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11/29/09

Holiday Beauty

Holiday time is upon us, it seemed to happen so fast, it feels like August was just last week!

Oh well, time to embrace winter beauty and prepare our skin for the blustery cold winter months.
Natural Health Magazine recently interviewed me about holiday makeup, check it out above or on page 32 of the magazine.

They didn't have room to fit all of my favorite products that I wanted to share with you, so I included them here.
Enjoy!

Jane Iredale eyeliner in Black Brown
Primitive Lipstick in Tahiti
Nvey Lip Gloss in Nude
rms beauty Living Luminzer
Kahina- Giving Beauty Argan Oil Serum

11/12/09

goodLooks: Green Makeup Begets a New Kind of Makeup Artist

I was recently interviewed by Melisse Gelula of Well and Good NYC.


Here is the interview:

“I wasn’t eating food with chemicals, but here I was putting them all over the faces of women. I decided I didn’t want anything to do with that,” says Jessa Blades, one of a small new crop of green makeup artists working the editorial and wedding scene in New York City.
Although she went to North America’s top makeup school and worked for glamorous MAC cosmetics, Blades now carries in her kit green giants like Jane Iredale and Dr. Hauschka. And she’s a divining rod for emerging eco-friendly boutique brands, like RMS Beauty, MOD Skin, and Couleur Caramel, a collective category that there’s still no aisle for at Sephora. (Although she lists a dozen or so on her website.)
So how does makeup without the dirty dozen ingredients measure up? “One thing I hear from women is green makeup doesn’t last,” says Blades. “Well, nothing lasts. Breakfast doesn’t last all day. We just eat again. Likewise, lipstick needs to be reapplied. Should we load it with chemicals that dry out lips instead of doing a touch up?” The color selection nearly matches traditional makeup now, and many eco-friendly formulations include ingredients that are nourishing for skin, adds Blades.
What’s refreshing about Blades is that she’s a thinking woman’s green makeup artist, not an absolutist. Especially when it comes to special events. “It’s really okay to use waterproof mascara at a wedding,” she says. Particularly yours.
The takeaway? “The goal is to watch our exposure to toxins to avoid a build-up over time. Not to be all or nothing.”

11/2/09

3 Bets by Sandra Steingraber

Please take a moment to read, I promise it will be worth your time... this is important for everyone, new parents, economists, teenagers, humans in general.
Sandra Steingraber is an ecologist, author, cancer survivor, and internationally recognized expert on the environmental links to cancer and reproductive health.
by Sandra Steingraber

Here is an excerpt:
"In umbilical cord blood alone, 287 different chemicals have been identified, including pesticides, stain removers, wood preservatives, mercury, and flame retardants. Our current environmental regulatory apparatus does not take into account the timing of exposure. And yet the science clearly shows that toxic exposures during key moments of infant and child development—especially during the opera of embryonic development—raise risks for harm in ways that are not predictable by dose. Benzo[a]pyrene, an ingredient in tobacco smoke, diesel exhaust, and soot, can damage eggs in the ovaries. Exposure to pesticides in men can reduce sperm count. Thus, our environmental policies may be eroding our fertility. And if a pregnancy is achieved, exposure to certain chemicals raises the risk that it will be lost through miscarriage, or what we in the scientific community call spontaneous abortion. Evidence suggests that the pesticide methoxchlor has this power, as do certain chemical solvents..."