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

Stars Play the (Hair) Parts at SAG Awards

$
0
0
Side parts took center stage at the SAG Awards 2016.

If you were looking for a trend, it was all over the place, and it's a great lesson to see on the red carpets, that we can dramatically change our look just by playing with the part, switching it from side to side and wearing it way down, or by putting it down the middle.

Sarah Hyland and Lily Rabe, along with Molly Parker, did deep side parts for the red carpet walk into the Shrine Auditorium in Los Angeles.

Then we saw the ever-so popular middle part, as worn beautifully by Emily Robinson, Amanda Peet, Hannah Murray and Eva Longoria.

Heavy bangs were also a hit this year, worn by Christina Ricci and Stephanie Drake.

For color, reds were what I saw trending toward spring, in warmer, lighter, coppery tones. Amy Poehler, Ellie Kemper and Hannah Murray all had their hair in these warmer reds. Christina Hendricks rocked the strawberry blonde along with Nicole Kidman.

Hair was beautiful at the SAG Awards, a focal point without overshadowing the 'dress.' Hair made a statement while letting the eyes and lips shine. Look at top knots worn by Kaley Cuoco and Queen Latifah for gorgeous examples.

The Screen Actors Guild Awards are one in a stream of major award ceremonies that start each year with a parade of stars, trend-setting fashions and hairstyles. We just watched The Golden Globes and the Critics' Choice Awards. I'll be at the 58th Grammy Awards on Feb. 15. Soon after that we watch the Oscars.

One of my favorite actresses at the Golden Globes, Kate Hudson, wore her hair in simple, sexy soft waves in a blend of different blonde shades. Parted down the middle, she went with a popular no-fuss style. Olivia Wilde had a similar style but in a different flavor with darker roots, something we've seen a lot of recently, and some balayage treatment for that sun-kissed natural look and some highlights around the face.

Not surprisingly, we saw some of this at the SAG Awards but each of these events has a distinct tone. The Golden Globes are pretty formal, all about film and television, of course. The Grammys are all about music and tend to have a few more surprises ... Can't wait!

A few things shared by all these events are the red carpets, the well-dressed elite and a massive audience that circles the globe, and that's why we watch.

Love change!

-- 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.












Hate Those T-Shirts That Say 'Princess?' Here's The Feminist Swag For You

$
0
0

Do you cringe every time you see those T-shirts with the words "Princess" emblazoned across them? How about the ones that say "Cool story babe, now go make me a sandwich?" There are tons of awful slogans scrawled across clothes, but there are some brands that are getting it right.


To shine the light on those companies and designers, we decided to round up 12 feminist items that make us smile. And the best part? Many of them are unisex.



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.











These Shoe Hacks Will Make Your Footwear Last Longer

$
0
0

Out of everything in our closets, our shoes probably take the biggest beating. So naturally, we're always looking for tricks to make them last longer and make them more comfortable.


While we all know the common tips, like spraying suede shoes before going out in wet weather, most us don't know the best way to avoid getter blisters in our shoes. Or how to repair scratched heels. Thankfully, the folks over at Shoe Zone have created a handy infographic chock-full of amazing hacks. Between how to stop shoes from smelling and the best way to improve the grip on new footwear, this little graphic is something you'll want to bookmark. 



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.











8 Tricks to Dressing Taller (That Don't Involve Heels)

$
0
0
Did you know that over 70 percent of women in the United States are considered petite (meaning, five foot four inches tall and under)? Mind blown. If you're a shortie out there, we've got some clever tips to help you fake a few more inches--and one of them is actually wearing flats. Mmmhmmm. You're welcome.

Related: 12 Ways to Dress Yourself Skinny

Try a V-Neck Top. Here's Why.

2016-01-27-1453911493-8759764-taller1.jpg

Go Monochromatic. Here's Why.

2016-01-27-1453911521-3692701-taller2.jpg

Befriend The Cropped Pant. Here's Why.

2016-01-27-1453911548-4999857-taller3.jpg

Master The Cuff. Here's Why.

2016-01-27-1453911575-1430947-taller4.jpg

Opt For Flared Denim. Here's Why.

2016-01-27-1453911603-4288002-taller5.jpg

Don't Shy Away From The Miniskirt. Here's Why.

2016-01-27-1453911632-9505967-taller6.jpg

Take Solace In Pointy Flats. Here's Why.

2016-01-27-1453911656-4929821-taller7.jpg

Ditch The Gigantic Tote. Here's Why.

2016-01-27-1453911680-2079597-tallerpurse.jpg

Related:

12 Ways To Dress Yourself Skinny
The Best Flared Jeans for Short Legs

-- 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.











How To Create The Best Instagram Photos -- Without Editing

$
0
0



First, let's get this out of the way: Instagram filters and editing options are great. They can enhance a photo, camouflage imperfections and even help your entire feed look more cohesive and well put-together. But there are things that even a good editing tool can't do. 


Drew Scott, a popular blogger and Instagram super-user, seems to have mastered the art of taking compelling pictures. As he knows personally, getting that perfect shot often comes down to one thing: knowing how to use angles. It's something you can do even when you're the subject of the photo, rather than the photographer.


"One of my main tips for emphasizing Instagram photos is making sure that your photographer gets as low as possible when taking your photo," Drew says.



"A photographer getting a little bit lower down -- as low to the ground as possible -- elevates your height and makes you look superior against the wall," he explains. 


Don't just stop there when it comes to using angles to your advantage, Drew adds.


"Angles can make or break a photograph," he says. "Making sure you are taking the picture at the correct angle is definitely key." 



Drew suggests playing around with different angles to help determine not just your best angle, but also the best angle for different objects you want to feature. Try straight-on shots, shots from overhead, shots directly from the side -- in other words, experiment.


"Take multiple different photos before you post one," Drew says. "[It] gives you a lot of options and choices."


Related:An Instagram star's two biggest tips for getting more "likes"


 


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.











How Hairdressers Could Be A Secret Weapon Against Climate Change

$
0
0

Are we looking in the wrong place when it comes to finding champions who can turn us away from our environmentally destructive ways?


Researchers at a university in the United Kingdom believe that hairdressers, rather than politicians, scientists or celebrities, could be the secret weapon in convincing us to reduce our carbon emissions.


Given that hairdressers get up close and personal with billions of customers, they are the perfect vehicle for helping to change people’s behavior, according to Dr Denise Baden, an associate professor at the University of Southampton’s management school. Even better, they deal with many of the environmental challenges that need addressing, such as water and energy use as well as the toxins in many hair care products.


A new study by Baden shows just how much difference people can make if they change their routines.


A person who carries out a daily hair wash with two shampoos plus rinse-out conditioner creates a weekly carbon footprint of around 9 kilograms, or nearly 20 pounds of carbon emissions. But this could be cut down to just 1 kg (roughly 2 pounds) if they change to a twice-weekly hair wash using just one shampoo plus leave-in conditioner, the study says.


Her research, which is funded by the U.K. government, also shows how important it is that hairdressers educate their clients to reduce the use of heated appliances such as hair straighteners, curlers and blow dryers. Not only does taking a more natural approach improve hair condition, but it also reduces energy costs and protects the planet, according to Baden.


She and her team have now developed a carbon footprint calculator, which demonstrates the effect hair care routines have on the environment and points out five changes that can make a big difference:




  1. Do not wash your hair every time you shower -- and whatever your routine, allow an extra day to go before shampooing.




  2. Shampoo once rather than rinse and repeat.




  3. Cut down shower time by using a leave-in conditioner.




  4. Shower rather than take a bath and limit the time to four minutes.




  5. Let hair dry naturally.




This is not the first time that hairdressers have been recognized for their potential to get important information to a mass audience. The United Nations Population Fund, in collaboration with UNAIDS Secretariat, back in 2009 identified barbershops and beauty salons in Guyana as information hubs to help reduce HIV.


“We’re not asking hairdressers to become sustainability consultants or to compromise on standards,” Baden said in a written statement. “Instead, we’re trying to educate businesses that less is more and to spread this message to their clients. For example ... [p]roducts such as leave-in conditioner not only save energy, time and money but are also great for giving body to fine or flyaway hair." 


“Our approach has been to train the trainers so they can in turn affect the behaviour of their clients," she added. "Just one hairdresser can affect the practices of hundreds of clients.”


The next step for Baden and fellow researchers is to develop a sustainable hairdressing certificate for salons, hairdressers and training colleges.


While all this may seem like a clever approach to helping limit climate change, there is one key challenge that Baden has not yet been able to overcome. While hairdressers are often adept at chatting about topics ranging from relationships to the weather, they do not often make proactive change agents.


As Baden pointed out in a 2014 interview: "Early adopters of social innovations characteristically have more years of formal education, greater rationality, higher IQ, higher aspirations and higher status occupations than late adopters. None of these attributes are typical of hairdressers. Therefore it is unsurprising that our pilot research found no examples of hairdressers taking the lead on sustainability innovations."


But the world is changed one person at a time, and Baden points to the feedback from one hairdresser who went through a sustainability-focused training session: “Taking that approach has given me more pride in my work and in my profession as a whole. I no longer feel like 'a blonde with scissors,' I feel like a professional who is making a difference."

-- 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.











Playboy's First Non-Nude Issue Is Here And It's Totally SFW

$
0
0

The first issue of Playboy's non-nude era is here. 


Playboy's March issue is the first to embrace a new look and a new mantra. There is now a commitment to "art, literature and long-form journalism," along with "an entirely contemporary take on photographing the beautiful women who have made the publication one of the most enduring and successful of all time," according to a press release. 



Instagram and Snapchat star Sarah McDaniel is the March cover girl whose social-media themed photo spread is meant to be from "a boyfriend's perspective." 


Dree Hemingway, daughter of actress and author Mariel Hemingway, is the centerfold. 



“I know I speak for all involved when I say that creating this new Playboy magazine has been a labor of love for those fortunate enough to work on it,” Playboy Enterprises CEO Scott Flanders said in a press release. “We are exceptionally proud of the end result and are confident that everyone will enjoy reading it as much as we did creating it.”


In October, Playboy announced that the magazine would stop publishing nudes in its print magazine, citing competition from other publishers and ubiquitous porn on the Internet.


The announcement came after the company changed its website to a SFW version in August. The site saw a bump in unique users, while the print circulation was just 800,000 (a far cry from its 5.6 million subscriber base in 1975). 


While there is no full-frontal nudity anymore, Playboy hasn't completely lost its essence. 


"There's a lot that we're keeping of the DNA of the magazine, but there's a lot we're evolving, too," Chief Content Officer Cory Jones told CNN. "It's going to be sexy, but it's going to be safe for work."


 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.











Dita Von Teese's 10 Golden Rules for Valentine's Day Lingerie

$
0
0
by MARJON CARLOS

2016-02-04-1454600141-7142464-103ditavonteeselingerie.jpg
Photo: Courtesy of Dita Von Teese / @ditavonteese

While this fashion writer has what some may call a "congested" closet, I'll admit that my delicates drawer is somewhat . . . lacking. Besides having championed the, ahem, perks of being braless and quite flawless, I never thought lingerie qualified as seasonal investment pieces, like, say, a shearling coat. After all, you don't often wind up wearing underpinnings for that long--well, not if you're lucky.

But Dita Von Teese, the glamorous burlesque dancer, lingerie connoisseur, author of beauty tome Your Beauty Mark, and ultimate seductress, has had me reconsider all that. Before taking the stage in a Zac Posen waist-whittling skirt to host the annual Femmy Awards, which honors purveyors in the lingerie business, Von Teese shared her insights on how to shop for lingerie properly and heat things up for Valentine's Day--regardless if you have a date or not. Because, as she reminds us, seduction has nothing to do with other people, but is all about creating your own look.

2016-02-04-1454601937-8551593-201ditavonteeselingerie.jpg
Photo: Courtesy of Dita Von Teese / @ditavonteese

A girl's first piece should be in black lace . . .
Black lace is sophisticated, elegant, and erotic all at once, and it looks terrific on every woman. I say invest in a gorgeous set. Buy a bra that fits very well, plus two to three pairs of matching underwear, with varying shapes to add versatility to your wardrobe. The underwear needs to have double the life of the bra, so it's smart to buy duplicates. Bonus points for the garter belt!

. . . But don't be fooled by size tags.
Never buy underwear that is too small just because you like what the tags say. Try everything on, taking care not to buy things that are too tight. If being a different size than you want to be puts your panties in a bunch, cut out the tags. Cut the tags out regardless, actually.

Your bra drawer should pop!
A bra-and-underwear set in a bold, unexpected color is the best first purchase to start your collection. Red, fuchsia, teal blue, green--vibrant, joyful colors! I love opening my drawer to an array of colorful lace and satin. As much as I love black lace, I think color adds a sense of playfulness and adventure to your lingerie wardrobe.

A corset over a waist trainer--any day!
Well, there's a lot of misinformation about what a waist trainer is and what it isn't, and there are all kinds of companies making these strange stretchy waist-training corsets. It's important to look past the trendy celebrity-endorsed products--you can't shape your waist with a Lycra corset, and that's what they are all talking about.

Waist shaping can be accomplished with a true corset, which should be custom-made to your measurements. It is also no substitute for diet and exercise, and waist training doesn't happen overnight; it takes a bit of time. I suggest looking to long-established corset brands like Dark Garden Corsetry or Mr. Pearl, and avoid all the new companies trying to jump on the bandwagon.

2016-02-04-1454602030-6044111-302ditavonteeselingerie.jpg
Photo: Courtesy of Dita Von Teese / @ditavonteese

Stockings for winter keep your legs cozy--and sexy!
Everyone knows that I love fully fashioned seamed stockings. I even have my own collection. I wear these a lot during the wintertime, and when it's really, really cold, I love extra-long thigh-high cable-knit stockings. They're like sweaters for the legs.

Let garter belts be your Valentine's Day Gift to Bae.
Garter belts and stockings are the perfect thing to try! Wear them the French way: underwear over the top of the garter belt, not under. Black stockings and a black garter belt are sophisticated and erotic. Invest in good-quality pieces. I wear garters in everyday life, so the ones from my collections are very functional and made with six straps and power mesh to keep stockings in place. I have a drawerful of cute garter belts from luxe brands that are only really wearable for photo shoots, so when I created my own line, I set out to make garters that function properly. I'd say garter belts are my specialty.

Don't keep your lingerie hidden--show it off for the holiday!
I do love lingerie as outerwear. In high school, my go-to look was a 1950s slip with a cardigan sweater! And I love a bustier worn with a pencil skirt. I often wear my bustiers with tuxedo pants or slim-fit capri pants and a cardigan sweater or tuxedo jacket. I also have a few very low-cut dresses that I like to wear with a lace-trimmed bra so that the edges peek out of the top of the dress.

Showing (and wearing) less can always be more.
This is the beauty of lingerie! No matter what your personality is, you can be whomever you want underneath it all. I don't bare much skin offstage; I like my hemlines below my knee, and I like dresses with shapely lines that might show a touch of cleavage, if any. My "uniform" for seduction is a shapely black dress with French-heeled seamed stockings, sexy black pumps in patent or matte leather, and black leather opera gloves. It's mysterious and sensual at the same time.

Valentine's Day as a single girl is prep time!
I've spent many a Valentine's Day as a single girl--single time is prep time! The ultimate seductress practices in everyday life and knows that it's not about finding ways to reel someone in or hunt. Seduction at the highest level comes from designing your own attractive world that others want to be a part of. Creating a poetic, beautiful living space that you enjoy is important. I call mine the Lair of Seduction! It's a place with beautiful, flattering, light, sensuous textures--all things that make me feel good. It starts with considering what makes you feel good and reveling in it for your own pleasure. It's the same with lingerie. There's no reason to store your sensuality on a shelf if you're single. This is the time more than ever to stay in touch with pleasures. Read sexy books, wear your good perfume, update your lingerie wardrobe, and make your living space sexy so that you're ready for a partner when the time is right.

But, ultimately, effortlessness is the most alluring.
We don't have to choose between glamour and function. I consider every piece in my own lingerie line for its comfort and functionality in my wardrobe. I never put lingerie on for a man. Ever since I was a little girl, I saw lingerie as something that was symbolic of womanhood and femininity. My first job was working in a lingerie store when I was 15, so perhaps I have a different point of view than some, but I always saw lingerie as a moment of beauty and luxury for myself. Of course, in later years I learned how to use it in the game of seduction, but ultimately, my early relationship with lingerie is what I think makes me good at seduction, both on and off stage. I like it when things appear to be effortless--and they are effortless when practiced!

More from Vogue:

10 Places Every 20-Something Should Travel To Before Turning 30

The Best Celebrity Engagement Rings

Beyoncé's Best Moves 17 Body Sculpting GIFS from Her Top Music Videos

Why Marcia Brady Is Our Spirit Animal for Back-to-School Style

Celebrity Looks from the Red Carpet at People's Choice Awards 2016


Why We Love the Showstopping Style of Afropunk's Leading Ladies

-- 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.












29 Gorgeous Photos Show What Families Around The World Have In Common

$
0
0

Photographer Michele Crowe has made a name for herself showcasing the American family in its many diverse forms through a series of portraits called "The Universal Family." Over the past year, she's expanded the project by taking it abroad.


Crowe spent three months traveling through eight different countries and meeting families to photograph along the way. The resulting images showcase the diversity, complexity and ever-changing face of nuclear families around the world -- from gay parents and childfree couples to single moms, adoptive children and multicultural families.


"What I have hoped from the start and still do especially after my travels, is that by viewing these images, people can see how human and similar everyone is -- no matter where you are coming from -- and in that be able to appreciate each others' differences," Crowe told The Huffington Post.



"I think for a lot of people, especially those that don't travel outside of their comfort zone, we all seem so separate. Especially if you're going solely off what you see on the news," she added.


The photographer found many families to photograph through friends and acquaintances living in the countries she visited. At other times, however, kind strangers connected her to portrait subjects.


"People were so friendly and almost everyone I talked to about the project seemed to have a place for me to stay and a family to photograph," Crowe said. "It really hit home the community vibe we are capable of having as citizens of the world. I would know someone for one day and they were driving me to another part of town to meet their whole family, have dinner, and take photos."



One particularly meaningful visit for Crowe was her visit to the small town in Sicily where her great-grandparents lived before immigrating to the U.S. Locals helped the photographer locate her great-grandmother's former house, and the family living there invited her in and gladly posed for portraits. 


"I love reaching that point where you stop being a host and a traveler and you just become people with commonalities," she said. "You can't learn how incredibly similar we actually are by staying in your own backyard. And that's what this project is all about, bringing us together as one family."


Crowe sums up "The Universal Family" in the description of the series on her photography website: "Family is a support system and that support system is the most important thing in the world; It should not be judged or limited. Families can be big or small, blood related or not, same sex oriented or not, and of course composed of similar or wildly different cultural backgrounds. If you're lucky you truly understand that love has no boundaries."


Keep scrolling and visit Crowe's website for a look at "The Universal Family."



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.











Drew Barrymore's Definition Of 'Hot' Lights Up Our Hearts

$
0
0

Drew Barrymore is a girl on fire in the March issue of Harper's Bazaar. Literally pictured with superimposed flames coming out of her head, Barrymore defines what "hot" means for her own life, as well as naming the hottest people currently ruling Hollywood. 


“Hot is a state of mind. It’s an energy. You’re hot when you’re motivated. It means you want it and you’re going after it," Barrymore told the magazine. "Hot isn’t about being on the A-list or having a hot body. It's literally people who are on fire." 


The 40-year-old actress has been "on fire" for 30-ish years, as she's been in the public eye for just as long. The Wildflower writer maintains that she isn't "hot" right now because she's always busy working on her various projects and spending time with her daughters, Olive and Frankie. But there are a few people Barrymore admires that are currently lighting up the industry. 



"Like Lena Dunham is on fire. Amy Schumer. Louis C.K," Barrymore said. "I think their brands of comedy and observational life stuff are some of the coolest I’ve seen in so many years." 


Currently, Barrymore is focused on a lot of cool stuff outside of her usual Hollywood realm. 


"Yeah, I don’t work as often right now and probably won’t for the next few years," Barrymore told The Huffington Post in November of being a mom to two little girls. 


Instead, she's occupied with her growing beauty brand and Barrymore Wines. 


"I just love wine," Barrymore told HuffPost at an event in 2014. "And it was the right thing to do for me to start with a Pinot Grigio because I think that's where my wine journey as a wine drinker started -- was drinking Pinot with my girlfriends. That was pretty much the greatest way you could spend time, just girl-talking and sharing what your day was [like]."


Anytime you want to split a bottle, we're in! 



To read more of Barrymore's interview with Harper's Bazaar, head here or pick up an issue when it hits newsstands Feb. 16. 


 


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.











28 Times Brides Sported Short Dresses And Looked Damn Good Doing It

$
0
0

On your wedding day, you should wear whatever makes you feel like the most beautiful version of yourself. If a floor-length gown with a long train is not really your speed, then sport something short! 


The lovely ladies below rocked frocks with shorter hemlines -- some tea-length and others above-the-knee -- but all equally gorgeous. 



Also on HuffPost:



Are you ready to start taking better care of yourself? Sign up for our newsletter and join our Look Good, Feel Good challenge to supercharge your beauty and grooming routine and develop healthy habits. We’ll deliver tips, challenges and advice to your inbox every day.  

-- 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.











As Rachel Roy Launches A Plus Line, She Thanks Oprah For Her Success

$
0
0

A quick glance at Rachel Roy's celebrity clientele -- she counts the Kardashians, Tina Fey, and even Michelle Obama as devoted customers -- is enough to prove her staying power in the fashion industry.


But its her newest clients that are getting some serious buzz: women over size 12.



RACHEL Rachel Roy Curvy, a new collection that hits stores and online next week, is the designer's first foray into extended sizing. "If I had it my way, I would have started it long ago," Roy told The Huffington Post. "There has always been a request for it."


Well, that request has finally been answered, and it's good. Even the campaign, starring Candice Huffine, reflects Roy's simple desire to make clothing all women want to wear.


"My vision for my clothing collection is to dress women so they can go on with their day and life, and it’s a tiny bit more effortless because they have clothes that make them feel smart and sexy. It’s not dependent on whether or not she’s a size two or size 24," she said. 



It's that accessibility and sophistication that attracts strong women like Obama to Roy's designs. However, Roy revealed it was another extremely powerful woman who in 2006 helped her realize her own potential.



"When I was asked to be on the Oprah Winfrey show, it felt that perhaps they meant Rachael Ray ... She checked me out and had me on a show entitled 'The Next Great Thing in Fashion,'" Roy explained. "Of course, in my mind I was like 'Oh my God, I don't deserve this title,' because unfortunately as women that’s how we think. But it made me want to live up to Oprah's belief in me -- I didn’t want to let her down. She had me on national television, showcasing my clothes. She put that out there. I think when we do that for others -- hold them up to a pedestal -- they’ll want to rise to the occasion." 





While by measurement standards her new line is plus-size, Roy made it a point to explain why the brand instead refers to it as "curvy."


"A big part of developing this line was about listening," she said. "Listening to the marketplace, listening to what was going on in culture, and listening to the women who have been asking us to do this for years. Naming it 'plus' or 'woman' was never part of the conversation. We set out to create something that was true to us and true to the women who are wearing it -- and they describe themselves as curvy."


Of course, expanding diversity in fashion is not exclusive to size. Roy recounted a time "years and years ago" when her vision was steamrolled by a stylist and casting director who told her casting a racially diverse show would be "impossible."


"The stylist told me I wouldn't be taken seriously. What she was really saying is that she would not be taken seriously because it was her job to style the collection. I never worked with her again. The casting director meant that there were so few models of color available. I told him I didn't care -- to go sit outside of [trendy New York City restaurant] Cafeteria and find them. It is possible." 



Diversity was possible then, and, as proven in part by this new launch, it's possible now, too.


The 45 pieces in the RACHEL Rachel Roy Curvy 2016 collection will retail between $55-$179. The line will be available in select Macy's stores and on Macys.com next week, and on RachelRoy.com in March. 


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.











Honey Blonde Celebs Rule This Week's Best Beauty List

$
0
0

This week, we were reminded how multifaceted blonde hair really is. Instead of seeing the same blindingly bright 'dos that seem to measure "success" in Hollywood, our attention was drawn to celebs with gorgeous shades of honey blonde hair. 


Nicole Kidman wowed at this year's SAG Awards with her radiant mane cascading down her colorful Gucci dress. Bella Thorne served major #hairgoals wearing loose, golden curls as the host of Miss Me and Cosmopolitan's spring campaign launch. Meanwhile, Halle Berry looked effortlessly chic with her dark roots and blonde ends at the 2016 Makers Conference. 


Check out these hairdos and more below. Plus, read our tips and tricks on how to achieve these celebrity beauty looks at home.



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.











Marsha Barnes Shares 5 Ways to Look Fly Without Going Broke

$
0
0
2016-02-04-1454562341-1525322-marshabarnes.png

It's no secret that women love to look great. It's also clear that a fashionista's never-ending quest to fill her closet with the best shoes and fabulous wears can get pretty expensive.

Since being broke is no fun, we called on Marsha Barnes, Certified Financial Education Expert, Personal Finance Expert and the Founder of The Finance Bar, to give her expert advice on how to stay looking fly without ending up in the poor house.


Marsha Barnes' 5 Ways to Look Fly Without Going Broke


2016-02-04-1454562448-9746276-MarshaBarnes2768x354.jpg

1. Consider a uniform: What's your personal style? Often times we spend money by following trends. Identify with what you love. For example, I love circle skirts, quirky unique shoes and super comfortable tops. That's my style. I own four pairs of pants total.

2. Re-purpose what you already have: Who says you have to gain a new wardrobe every season? Add a bit of spice to your outfits with necklaces, bracelets, new lipstick, and even a new hairstyle. Focus on what you're grateful for, what you already have, and your finance goals.

3. Schedule a weekend to conduct a closet overhaul: Pull everything out and put together at least 5 outfits. I promise, you'll find some that you love!

4. Focus on making your finances beautiful with the same amount of energy you use to beautify yourself: Mindset is everything.

5. Remember, it's just clothes: Fashion and all things Fab-they'll be around for a very long time. Remember that your current situation is temporary.


Visit BeyondClassicallyBeautiful.com to read more content that celebrates the diverse beauty of black women.

Follow Beyond Classically Beautiful on:
IG @BeyondClassicallyBeautiful
Facebook.com/BeyondClassicallyBeautiful

-- 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.











50 Shades of Namaste: Exploring Yoga and Sadomasochism

$
0
0
The first time is terrifying, yet life changing. You will be instructed to take off your shoes and strip down to your bare essentials. If you have the courage to look around, you will see men and women contorted in grotesque positions, with various limbs bound and tied. You will lie back while someone spreads your knees and ties your ankles to your hips with a stiff canvas strap. A sandbag will be placed over your eyes and you'll be instructed to breathe through the discomfort.

Perhaps it happened in a hot room swamped by lithe, malleable bodies beaded in perspiration. You were commanded to bend over. You felt a set of hands clutching your hips, guiding you further into compliance. Flushed and receptive, you kept a steady gaze, and held your position until the next set of instructions.

Bondage and discipline coupled with dominance and submission is commonly seen as sadomasochism. It is practiced as a way to, ironically, unshackle us from the pain of life. If we look closely, yoga is not that different. Both employ techniques to free the mind from suffering. Both incorporate means to transcend pain and experience pleasure. Both involve a close relationship between the teacher and student. Both share the ultimate goal of attaining higher states of consciousness and bliss.

We all have an innate desire to be liberated from the struggles of life. Carl Jung believed there is no coming to consciousness without pain. As a society that runs from agony straight into the pleasure dome, it is hard to believe anyone would voluntarily gravitate toward pain, but we do, and it is helpful. For some, being bound, tied, and told what to do is just the type of discomfort we need to set us free.

Pain is a necessary way to enhance pleasure. Beyond promoting the release of endorphins and other pain-killing hormones, pain can make pleasurable activities feel better. Anyone who has ever taken a hot bath after a long day working in the bitter cold knows this to be a fact. The old adage of no pain, no gain, holds true for the yogi who believes enduring discomfort promotes happiness.

The teachings in the Yoga Sutras of Patanjali share that transcendence of the ego through the practice of tapas (discipline, self-restraint, and torching inner impurities) is key in experiencing oneness with everything. Like the phoenix, we must burn in order to rise from the ashes if we want to evolve.

Bikram yoga's high temperatures bring rise to that bird of rebirth. After feeling like a captured terrorist inside a military hot box, the moment the door opens and the cool air descends upon us, bliss abounds.

Iyengar yoga's props and contraptions are akin to what might be found in a sex dungeon or a medieval torture chamber. Racks, straps and wall slings are commonly used to tie and bind us into curious poses, all for the sake of liberation.

2016-01-30-1454131553-19999-HuffPofiftyshadespic.jpg Photo used by permission.


Spanning the course of history, there have been numerous sexual allusions associated with yoga. In the Kama Sutra, the practice of slapping and biting our sexual partners was meant to promote mindfulness. The Yin and Yang of Taoist yoga rituals involved dominant and submissive role-playing to seek balance in natural forces. Ancient tantric yoga practices involved holding challenging sexual positions over long periods of time, for personal awakening.

Contrary to popular belief, in order to gain positive psychological or spiritual benefits, neither sadomasochism, nor yoga for that matter, has to involve sex.

While sadomasochism carries a certain stigma of insanity, research suggests those who engage in it are not mentally ill, they are inherently healthy and happy individuals.

Current studies show non-sexual practices involving pain instill feelings of unity and connection with others. James Ambler, Brad Sagarin, and a team of researchers from Northern University, believe these altered brain states brought on by sexless sadomasochistic practices are similar to what can be experienced when people push themselves in [sexless] yoga.

"The dorsolateral prefrontal cortex is responsible, in part, for distinguishing self from other," said Ambler. "If less blood flows to the brain during these intensely painful experiences, the result may be a feeling of oneness."

"We think this may be indicative of the types of altered states of consciousness people might be seeking," noted Sagarin.

Roy Baumeister, Ph.D., professor of psychology at Case Western Reserve University believes sadomasochism is a way for people to escape his or her egocentric identities.
He says, "Like alcohol abuse, binge eating, and meditation, sadomasochism is a way people can forget themselves". However, sadomasochism and meditation are potentially less destructive than boozing and overeating.

Disassociating from our identities frees the mind from suffering. The yogi believes surrendering the ego, especially when it involves a journey out of our comfort zone, is crucial to our spiritual development as human beings. However, some are not only capitalizing on this psychology, they are exploiting it for personal gain.

"Open yourself completely every day. Don't worry about the beauty or the pain of it. There's no growth without distress and disturbance," said Swami Chetanananda, a spiritual leader who purportedly abused dozens of his followers, financially, sexually, and spiritually.

"When ego is lost, limit is lost. You become infinite, kind, beautiful," said, Yogi Bhajan, who was accused of rape and sodomy.

"Yoga is really trying to liberate us from...shame about our bodies," said Rodney Yee, who admitted to having sex with his students.

When any teacher-student or dominant-submissive relationship becomes infused with selfishness, someone inevitably becomes a victim. The current matters of Bikram Choudhury remind us of this sad truth.

The path to enlightenment has many shades of grey. The dark side of yoga is littered with vanity, ego-centrism and a ravenous appetite for seduction and power. If we want a shot at enlightenment, we shall transcend wrongdoing in the midst of our pleasure-seeking practices.

Our first yoga experience may read like a steamy, sadomasochistic trilogy, or be analogous to the Eagles' song, Hotel California, as the narratives are somewhat similar. We are all prisoners of our own device, and it certainly could be heaven, or it could be hell. If ethics are not a top priority, we won't ever experience the pleasure and ecstasy we seek, no matter how hard we push, and how much it hurts.

-- 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.












Make a DIY Hexagon Shelf With Popsicle Sticks

$
0
0
2016-02-02-1454452477-2986178-DIYHexagonShelfPopsicleSticks6.jpg

My favorite craft projects are those that take something mundane, utilitarian or used up and transform it into something beautiful.

Well, it doesn't get much more ordinary than popsicle sticks.

Most of us probably haven't given them much thought since about third grade. But that is going to change today with these DIY hexagon shelves.

2016-02-02-1454452788-1886319-DIYHoneycombShelfPopsicleSticks2.jpg


These shelves add instant dimension and warmth any room. Plus, you can change out what lives inside them throughout the year.

2016-02-02-1454453595-119705-DIYHexagonShelfPopsicleSticks5.jpg

If you're looking for an inexpensive décor upgrade that will inevitably become a conversation piece, this is it. At less than $10 for the entire set of honeycomb shelves, this is some super affordable DIY decor. And most of all, these shelves just look positively Mad-Men-esque up on the wall.

2016-02-02-1454452908-1515334-DIYHoneycombShelfPopsicleSticks4.jpg

Hexagon Shelf Supplies

• popsicle sticks (You'll need about 100 per each single hexagon shelf and 200 for the larger honeycomb shelf)
• tacky glue
honeycomb shelf template (Download it from MakeAndDoCrew.com.)
• wood stain (Minwax Early American was used here.)
• paintbrush
• 1 picture hanger (Optional)

Instructions

1. Download the template. Print it, trim it and tape it together.

2. Position popsicle sticks as pictured, alternating every other hexagon side. I've found that adding a drop of glue to both ends of 3-4 sticks at a time and laying them in their appropriate position to be the most efficient strategy.

2016-02-02-1454454840-5626404-DIYHexagonShelfPopsicleSticks7.jpg

3. Add glue to more sticks and use them to make a second layer on top of the first, alternating every other hexagon side.

4. Continue like this until your honeycomb shelf is desired depth. The shelves pictured are about 16 popsicle sticks deep per side.

5. After the glue is dry, use a paintbrush to apply wood stain. Make sure to get stain between each stick. Let the stain dry.

2016-02-02-1454454876-4962602-DIYHexagonShelfPopsicleSticks2.jpg

6. If you'd like, glue a picture hanger on the top side of the hexagon. (Or simply hang two nails for the shelf to rest on.)

2016-02-02-1454453485-6114727-DIYHoneycombShelfPopsicleSticks3.jpg

7. To make a larger honeycomb shelf for your new hexagon twins, check out this DIY Honeycomb Shelf Tutorial.

8. Fill your new shelves with your favorite miniature possessions. Less is more.

9. Sit back, admire and let your third grade self revel in the lowly popsicle stick's potential finally actualized.

2016-02-02-1454455029-2225370-DIYHoneycombShelvesPopsicleSticks2.jpg

Find more low-budget, high-style DIYs at MakeAndDoCrew.com.

-- 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.











Meet the Mavericks Making Modeling More Diverse

$
0
0
2016-02-04-1454628293-802519-28lordeinc.w529.h352.jpg
Nafisa Kaptownwala; Philomena Kwao; Peche Di (Photo: b0llyh00d/Instagram, Lily Cummings)

By Véronique Hyland

Crouched on an armchair in the Soho Grand lobby, Nafisa Kaptownwala is tugging at her nose ring. Kaptownwala, who goes by the Instagram handle @b0llyh00d, has streaked blonde hair and the kind of intentionally scruffy athleisure style that reads as glamorous chiefly on the very young and beautiful. She's recalling her reaction to the spring 2014 Rick Owens show, which famously showcased a step-dance team primarily made up of women of color. "For me it felt uncomfortable," she says, "because it felt like he was using these girls as a prop rather than genuinely inviting them in a fashion space to participate kind of on the same level as everyone else."

Related: 200 Designers on Their Fall 2016 Inspirations

Though she speaks like an academic, Kaptownwala is an entrepreneur. Not long after Owens's show, she founded Lorde Inc, an agency that represents a number of young, beautiful, cool people like herself -- all of whom are also people of color, like she is. "I just started the agency because I wasn't finding models that I wanted to work with and style and shoot," she says, "and my friends weren't styling or shooting models of color either. It was my way to be like, you don't really have an excuse to not use models of color anymore because here they all are. Like, I've just put them together for you."

Kaptownwala's is one of several agencies that have sprung up in recent years in response to what the founders see as the hegemony of the major agencies that have dominated fashion for decades. In addition to Lorde, there's JAG, focused on models of varying sizes, and Trans Models, devoted entirely to transgender talent. Though their stated missions are different, they're linked -- underdogs in an industry where a few big agencies maintain a stranglehold. Despite that, they're attracting talent and -- even more important for their longevity -- an influx of corporate clients. (Most of the major agencies -- IMG, Ford, Next, and Wilhelmina among them -- declined to comment for this story. The Society, which represents Kendall Jenner and Andreja Pejić, declined to make agents available to comment but provided the following statement: "We represent women of diverse backgrounds and experiences who have the ability to inspire both within our business and beyond.")

Since Kaptownwala founded it in London in 2013, Lorde has been steadily gaining on its established competitors. "We've been projected into this more mainstream fashion lens, which definitely wasn't my initial intention," she says. That said, the agency still has a scrappy feel to it -- its website isn't fully live yet, and it redirects you to a Tumblr with candid-looking street shots of Lorde's model corps rather than the slick black-and-white shots you often see on major agencies' boards. It's also far more diverse than those boards. "It's quite jarring that there's obviously not a lot of people of color on their rosters," she says. "For a lot of the people that come to our agency, it's because they've tried their luck with other agencies and there wasn't an interest."

Related: The First Black Trans Model Had Her Face on a Box of Clairol

Kaptownwala is most excited about two recent signings: up-and-comer Jenny Choi, who's "gotten profiled on a few websites for just having great style and being really cool," she says; "We also signed a girl named Layla" -- whose last name escapes her at the moment -- "she just has an incredible look." She's recently cast some models in an upcoming music video by a major R&B star (though she swears me to secrecy on said star's identity). "We've also been working on a campaign with Nike, which is going to be pretty fresh."

That doesn't mean that she isn't concerned about the future of the movement she's trying her hardest to pull off. Her biggest insecurity, she says, is "feeling like we're just going to be a trend, like [diversity] is a conversation that people want to have right now, [but] where will they be in five years?" Her intent, she says, is "to try to get designers to warm up to the idea of working with models of color, and not just the five main girls of the season."

It's worth noting that the gulf between so-called "real" models and honest-to-goodness real people remains unbridged by the industry. These three agencies are out to break boundaries, but they're not upending our standards of beauty entirely. Scroll through the Lorde Tumblr and you'll find that everyone is stunning, perfectly symmetrical, young, hip, and (for the most part) slender, though the agency does represent some plus-size models. But its mission serves as a corrective for fashion's mode du jour: applauding every advance toward diversity made by big brands as some sort of glass-ceiling-shattering watershed, when the reality is more challenging.

Related: Can You Scientifically Predict a Model's Success?


The irony of Kaptownwala's mission, and that of her fellow niche-agency founders, is that if they succeed in making modeling more diverse and prodding the major agencies into changing their ways, they could find themselves out of a job. But she doesn't see that happening anytime soon: "I would love to say that things are changing and getting more progressive and we're being a little bit more critical, but I don't want to give anybody that much credit." When I bring up IMG's signing of trans model Hari Nef, she counters, "I think that's society saying, Hey, we find Hari Nef interesting. I don't think it's the agencies that are changing, really, I think they're just capitalizing on what society wants to see; it has everything to do with capitalism at the end of the day."

A photo posted by nafisa (@b0llyh00d) on




Some models have already made the jump from the big pond of a major agency to one of these start-ups. Philomena Kwao, a British-born model of Ghanaian descent, used to be signed to Ford, the 70-year-old behemoth that once helmed the careers of Christie Brinkley, Elle Macpherson, and even a young Martha Stewart. Still, the decision to leave for JAG Models wasn't one she agonized over. She was already close with Ford bookers Jaclyn Sarka and Gary Dakin, who left to found JAG. "I trusted them. I decided that they were the best people for my career," she says. Since signing with them, she has booked campaigns for Nordstrom and Lane Bryant, a job as the face of Torrid, and a fashion spread in Essence.

Related: 5 Uniquely Stylish Instagram Accounts to Follow

JAG is one of the few agencies that represents models of all different sizes -- not just straight-size and plus-size, but plenty of so-called "in-betweeners," like Myla Dalbesio, who booked a Calvin Klein underwear campaign while signed with JAG. (She has since decamped for Next Models.) Kwao pointed to the individual attention she gets from her agent at JAG as the biggest factor for her, and she's confident that casting directors are having no problem finding her. "If a brand wants a specific girl, they want a specific girl, wherever you are."

In recent years, she thinks that they have become increasingly open to casting a wider net for new talent. "They're listening to people," she says. "Because of social media and reality TV, people want to understand the person who's wearing the clothes. It's not just the top that you're looking at, it's the girl behind the top. Who is she? What does she like? What's her attitude like? Why is she wearing the clothes?" She strives to make herself available on her social-media accounts, where she fields questions about finding the best foundation for darker skin tones, or about her signature close-cropped hair.

Though Kwao has booked campaigns, commercials, and editorial spreads, the runway is still the branch of fashion that eludes her and many models of different sizes. "Every season you get a few more," she says. Kaptownwala agrees that size diversity has been slower to emerge on the runway, which she attributes to the prevalence of sample sizing. "Time and time again I'll get casting directors asking me for people in sample sizes," she says, "and I'm like, 'Oh shoot, I don't even have that many models that fit in sample sizes.'" Kwao, for her part, says modeling on the runway remains a major career goal.

Perhaps one day Kwao will go on to found her own agency. That's what Peche Di, a trans woman who has modeled for brands like Barneys, did with Trans Models. The former Thai beauty queen drew from her own frustrating experiences dealing with agencies, which she found to be less than open to trans people. "During the transition, it can be very tricky for them to understand," she says. "It [was] really hard to explain to them that I wanted to be a woman." Despite the signings of trans models like Nef, Andreja Pejić, and Lea T to major agencies, Di still feels the need for a trans-only enterprise. "Most of the transgender [models] at the big agencies are white trans people," she points out. "They still are not inclusive to trans women of color."

Related: See Unexpected Photos of Central Asian Style

Di also claims that many agents aren't equipped to deal with the unique needs of models who are transitioning. "Sometimes a model still wants to dress up like a woman but doesn't want to have any surgery, or some of them want to have surgery," she says. For example, Trans Models updates models' photos after their facial surgery, "small things that another agency wouldn't understand and would freak out about it. With a bigger agency, they still want to sign that person into a male category if they don't want to have surgery."

Like Lorde, Trans Models has an explicitly political bent, with its members acting not just as faces but as advocates. Models from the agency recently held a TED Talk-like event, and have done the speaking circuit at Howard University and other colleges around the country. This coming New York Fashion Week, Di is planning an all-trans fashion show. "People still think that we are a modeling agency, but we aren't. We are also advocacy-tied," says Di.

And their emphasis on social change doesn't mean that they don't care about making money. Though the agency has only been around since May, its signees have landed campaigns for clients like Budweiser and Smirnoff. "My goal is to find jobs for them because I grew up struggling [to find] a job," says Di. She's still learning the ins and outs of what it means to run an agency. "Contracts are really tricky for me -- the least glamorous side!" she admits. "It scares me a little bit."

More from The Cut:

The Sexiest Dresses of All Time
The French Fashion Icon Who's Sharing Her Little Black Book
The 40 Chicest Women in Trench Coats of All Time
The '60s Style Icon Making a Foray Into Athleisure
The 50 Best Movie Beauty Moments of All Time

-- 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.











Where Black Beauty Is Celebrated Online

$
0
0
2016-02-04-1454629831-6712100-01bebeautifulla1.w529.h352.jpg
Photos from Rita Labib and Jay William Washington, as seen on @BeBeautifulLA (Photo: jwilliamwashington.com, Rita Labib)

By Ashley Weatherford

Shawanna Davis was trying to fight tears. On the phone from L.A., she recalled a comment from a follower who said she was barely holding on after a bad breakup. "When you actually talk to someone who is sobbing and she doesn't know what she can do, what her next move is in life, and she wants to hear your voice to calm her down, it changes everything. That's when I realized it wasn't about me anymore." Davis isn't a therapist, a celebrity, or even a spiritual leader. She curates @BeBeautifulLA, the Instagram account that's unapologetically redefining what it means to be black and beautiful.

Related: The Year Black Hair Was Everywhere

Right now there are nearly 8,500 photos under @BeBeautifulLA. A young girl with an afro, smiling; Naomi Campbell on the cover of Vogue Portugal; Olympic gymnast Gabby Douglas; a naked woman with her back to the camera, stretch marks and rolls of flesh in full view. It's easy to tell that each image is selected with an artist's eye. Most of the photos are editorials sourced from magazines, or they're scooped from photographers who capture black women in all of our varied states: whimsical, stoical, fragile, and passionate.

A photo posted by Wanna (@bebeautifulla) on




Along with each image, Davis attaches a poem in the caption. She looks all over the internet to strike the perfect match between photo and verse. Tumblr and submissions from young, eager poets are helpful. The process is only a little different from the early days of @BeBeautifulLA, when, Davis says, "I would go online and just type in the word love. From there I would find a quote or a poem."

Related: 5 Uniquely Stylish Instagram Accounts to Follow

The roots of @BeBeautifulLA reach back to 2012. Actually, they reach back further than that, but let's begin there, when Davis, an artist who earns a living by consulting beauty brands, held an art show at Papillion Art in L.A. She commissioned the work of black female artists because she dreamed of a space that praised images of black women, made by black women, that told stories about black women. But she was nervous. What if no one came to the show? "It was a rainy day in March. My boyfriend and I pull up and it is like a packed house. People are outside the door waiting to come in. That was the moment -- when you can literally feel your wings start to spread. It's a feeling of Oh my God, you have to dream bigger. That show brought me to Instagram, where I can do that every day."

Looking back on the opening night of that show, gallery founder Michelle Joan Papillion remembered the speech Davis gave: "She started explaining to the audience that when she was a little girl she would sit in her room and dream about having a place where she could put beautiful art and beautiful people together. She teared up during that speech because that moment was happening."

A photo posted by Wanna (@bebeautifulla) on




In retrospect, it's not surprising that someone like Davis created a space to celebrate black beauty. Born in Tulare, a tiny inland Californian town that sits at the midpoint of San Francisco and Los Angeles, Davis grew up with beauty on her mind. Her mother, four aunts, and grandmother were the "stylish women of the town." Piles of fashion magazines occupied her living room with regularity. As a child, Davis would cut out the clothes worn by models like Iman and Naomi Sims in magazines and attach them to her childhood paper dolls. Neither popular nor an outcast, she struggled to find footing in a world that didn't underscore the intersection of self-aware black girls who enjoyed pieces of white popular culture. "I was the awkward black girl Issa Rae talks about. I was loving New Kids on the Block but still all up in my Essence magazine, trying to realize why Joey McIntyre didn't love me. I'd kind of go back to my younger self and give her a little nudge to let her know it's okay, you know."

Related: Inside a Beauty Editor's Insane Skin-Care Routine

Davis says @BeBeautifulLA was launched because of a few factors. She was living in L.A. and needed a creative outlet. There was the art show, of course, that was a wild success. Her friends and boyfriend could also see she had a knack for celebrating beauty in a thoughtful way. Davis first launched a blog, but quickly abandoned it -- the rhythm of that world wasn't quite right for her. She finally landed on Instagram in 2012. "I wanted it to feel very much as if you were in my home. When my friends come to my home, there are books and we like to read, we like to play with beauty products, and we like to talk about hair. This is my vision board. Instead of doing a journal every day, I'll put up a picture with a poem and it will be about black girls and I'm not going to apologize for only posting black women. When I go to a newsstand there's no apology that I only see three of me. Black women have to find a way to know that they're beautiful."

A photo posted by Wanna (@bebeautifulla) on




It wasn't long before famous faces discovered @BeBeautifulLA. Tracee Ellis Ross, Sanaa Lathan, Gabrielle Union, and Kelly Rowland follow the page. Skrillex, surprisingly, does too. The notoriety is exciting, yet strange to Davis. "I never thought I would get celebrities to follow me. There are a few of them and they tag their ultracelebrity friends and I'm like oh my gosh. I used to be tempted, when they're commenting on my posts, to put it up on my page, but my page isn't about that. That's their safe conversation, that's their safe space to talk and be sista-friends."

Related: Testing the First Luxury Makeup Brand for Women of Color at Sephora

"Her Instagram is like a painter's jumper cables," artist Donald Robertson wrote to me in an email. "It just gets you going. It's flesh and fashion and color. All the stuff that makes me pull out my paints. Her eye and her edit is a constant inspiration to me."

You can tell the respect between Davis and Robertson flows both ways. "Talking to Donald is like Warhol status. He's given me a certain platform, the little blue check mark that I don't have. And he's not a black man, he's a white man, but he understands it, he doesn't question it. He knows that what I'm doing matters to someone, and that means a lot."

A photo posted by Wanna (@bebeautifulla) on




That's not to say @BeBeautifulLA runs clear of the pernicious commenters of Instagram. In fact, there are plenty. "I get racist comments daily. And I'm like really, that's what you saw in that poem and that picture of a beautiful woman? There are 900 million Instagram pages and you found me."

So what does Davis do to counter malicious comments? "Delete. I have no time. I'm not here to educate you when you want to say baboon, monkey, look at that darkie."

Related: 12 Luxurious Cleansers for Your Winter-Battered Skin

Her vigilant stance in honoring women extends to size as well. "I make sure that big women are represented on my page. I feel like it's my duty to let the world know that I have 80,000 people now, and that this woman is brave and she's beautiful and we're not cookie-cutter. That she's vulnerable enough to show the rolls in her back, the stretch marks on her body, the cellulite in her thighs. I take it personally when people want to come over and write a laughing emoji. There might be a girl who may look just like that woman in that picture and that woman may never meet that girl, but that girl's going to screenshot that picture and she's going to look at herself differently."

A photo posted by Wanna (@bebeautifulla) on




You can call @BeBeautifulLA many things, but unfiltered honesty sits at its core. Nude black bodies and equally raw poetry fill the feed. Davis curates these images with a precise purpose. "We need to see the black female form naked. Little black girls with big butts and full lips, they're getting teased because the European look with the black girl features is the norm now. I need little black girls to know that, your natural hair with these lips, it all makes sense."

Davis began @BeBeautifulLA during a time of "selfie-nation," as she calls it. She didn't want the account to be about her, and that set it apart. Though she now sprinkles the account with her own image every ninth photo or so "just to peek through and say 'I'm here!'" @BeBeautifulLA will always be for black girls, young and old. She dreams of breaking through the wall of digital and into print with a @BeBeautifulLA book. "It's going to go right back to little Shawanna -- she used to make books of paper dolls and fashion and words. It would be a collaborative thing because my page is about the sum of us."

More from The Cut:

How to Look Amazing in Under 10 Minutes

What Makes Kim Kardashian's Hair Look So Good?
5 Victoria's Secret Models on Breaking Their Diets
Study Confirms Watching Love Actually Is Bad for You
The 50 Best Movie Beauty Moments of All Time

-- 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 Inside Scoop Behind Some Of The Most Iconic Engagement Rings Of Our Time

$
0
0

These engagement rings are a cut above the rest.


An infographic from UK-based George Pragnell jewelers provides an in-depth look at some of the most iconic engagement rings, including those worn by Audrey Hepburn, Jacqueline Kennedy, Elizabeth Taylor and Kate Middleton.


To learn the stories behind the legendary bling, check out the graphic below. (Zoom in to enlarge the text.) 



Also on HuffPost:



Are you ready to start taking better care of yourself? Sign up for our newsletter and join our Look Good, Feel Good challenge to supercharge your beauty and grooming routine and develop healthy habits. We’ll deliver tips, challenges and advice to your inbox every day.  

-- 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.











Stylish Valentine's Gifts To Give, Get (Or Buy For Yourself)

$
0
0
According to statistics from 2015, the percentage of single and married people in the United States is said to be nearly equal. In fact, if anything, more people are single than not. For this reason alone, it really shouldn't matter if you're in a relationship or not this Valentine's Day. Either way, you're not alone. Plus, who doesn't love a holiday of chocolates, dinner, cocktails and other gifts? If cupid hasn't shown up in your world, all the more reason to treat yourself. With these stylish Valentine's Day picks, there's plenty to love on Valentine's Day all its own.

2016-02-05-1454642158-1837744-ScreenShot20160204at7.14.28PM.png

There's nothing like a chic catchall for any space, and this cool crown gets the job done while reminding you of the royalty you are. Crown, West Elm

2016-02-05-1454642836-7341789-ScreenShot20160204at7.26.23PM.png

Nothing says love like a great accessory, and if it is red, all the better. This adorable (and stylish!) wallet plays on two trends: your excellent taste, and the scallop edge trend. Win, win. Wallet, Kate Spade

2016-02-05-1454644421-3210611-ScreenShot20160204at7.51.03PM.png

We're all special and nothing shouts it out like our birthstone. Celebrate yours with this fun birthstone collection of nail polish perfect for all the digits on your fingers or toes. Nail polish, Julep

2016-02-05-1454645024-2750912-ScreenShot20160204at8.02.35PM.png

Wrap yourself like the gift you are with the season's must-have skinny scarf. Let it hang, loosely tie it, double and triple wrap it, wear it as a belt. Just like you, the possibilities are endless. Scarf, Rockins

2016-02-05-1454646686-4531964-ScreenShot20160204at8.30.53PM.png

Forget the wine! Spice up the night with a spicy hot beer. This unique stout pulls it off with just the right amount of heat, perfect for dinner, drinks or working into recipes for the night. Beer, Rogue

Get more Valentine's Day gift ideas and see all of this month's edition of Condiment magazine at www.getcondiment.com

-- 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