Showing posts with label beauty. Show all posts
Showing posts with label beauty. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 3, 2011

Before the Mane Event: Family Reunion at the Nail Salon

With full bellies and smiling faces, my girls and I left brunch and headed for the nail salon.  I was so psyched to be able to spend the day with five of my favorite women.  Then, once we arrived at the nail salon, I was greeted by a few more of my favorite women!


Oh hi cousins!  I'm always thrilled to see these ladies, but I was especially excited this time.  You see, my pregnant bridesmaid wasn't the only mom-to-be at our wedding.  We recently learned that the girl standing on the right in that photo was pregnant!  She and her husband are my newlywed role models,  They both seem so happy, but they're good at keeping it real.  I couldn't have been happier for her, and I was so glad that I was able to celebrate with her a little bit before the wedding!

My cousins also brought another gift with them, my grandmother.

Grandmommy Lioness is my only living grandparent.  She had been sick on and off for a few years, and recently decided to move from the house we visited for years to an independent living facility.  She hadn't traveled in years, and we weren't sure whether it was safe for her to fly to Atlanta for the wedding.  My dad and his siblings made some arrangements and were able to get her everything she needed once in Atlanta.  It meant so much to her, but I think it meant even more to me.  Here she is standing up from her Rollator walker, which she never locks before sitting in.  Seriously, Grandmommy Lioness?  You can't have a physical therapist as a granddaughter if you wanna do that stuff without a lecture!

 How did you, or how do you plan to, spend quality time with family before the big day?

Friday, March 4, 2011

Without Covering the Freckles

Pale skin.  Freckles.  Green eyes.  Red hair.  It's a tougher palette than it looks, I must say.  It's very easy to find clashing colors, sometimes too late.  Additionally, fair skin takes to color much more drastically than other skin tones.  This can be a good thing, but it can also lead to something overly dramatic.  I wanted to use a picture of a clown with a red wig to illustrate this point, but when I Google image searched for "clown," a lot of scary stuff popped up.  I don't want to subject y'all to that!

Instead, I'll use this photo of Nancy from "30 Rock," whose dream was to "open a store for red headed girls to buy cosmetics...from someone who understands."

I've had my makeup done professionally, and everyone always tries to "cover up the freckles." Those freckles are who I am!  I want to look like me, just a glamorous version of me that doesn't clash with my complexion.  I know what you're thinking...If the complexion is the problem, why not get a spray tan?  Because it doesn't look natural on me.  And I don't want to look like that redhead with the unnatural tan:

A friend of mine works as a makeup artist, and she's offered to do my wedding day makeup as a wedding gift to me (sweet!), so I started looking for inspiration.  I started looking for something fresh, natural, and a little girlie.


I liked those looks, but I felt like I needed a little something more.  Even though our wedding is a daytime wedding, perhaps I could pull off a little bit of the smokey eye?


Perhaps I could even pull off some red lipstick?

It would, after all, go along with my pin-up/Old Hollywood hair!

Mac Cosmetics apparently recommends the following eyeshadows and finishes for redheads...
Clockwise from left: Honesty, Motif, Trax, and Mineralize Skinfinish

...as well as their pencil, Eye Kohl, in Teddy:

I absolutely love all of those shades, but I'm not sure if they'd work with the red lipstick.  Maybe I'd have to choose one over the other?  What do you think?

Where my redheads at!  What are you ladies doing for your wedding day makeup?

Thursday, February 3, 2011

Getting My Hair Did

Remember my hair inspiration post?  Remember how I wanted to look like a pin-up crossed with an Old Hollywood movie star?  Well, I had my hair trial!  Please excuse me if my face looks a little rough in some of these pictures...it was the day after my bachelorette party!  Why did I decide to schedule my hair trial during what would inevitably be a hangover?  Well, who knows!


Here I am showing my stylist some inspiration pictures:
"You see, I write for this wedding blog and so I wrote one post all about this one hairstyle and so all of my pictures are right here on this one webpage and I want this part of my hair back a little bit and also I like run-on sentences."

Curling is fun.

Teasing is fun, too.

The finished product:

Mama Lioness admiring my new 'do:

We might have to work on the veil a little...

How did your hair trial go?  Were you pleased with the results?

Sunday, January 2, 2011

Channeling Veronica Lake

Mr. Lion had one request regarding my wedding day look: he wanted my hair down.  At first, I was a little skeptical.  What if it got in my face?  What if it covered up to much of my gown?  Would my veil look okay with a down-do?  Then, I recalled the feeling I get when I look at my old prom pictures.  I had chosen a pretty involved up-do.  On some girls, this would look glamorous.  On me, I just looked poofy.

Most importantly, I just didn't look like myself.  I don't want to look back on my wedding pictures years from now and wonder why I picked a hairstyle that wasn't me.  I want to look like myself...just a more glammed up version of myself.  Enter the Old Hollywood inspiration.

Veronica Lake is one of my favorite Hollywood bombshells.  Her curls are subtle, but sophisticated.  The look is natural, but it also packs a lot of sexy.

Rita Hayworth is another excellent example of the classic Hollywood look.  Her curls are a little more wavy, adding a softer element to the look.

At risk of this post turning into a Madonna music video from the 1990s, let's venture into modern day, shall we?


Hmm...wonder if I could pull off red lipstick with that look, too?  All of these ladies had oval faces with high cheekbones; I needed to make sure someone with big cheeks a heart-shaped face could work it too!


Phew!  Thanks for the assurance, Scarlett!  Then, I just needed to see it on a redhead.


Seeing that Old Hollywood look on a redhead reminded me of another one of my favorite bombshells.

So there you have it: soft, wavy, loose curls with a little bit of a pick-up in that front piece just to keep it off the face.  I'm meeting with my hair stylist soon for a test run, so I'll definitely let y'all know how it goes!

How did you decide on your wedding day hair do?  Where did you draw inspiration from?

Wednesday, December 15, 2010

Raising a Brow

I'm no stranger to make-up.  I've danced my whole life and, as Mrs. Barrettes will tell you, that can give you lots of practice with faux lashes!  My stage make-up skills carried over to everyday make-up, which my college roommates were pretty psyched about.  I was always happy to paint their eyelids for a night out on the town.  I feel pretty comfortable with a brush and some shadow, but put a pair of tweezers in my hands and I simply have no idea what to do.


I'm what I like to call "eyebrow illiterate."  Ever since I was about 16, I've plucked about two hairs between my eyebrows, and another two hairs underneath each one.  Fortunately, my eyebrows aren't too unruly naturally.  But this minimal maintenance has left me with no shape, no arch.  Allow me to show you an example:
Before plucking...

...and after.  Not much of a difference, huh?

I really wanted to master my brows before the wedding.  The problem was that I didn't trust myself with them, but I was scared to have them done.  I wasn't afraid of the pain from waxing; I was afraid that I would end up overplucked.

Then, my friend introduced me to Anastasia of Beverly Hills.  This cosmetics company specializes in eyebrows, and my friend had nothing but good things to say about them.  For $30, they wax, trim, pluck, shape, and fill your brows.  Yes, that's a bit steep.  But when I learned about their methodology, I decided to splurge.  I thought y'all might be interested to hear about it, too, in case you wanted to try this place yourself, try some place similar (and hopefully cheaper!), or go the DIY route!

Anastasia bases their brow design on something they call the "Golden Ratio."

The stylist took some eyeliner and drew three lines on each of my eyebrows.  The first indicated the medial border of my eyebrow, which lined up with my nostril.  The second indicated the lateral border of my eyebrow, which shot out diagonally from the edge of my nostril.  The third indicated the peak of my arch, which lined up with the middle of my nose and my pupil.  Using these three points, the stylist then chose a stencil that fit my shape best.  I'm apparently the "high arch," which I found interesting because I didn't even know I had any arch at all!

The stylist began to shade in the stencil to guide the waxing and the shading.

Then, the stylist waxed and plucked.  She filled in the thinner areas with a powder that matched my hair color.  Then, she glossed over it with a brow gel.  She applied some cream to sooth the surrounding area.  Finally, she traced over the bottom of each brow with a highlighting pencil.

I loved the finished product.  It looked natural, but sophisticated.  I actually had a shape to my brows, but not so much that I looked like a Disney villain!

Anastasia sells a brow kit for $85 that includes nearly everything that my stylist used on me: the stencils, tweezers, a brush, the powder that matched my hair, the brow gel, the soothing lotion, and the highlighter pencil.

Again, the price was steep, but I saw it as an investment.  If this meant I could maintain my eyebrows independently until the wedding, I would save money in the long run.  So, I bought the kit.  Anastasia gave me a fresh start on eyebrows, and I can take it from here.  This morning, I used the stencil to fill in my eyebrows...and I was pleasantly surprised with how many compliments I received!  I truly feel that I have conquered the eyebrows that I once feared so much.  Best of all, I feel like it's given me confidence.  It's added a new element to my wedding day face, and I'm pretty psyched about that.

Are you currently experimenting with something for your wedding day look?  How's it going?