A few years ago, after going through three tubes of DuWop's infamous Lip Venom (I was obsessed with its tingly, tasty blend of cinnamon and ginger oils), I decided that I absolutely could no longer pay $16 for a tiny tube of gloss. Shortly after this decision, I came across a display of essential oils at a small health foods stores in Indianapolis. The cinnamon one grabbed my eye. Eureka! I could add a few drops of cinnamon oil to my regular lip gloss and instantly transform it to a plumper! "Look at me, being all cost-effective chemist," I proudly thought.
Ha. I apparently dded one too many drops because every nostril in the state seemed to know when I applied it. "What is that smell??" I heard from family and friends nearly every time I whipped it out. After a couple weeks, my mom and brother pleaded, "For the love of God, will you throw that crap away?!" Okay, okay. But you know what? It worked. My lips instantly become plumper and brighter.
Now I have an excuse to shell out the big bucks again for DuWop: Lip Venom not only comes in a longer-lasting stain...but it's organic and paraben-free: DuWop Pure Venom Plumping Lip Stain.
Pretty factor: Organic shea butter, safflower oil, and jojoba oil thoroughly moisturize, while sugar cane extract (the natural source of glycolic acid) exfoliates to keep lips young. And, of course, the classic cinnamon and peppermint leaf oils stimulate circulation, increasing lips' fullness and color. It has to be the perfect lip product.
Eco factor: Organic ingredients, no parabens, petrochemicals, or synthetic colors and fragrances
August 22, 2008
NEW DuWop Pure Venom Plumping Lip Stain
Tags: Lips
August 18, 2008
NEW Tarte Lash Hugger Natural Mascara
Until now, finding a great eco-friendly mascara was like trying to find a natural blonde at a Texas beauty pageant. I've tried many and have found either the formulas to be too runny (thanks to moisturizing oils like jojoba) or the brushes to be too skinny (not volumizing enough).
Leave it to Tarte Cosmetics to develop the perfect one (and in such a pretty tube). Tarte was my favorite makeup line at Sephora when I worked there a couple years ago because of the numerous healthy ingredients in its high-performing products. Last year, this cool company went green, making its goods free of parabens, mineral oil, propylene glycol, or synthetic dyes and fragrance.
Pretty factor: Olive esters—not oil—condition without runiness. Rice bran wax and acacia gum adhere to and naturally thicken lashes. A fat brush with ample-spaced bristles perfectly separates and gives va-voom volume.
Eco factor: No parabens, propylene or butyelene glycol, mineral oil, or synthetic fragrance. The tube is made from recycled aluminum.
August 15, 2008
Evan Healy Sea Algae Serum Review
Each Friday this summer, it's seemed that nearly everyone in my Manhattan office has wisked off to the Hamptons. For those of you who, like me, have been doing more day-dreaming than jet-setting since Memorial Day, bring home the beach—and get a gorgeous glow—with Evan Healy's Sea Algae Serum.
I was lured to purchase my first Evan Healy product by its minimalist packaging that whispered "purity, cleanliness." Evan Healy is a San Diego-based aesthetician who trained at Dr. Hauschka and various holistic doctors in Europe and California. Her line is based on the fact that "the skin breathes" and is nutrient-packed and ultra-pure.
Pretty factor: This lightweight serum—which quickly absorbs into the skin—contains a complex of marine botanicals, which feed the skin vitamins and minerals. Seabuckthorn oil revitalizes with naturally occurring beta carotene and vitamin E, while antioxidant CoQ10 renews skin cells from free radical damage (=too much time in the sun).
Eco factor: Organic ingredients and no parabens, petrochemicals, propylene glycol, filler/thickener ingredients, sulfates, or synthetic colors and fragrances.
Ideal for: all skin types. Really.
Tags: combination, dry/mature, evan healy, serums
August 11, 2008
Thinking About Eco-Eating After A Michael Pollan Lecture
This post strays a bit from beauty. But if we are what we eat—if what we put into our bodies eventually affects our skin, hair and nails—then I'm not wandering too far. :)
Friday evening, a foodie friend and I sojourned to Long Island City, Queens (just across the East River from midtown Manhattan) to hear a standing-room-only talk by food writer-superstar Michael Pollan.
I've been interested in nutrition and good eating as long as I have beauty, and have followed Pollan's work specifically since reading an excerpt from his most recent book, In Defense of Food, in The New York Times Sunday Magazine a couple years ago.
A professor of journalism at UC Berkeley, Pollan advocates via thorough research for eating locally (e.g. from farmers' markets) and organically. I do, too. Here's why.
- The more local food is, the more healthful it is (produce loses nutrients the longer it travels), and the less carbon footprint it leaves. For example, lettuce voyaging from Salinas, California to a Whole Foods in New York uses significantly more gas than lettuce traveling from a farm on Long Island to that same Whole Foods.
- Numerous studies have found that organic produce is more nutrient-rich than its conventionally grown counterparts. Scientists theorize that when produce is sprayed with pesticide, it becomes "lazy." Pesticide-free produce has to fight harder to survive and thus produces more protective antioxidants.
- Organic farming prevents tons of fertilizer from further polluting waterways and killing marine life. Earlier this summer, my mom sent me one of many recent articles about how fertilizer runoff from Midwestern farms causes the disgusting "dead zone" in the Gulf of Mexico.
- Buying "free-range" chicken and beef from a local farmer doesn't support industrial farms—where animals are packed almost literally on top of each other, without access to the outdoors. They become distressed and sick and are pumped with antibiotics to strengthen their immune systems. We intake these antibiotics when we eat the meat, possibly causing the increase in antibiotic-resistant bacteria that scientists have been discovering. Industrial beef farms are also responsible for generating obscene amounts of manure that, instead of fertilizing grass as nature intended, releases pollution-causing methane into the air. Look for "grass-fed" beef.
Just some things to think about. Thanks for letting me proseltize!
August 1, 2008
Whole Foods Video Series with John Masters
After a couple months of using an eco-friendly hair line that wasn't doing much for me, I finally finished the bottle and switched back to John Masters Organics. This past winter, I lathered my locks in JM's amazing Honey & Hibiscus Reconstructing shampoo and conditioner and received numerous compliments. Since it's summer, I wanted something lighter, but not too light because I have high-lighted hair and dry ends that need moisture. I opted for JMO's Evening Primrose Shampoo for Dry Hair.
Well, after a week of use, what do ya know? My hair is again smoother, softer and more vibrant. (Evening primrose oil is loaded with rejuvenating essential fatty acids.) Better yet, while doing research, I found these new Whole Foods video interviews with John himself about ingredients to look for in natural haircare. Check 'em out—they're enlightening!
