fall madly in love with one dopey dude (and in a matter of hours)?

While it's fun to watch all of the uber-cheesy, romance-laden dates unfold on television, the reality of sitting in an empty theater with a practical stranger watching your old baby videos or being forced by a stylist to watch clips of an upcoming movie on an iPad while you're being "pampered" -- actual dates that have occurred on "The Bachelor" -- sound more uncomfortable than anything. Watching makes us glad we date off-screen, in a world where we will never meet a romantic partner by riding in on a white horse or get dumped while standing on a glacier.

Plus, if there were ever a reason to fully let go of the Prince Charming fantasy that shows like "The Bachelor" attempt to play upon, just look at the numbers. Of all of the couples "magically" brought together on the franchise, only five are still together -- one being Chris and Whitney, who have only been publicly engaged since the end of March. Most of us would rather brave the uncomfortable waters of meeting people in bars, through friends or on Tinder than cut down our peers on national television, or "win" love and then be publicly dumped -- details of the whole messy affair splashed across the tabloids.

So instead of taking "The Bachelor" franchise too seriously or using it as any kind of model for our own conduct, we take from it exactly what it can give us -- an escape from our daily lives, a reason to appreciate our real, imperfect romances, and an excuse to drink wine on a Monday night... sans tears.

This piece is an updated version of a 2012 feature.

Check out HuffPost's new "Bachelorette"-themed podcast, "Here To Make Friends"!


You can check out our future episodes of Here To Make Friends and other HuffPost Podcasts on The Huffington Post's Sound Cloud page. Thanks to our producer, Katelyn Bogucki, our editor Jorge Corona, and our guest Jay Overbye.

Also, check out the HuffPost Here To Make Friends podcast on iTunes and make sure to rate and review the show, too.

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Oh Thank God, Now We Finally Know What Happened To Huell On 'Breaking Bad'

$
0
0
If you've been waiting with bated breath to find out the fate of Huell since "Breaking Bad" ended, stop it. Seriously, it's not good for you and the series finale was almost two years ago. Also, we now have an answer.

waitingfoever101010

Last time viewers saw Huell, he was waiting in a safe house for Hank and Gomez to return. Since that was never going to happen, fans were left wondering if Huell maybe just kept on waiting. The show's creator Vince Gilligan reveals in a new "Breaking Bad" book that all hope was not lost for Huell:



Yes, sadly he’s waiting morosely on that sofa, looking like a lost puppy… [Laughs] No. It’s likely that Agent Van Oster keeps in touch with DEA headquarters. So when he learns Gomez and Hank have gone missing, he would in short order tell his superiors what they were up to. Within a matter of hours, really not that many in story time, Huell will be taken back to HQ. They’ll question him, find out what he knows -- which isn’t much -- and he’ll be let out on the street. Right now, he’s doing what Huell does best, whatever that is. He’s out and about as a free man.


Well, that's one less thing keeping you up at night.

H/T: Uproxx

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.


Stefano Tonchi, W Magazine Editor-in-Chief: We're 'Still Paying' For Putting Kim Kardashian On The Cover

$
0
0
W Magazine was met with criticism when it featured Kim Kardashian on the cover all the way back in 2011, but according to Editor-In-Chief Stefano Tonchi, the scrutiny still hasn't ended.

"When we put Kim Kardashian on the cover of W Magazine, that was quite risky and somehow I'm still paying for it," he told HuffPost Live in a Wednesday conversation to promote the magazine's annual Art issue.

The cover in question featured Kardashian nude and spray painted silver, which readers complained was "very provocative but really something very lowbrow. Too commercial," Tonchi recounted.

"They talked about W [Magazine] as something much more society," he recalled of the naysayers. "But what is the new society? Let's see who was on the list at the MET [Ball]: She was!"

Tonchi continues to defend the magazine's choice to make the ubiquitous reality star its cover girl.

"Kim Kardashian was a work of art because she really built herself in a way -- creating this mythology around herself and her family and creating an empire around it, as we know," he explained. "And that empire now, is the Kardashian empire."

Watch more from Stefano Tonchi's conversation with HuffPost Live here.


Sign up here for Live Today, HuffPost Live’s morning email that will let you know the newsmakers, celebrities and politicians joining us that day and give you the best clips from the day before!

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

What Tabloid Headlines Would Look Like Without The Sexism

$
0
0
Magazine tabloids tend to treat women like zoo animals instead of people.

Created by college students Erin Valentine and Ashley McGetrick, a new project called "Breaking News: Deconstructing Entertainment Journalism" highlights the rampant sexism in entertainment media by revealing what headlines would look like if tabloids treated female celebrities like real people.

kourtney

Click here to enlarge image.


The two seniors at Elon University created the project for their capstone course on women and gender in the media.

"By translating these headlines to be more feminist-friendly, we hoped to call out sexist and unequal cultural influences, especially of celebrities, in the media," Valentine told The Huffington Post. "Sensationalized tabloid media preys on the female body and an idealized version of 'womanhood.'"

Headlines involving female celebrities are notorious for objectifying women, Valentine said. From shaming women who go makeup-free to criticizing women for wearing gym clothes, tabloids subject women to a lot of sexism that men rarely experience.

"Whether in line at the grocery store, scrolling through Facebook or flipping through television channels, it is hard to miss headlines worshiping, critiquing or questioning the physiques and lifestyles of female public figures," Valentine said. "While seemingly harmless, these hyped up headlines attack more than just the people pictured."

It's not only the headlines that are implicitly sexist, but the stories written about these female celebrities. Instead of writing about how hard-working Blake Lively is when she attends dozens of events in one day, stories are written about how many outfits she wore.

Valentine noted that consumers do have an impact on these headlines. "They should also acknowledge that they have the power to push back as viewers and as the audience to encourage more feminist-friendly entertainment journalism," she said.

Check out some of Valentine's and McGetrick's feminist-friendly headlines below.




Head over to Valentine's and McGetrick's project website to read more.

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

'When They Were Kids' Cartoons Perfectly Depict Rihanna And Other Fashion Icons As Children

$
0
0
It looks like Rihanna was always a "bad gal."

rihanna

Fashion Cartoonist, an anonymous doodler who has been featured in the trade publication Business of Fashion as part of its Fashion Funnies section, has released a new set of adorable cartoons.

The images, which depict fashion icons and celebrities as "children," are a welcome light-hearted contribution to an industry that has the tendency to take itself pretty seriously. The cartoonist, who chooses to stay anonymous, explained in an e-mail to The Huffington Post:

"My blog is, in its own way, a tribute to the extraordinary personalities that populate the fashion world. I believe that, while fashion is definitely a very important and serious business, sometimes we take it too seriously. My cartoons put fun, irony and humor back into it!"


Fashion Cartoonist posts standalone images like the one of Rihanna, as well as nods to happenings in pop culture. Elton John's feud with Dolce & Gabbana got the cartoon treatment, as well as Pharrell and Robin Thicke's legal troubles. Even Iris Apfel is included, just off the heels of the release of her documentary.

Preach. To see more from Fashion Cartoonist, head to the blog and Instagram.

iris

elton

pharrell robin thicke

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Geri Halliwell Marries Christian Horner

$
0
0
Zig-a-zig-ah! Ginger Spice just got married. The former pop star tied the knot with Formula1 racing team boss Christian Horner at Woburn Abbey in Bedfordshire, England on Friday.

She wore a Phillipa Lepley gown, and was accompanied by her daughter, Bluebell Madonna. Because friendship really is forever, Baby Spice's (aka Emma Bunton) sons Tate and Beau acted as page boys.

geri

geri

Other Spice Girls Victoria Beckham and Melanie Brown were not in attendance, but they tweeted well wishes (and one A-plus vintage photo).







Halliwell and Horner have been dating since 2014, and got engaged back in November.

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Catalyst Wedding Magazine Is The Answer To Our Feminist Prayers

$
0
0
2015-05-15-1431707199-2196099-catalystbeautifulpromoimage.jpg
Credit: Betty Clicker Photography

Liz Susong and Carly Romeo, founders of the new Catalyst Wedding Magazine, felt it was time the bridal industry had a "feminist disruption." Their magazine, which launches later this month, aims to do just that.

Instead of just featuring the white, wealthy heterosexual couples that usually grace the pages of popular bridal publications, Catalyst celebrates the underrepresented: people of color, diverse bodies, same-sex couples and the many, many people who can't spend anywhere close to $40,000 on a wedding.

"Carly and I see a need for a magazine that publishes real, authentic love celebrations and diverse love stories that doesn't allow advertising revenue to drive its content," Susong told The Huffington Post.

In March, Susong, a "progressive" wedding planner, and Romeo, a feminist wedding photographer, set up a Kickstarter page to raise funding for the project. They surpassed their original goal of $8,500, ultimately raising $13,490.

2015-05-15-1431707379-360769-simenahandifi515.jpg
Credit: Cassie Rosch

Susong explained to HuffPost that Catalyst considers itself feminist on three counts: representation, roles and rights.

"Part of our mission is to increase diverse representation in wedding media," she said. "We want to see all sorts of couples and bodies being presented in full-color, beautiful print! The editorial content engages in critical dialogue around wedding traditions and the industry at large, especially around gendered roles in the wedding planning process."

And while Susong says the publication is a "strong voice in favor of marriage equality," she explained that Catalyst is not a gay wedding magazine.

"We're not just looking for a new niche market to sell glitter to!" she said. "We're celebrating authentic love and community -- no strings attached."

2015-05-15-1431707480-8653355-Gwenhillpopwedco.jpg
Credit: Pop! Wed Co.

Some of the features in the first issue include "Let's Ditch The Diet," "What Makes A Rebellious Bride" and a personal essay titled "Here In Your Love" about planning a wedding while writing a Ph.D. dissertation. And then, of course, there are the beautiful real wedding photo spreads featuring couples not traditionally pictured in mainstream bridal print publications.

"It's important to us that the magazine is in print because while some offbeat wedding resources exist online, we rarely get to see diverse bodies in beautiful, full-color print spreads," Susong said. "Magazines provide a tactile experience, and all of the couples together in the magazine tell one story. We think that's really special!"

2015-05-15-1431721197-4526800-rebelliousbride515115.jpg

Susong and Romeo say they are aiming to produce two volumes a year, with the second issue coming out in January 2016. So far, they have sold around 600 copies of the first issue -- and counting.

You can order your copy of Catalyst here. Orders will begin shipping Memorial Day weekend.

H/T Mic

Watch an interview with Liz Susong below:



-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

So, Madonna Has Pink Hair Now

$
0
0
Oh, Madonna. You never cease to amaze us with your honesty, resilience and ever-changing look.

Our favorite "Material Girl" debuted some brand new fuchsia ombré on Instagram Thursday, proving that she is as on trend as ever. She and Daniel Moon, the colorist who gave her the new look, posted matching photos. Madonna's reads: "Rise and Shine NY!!!#bitchimmadonna" Because of course.

Rise and Shine NY!!!#bitchimmadonna

A photo posted by Madonna (@madonna) on




Madge appears to have taken a cue from Kaley Cuoco, who dyed her hair a lighter shade of pink last month. There's no confirmation whether Madonna's hair is actually dyed, or if it's a more temporary chalk/extension/wig situation. But either way, based on over 90,000 likes from her Instagram followers, we'd say the choice to go pink was a good one.

What do you think of her new 'do? Sound off below!

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

The Problem With These Forever 21 Shirts

$
0
0
A video on Buzzfeed prompted me to check out Forever21's website. I am way over the age of being allowed to set foot inside the physical store, but the video gave women's reactions to some of their graphic t-shirts and I had to know what all the fuss was about.

What I discovered was an array of shirts which seem to be painting young girls as sexualized, uncaring, insensitive and dim-witted buffoons. I am appalled at some of the slogans being marketed towards young women. Below are just a few that turned my WTF meter to 11.

2015-05-15-1431671242-7471944-killscreativity.jpg

So, either you can be creative or you can be in love. Really? Turn on the radio, read a poem, watch a movie and it is clearly evident that love can actually propel creativity to new heights. Seriously -- what does this mean?

2015-05-15-1431671290-2468336-actuallyreallysmart.jpg

The subtext being, "But you wouldn't know that by how I dress." I guess smart girls can't wear crop tops. Sorry, ladies who express their personalities through fashion -- if you want to be taken seriously, you better don a muumuu.

2015-05-15-1431671325-3344039-troublemaker.jpg


This cute script says "Trouble Maker." Why should young girls ever consider being a troublemaker, let alone advertise it? This is a clear play on teenagers' need for acceptance and feeling like if they're the "bad girl," they'll be respected or popular.

2015-05-15-1431671364-4643114-risque.jpg


Risqué: adjective. "Slightly indecent or liable to shock, especially by being sexually suggestive." Because that's a message that should be marketed to young women.

2015-05-15-1431671410-5846034-gross.jpg


This one confounds me. Is the wearer saying she's gross, or that the person reading it is gross? I know this is supposed to be cute or something, but I just don't get it.

2015-05-15-1431671450-8833417-fancylittlenumber.jpg


I believe the defense of this shirt is that the clothing itself is the fancy little number -- like the new little black dress or something. But come on. Is anyone going to look at, or buy, the shirt with that intention? Absolutely not.

2015-05-15-1431671507-1712780-ionlydidittogetlikes.jpg


"Likes" = love. False love. Ladies should not be told, even inadvertently, that doing things for "likes" is a worthy reason to do things.

2015-05-15-1431671546-7668534-dontwantfeelingswantnewclothes.jpg


Our teenage years are full of hormone surges and complicated feelings that no amount of shopping can -- or should -- replace.

2015-05-15-1431671582-3563327-kissmeidareyou.jpg


Sexualization and aggression all wrapped up in one black shirt. That's exactly what I'd want my 15-year-old telling the world.

2015-05-15-1431671626-3045658-feedmetellmepretty.jpg


Evidently, the way to a teenager's heart is with a burger and a compliment on her exterior beauty. No need to tell her she's smart or creative or inspirational. Nope. Just "pretty" with a side of fries will do.

2015-05-15-1431671685-7172684-noonecares.jpg


The pièce de resistance. This was my mantra through my angsty teen years when all I wanted was for someone to tell me they did care about me. Now, young women can just wear this shirt to divert everyone's attention from the fact they really need someone to listen to them.

I understand these shirts are meant to be cute and trendy, ironic and funny, but they just make me sad that my daughter is growing up in a society where young women's insecurities are being preyed upon for the all mighty dollar. It's just wrong and unconscionable and flat-out disturbing. Shame on you, Forever21.

You can find more from Toni Hammer at Is It Bedtime Yet, on Facebook, and on Twitter.

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.


Watch This Sweet Couple Age 70 Years In Six Minutes

$
0
0
A month before their wedding, engaged couple Kristie Scherrer and Tavis Doucette participated in a fun and surprisingly emotional experiment. Using makeup and prosthetics, the pair was able to get a glimpse of what they'll look like as they grow old together.

Cut Video collaborated with Field Day on the sweet six-minute video, which shows Kristie and Tavis -- currently in their late 20s -- as people in their...

Fifties:

via Tribune Media

"I hope you look like this," Tavis says. "You look fantastic."

Seventies:

via Tribune Media

"To see her look like this makes me just think of where we have gone to be next to each other looking like this," he says. "What would have happened in between."

And nineties:

via Tribune Media

"There's some strange, comforting feeling seeing him this way," Kristie says.

A Cut Video employee told BuzzFeed that the makeup artists used the couple's family photos as a guide to what they might look like at that stage in their life.

According to their wedding website, Kristie and Tavis tied the knot on Friday. The making of the video, filmed roughly a month before the wedding, couldn't have come at a better time.

"Especially being about to get married and embarking on all that, I couldn't be more sure that this is what I want," Kristie says at the end of the video. And with that, our hearts have officially turned to mush.

Keep in touch! Check out HuffPost Weddings on Facebook, Twitter and Pinterest. Sign up for our newsletter here.

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

In This Week's Cheap Celeb Finds, It Looks Like Beyonce Loves H&M

$
0
0
bey
Photo credit: Alo Ceballos/GC Images


When we think of Beyonce, we normally think of her wearing a gorgeous (and extremely expensive) designer dress. And for most red carpet appearances, that proves to be the case. But this week, we spotted Ms. Knowles-Carter out and about in jeans that look awfully similar to a pair we saw for $39 at H&M. Looks like Bey may also be the queen of bargain shopping.

Check out all the other celebs we spotted in affordable items this week, and let us know which ones you're coveting.

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

It's OK To Be Fat. Go Ahead. You're Allowed.

$
0
0
I know the fat shamers on the anti-fat Reddit threads and the "concern trolls" all over the world will disagree heartily, but I am allowed to take up as much space as I want to take up. And, you know what else? I do not OWE IT TO ANYONE to be fat and healthy, either.

Contrary to popular opinion, I can be fat and healthy if I want to be. I can also be fat and unhealthy. Fat people have existed as long as humans have existed, so get used to us. We're not going to go and hide just because a bunch of people who have a lot of time to waste on a computer are creating hate sights dedicated to making fun of our fat body. I've been fat for over 30 years. My fat skin is extra thick and used to your vile and mean comments. They roll right off my back. (And right over my fat ass, too.) And, the mean threads that are started by the fat haters actually fuel my fire and serve as a reminder as to how much there is still to do in the Body Acceptance movement.

To me, it's plain and simple: You get to exist any way you want to exist. As Pink so eloquently put it recently when being attacked about her body: "I'm not worried about me. And I'm not worried about you, either. I am perfectly fine, perfectly happy, and my healthy, voluptuous and crazy strong body is having some much deserved time off."

Pink is saying what a lot of us "fatties" in the Body Acceptance movement repeat over and over. "My body, my business. Your body, your business." I have had my run-ins with people (total strangers) trying to police my body and the customers of my lingerie boutique. I even was on CNN talking about the right to be fat and wear lingerie. My boutique and I got embroiled in a fierce media debate about whether or not my plus size lingerie boutique glorifies obesity.

I think it's happiness that really infuriates and confuses some fat haters. People are often baffled when they see happy fat people. And when you add in the idea that we are not addicted to dieting or working out or obsessed with the notion that we should become some thin version of ourselves, well, that really throws the shamers and haters for a loop. I literally had to defend, on national TV, our right to exist as fat women who want to wear sexy and very revealing lingerie. All bodies are good bodies. All bodies deserve to be celebrated. No one body is better than another body.

So, yes, you can EXIST and take up more space than your neighbor. You do not have to quality that existence with a "but, I am fat and healthy." You don't have to justify anything to anyone about your body and what it looks like on the outside or the inside. The people who want to police your body are just sad, unhappy people with way too much time on their hands. They have nothing better to do. Me, on the other hand, I have shit to do. And, the first item on my TO-DO list is to help fat, thick, curvy women to find some sexy lingerie and help them celebrate their fat, luscious bodies.

2015-04-22-1429661208-1334386-cbbody.jpg






Like Us On Facebook |
Follow Us On Twitter |
Contact HuffPost Women



ALSO ON HUFFPOST:

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

The 20 Funniest Tweets From Women This Week

$
0
0
The ladies of Twitter never fail to brighten our days with their brilliant -- but succinct -- wisdom. Each week, HuffPost Women rounds up hilarious 140-character musings. For this week's great tweets from women, scroll through the list below. Then visit our Funniest Tweets From Women page for our past collections.





























































-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Julianne Hough Was An Extra In 'Harry Potter,' But We Actually Already Knew That

$
0
0
Julianne Hough took part in Us Weekly's "25 Things You Don't Know About Me" feature, in which the magazine asks celebrities to list 25 interesting or random facts about themselves that the public probably doesn't know about them. But Hough's list comes up short, because there's at least one fact we definitely already knew:

11. I was a Gryffindor in "Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone," but don’t blink or you’ll miss me!


While this isn't news to us, maybe it's news to you. And there really isn't a bad time to revisit a moment in Harry Potter history. Hough's role as a Hogwarts student was blink and you'll miss it, indeed. She can be seen sitting near Hermoine (Emma Watson) and Ron (Rupert Grint) while they cheer on Harry (Daniel Radcliffe) at a Quidditch match.

juliannehoughharrypotter



Hough has actually spoken about her appearance in the beloved 2001 children's movie on more than one occasion.

“Oh, yes. I remember it like it was yesterday. I’m still such a big fan. I always go and watch the midnight showing, so I’m excited to see it," she told Parade magazine in 2011 when asked if the ending of the film series felt bittersweet.

She added, “I might get in trouble for this, but I actually stole the Gryffindor scarf that I had as a memento. I was like, ‘I have to keep this scarf!’”

Then in 2012, during an appearance on "Live With Kelly," Hough brought up the scarf story again and admitted that while filming the movie as an 11-year-old she fell hard for Harry Potter himself.

"I was kind of in love, especially with Daniel Radcliffe. I wrote him a love note. It was Valentine's Day and I got him the Valentino Beanie Baby. I never heard back," she said.

If people weren't aware she had an uncredited role in the first "Harry Potter" movie, well they are now.

You can also see Hough in this deleted "Harry Potter" scene


-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Viewing all 18689 articles
Browse latest View live




Latest Images