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    Monday, September 28

    Bust Out That Smoky Fall Eye!




    Black's back and in a big way this fall and winter! Whether it's opening night, amateur night, or just a night out, black and washed out shades of black and grey are painting an elegantly gothic look on eyes for the season.

    Going dramatic? Try a black kohl pencil on the lid, with a black eye shadow over it. Then put a softly blended grey into the crease and slightly blend it up and off the eye.

    For a more natural look, or a bit of daytime chic, use a very natural or nude color eye shadow on the lid. After, put a black pencil in the waterline or use a liquid liner to make a sharp line across the top lash line.When applying mascara, this season is about the blackest of black mascaras.

    Here are a few other things amazing artists are doing:

    1. For incredible multi-dimensional color, start your eye makeup off with a black base (black cream shadow or a black kohl all over the lid) then add any color, like a gold or fushia over it for a deep sultry effect.

    2. Contouring with black-mix a very small amount of a black eyeshadow with your bronzer to contour under the cheekbones, then lightly blend a loose or mineral powder over the contour to soften the harsh contrast.

    As with any trend, use with discretion. At a certain age, black can add years to your face. If you find this is the case with you, stick to using black just as a liner or mascara!

    Sunday, September 27

    The Link Between Music and Fashion



    Gone are the days when pop musicians and their record labels could rely on selling their albums via traditional record stores. The windows of music stores may lie empty, FYE may no longer sale as many CDs, and 25 per cent of independent record shops may be lost, but if people have fallen out of the habit of visiting record shops, a new outlet for CDs is now opening up. Stores such as Gap and Urban Outfitters have been selling CDs in-store for years, allowing customers to buy what they hear playing in the store as they browse through the high fashion and vintage clothes racks. And upmarket retailer Mac Cosmetics has also sold records by music artists. By playing hip new music, customers can discover new music as they shop, with the music on sale including albums from their favorites.

    Wednesday, September 23

    Runway Review: With the shows over, whats promising for spring/summer 2010?


    Runway Review: With the shows over, what looks most promising for spring/summer 2010?


    Fashion has always been known for soft, fluid fabrics and innovative, but completely wearable designs that showcase modern twists on classically feminine styles. Using a sweetly somber palette of creams, blues and metal grey tones, designers can do just this. At this year's Fashion Week, an array of sexy and modern dresses and skirts that still manage to be alluringly feminine could be viewed. There was a large variety of dresses, skirts and short shorts that featured details such as clever draping, soft, fluttering tiers, origami-inspired pleats and, as the trends have predicted, high hemlines. This season has many fashion promises!

    Tuesday, September 15

    NY Fall Fashion Week Notable Fashion Critics

    Fashion critics from Women's Wear Daily (Bridget Foley), The New York Times (Cathy Horyn), The International Herald Tribune (Suzy Menkes) and The Washington Post (Robin Givhan) are the most prominent fashion critics.

    Cathy HorynCathy Horyn, The New York TimesRobin GivhanRobin Givhan, The Washington PostSuzy MenkesSuzy Menkes, The International Herald Tribune

    Monday, September 14

    Celebs at New York Fashion Week

    Ana Ortiz_MarkIndelicato

    Mom and son on the TV show Ugly Betty - take in the shows Saturday afternoon. Ana Ortiz and Mark Indelicato at the tents.

    LanceBass

    Lance Bass bringing black back to the VIP lounge at the Tents.

    HeatherGraham

    Heather Graham (The Hangover) revisits her fashion modeling days..


    HilaryDuff_001

    Hilary Duff took a break filming for the CW's Gossip Girl to check out the shows.

    SteveHarvey&Wife

    Comedian Steve Harvey - who has a line of men's tailored suits - arrives ahead of time for the Chado Ralph Rucci fashion show with his wife Marjorie Bridges-Woods.

    MarthaStewart

    Martha Stewart arrives for the Chado Ralph Rucci fashion show which was held on Saturday night.

    Veronica&Tori

    Veronica Webb and Tori Spelling view Christian Siriano's spring-summer 2010 show.

    MenaSuvari

    Mena Suvari at Christian Siriano's glam-slam of a show, which also featured the Project Runway's winner's shoe collection for Payless Shoesource.

    KellyRowland

    Kelly Rowland at Christian Siriano's show. taking a break from Bravo-TV's The Fashion Show.

    ChristianSirianoCelebrities

    Victoria's Secret model Alessandria Ambrosio, Project Runway's Tim Gunn and actress Kristen Johnson .

    Anna&Rachel

    Vogue editrix Anna Wintour ("star" of the frock-doc The September Issue) and actress Rachel McAdams (The Time Traveler's Wife and the upcoming Sherlock Holmes) at the Alexander Wang show.


    CorbinBleu

    High School Musical alum Corbin Bleu takes in the shows during a break from promoting The Beautiful Life: TBL with Mischa Barton in New York. The CW series is produced by Ashton Kutcher and Demi Moore.

    MischaBarton

    Mischa Barton makes her way pass the paparazzi into the Lacoste show.

    KirstenDunst&CharlotteRonson

    Designer Charlotte Ronson with actress Kirsten Dunst at the after-party for Ronson's show. Ronson is the twin sister of deejay Samantha Ronson, who is - of course - Lindsay Lohan's on-again-off-again lover.

    BruceWillis

    Bruce Willis with wife Emma Heming at the Erin Wasson x RVCA show.

    Ciara

    Hip hop honey Ciara on the runway just before the Nicole Miller show starts.

    SeanPaul

    Reggae superstar Sean Paul takes in the This Day/Arise: African Fashion Collective show.

    CharlizeTheron

    Ex-model and Academy Award winning actress Charlize Theron at the Rag & Bone show

    Sunday, September 13

    NY Fall 2009 Fashion Week Collection Highlights

    Fashion Designer Marc Jacobs pictured

    New York Fall 2009 Fashion Week Collection Highlights
    • Marc Jacobs -- The big-shoulder, pink and paisley days of the '80s.
    • BCBG -- Easy-to-wear dresses with interesting details (ruching, ruffles, seaming).
    • Lacoste -- Casual elegance like snap-front coats and jumpsuits in soft wool knit.
    • Georges Chakra -- Red-carpet looks.
    • Jason Wu -- The Inauguration gown designer showed ladylike pieces in twin-prints tweed and embellished full skirts.
    • Diane von Furstenberg -- The mix included skinny leather pants, oversized sweaters, camo prints and crafty pieces.


    Friday, September 11

    New Orleans Consignment Shopping

    Having lived in both Las Vegas and New Orleans, I’ve learned about the hierarchy of consignment stores. The best consignment shops take great care in their organization, the quality of their pieces, and their accumulation of brand name vintage. Two of the New Orlean's best options are Prima Donna’s Closet, located at 1206 St. Charles Avenue (just uptown from Lee Circle), and Swap (pictured here).

    Both of these stores are well maintained so shoppers know where they can find consignment items from retail stores. When shopping vintage, look for pieces with great versatility, no signs of wear, and a little bling –as Rachel Zoe would say look for pieces "to die for". If you got extra dollars to spend, find a vintage designer coat, a beautiful antique cocktail ring, or a Chanel handbag.

    Another fun thing about shopping vintage is that each piece has a its own history – it could be a dress someone wore for just one special night out or someone's "go-to" jeans that someone became too small. It's now your turn to create your own moments...

    Thursday, September 10

    New Orleans Style

    Charlie Sims at Donna's, the place to be on a Thursday night.

    For outsiders New Orleans was a place to party and eat food that is way too rich. For the folks who live there it's more complicated - it's home. Eighty-five percent of them were born there, and they're not going anywhere permanently, so forget this idea they're going to move the city somewhere else.

    It's not going to happen. New Orleans is the opposite of America, and we must hold onto places that are the opposite of us. New Orleans is not fast or energetic or efficient, not a go-get-'em Calvinist well-ordered city. It's slow, lazy, sleepy, sweaty, hot, wet, lazy and exotic.

    Here are 22 reasons America needs New Orleans, the national capital of eccentricity:

    1. The turtle soup at Galatoire's is presented in a white porcelain tureen, then ladled into your bowl by a waiter who reveals with a wicked smile that the turtle's name was Fred.

    2. The hats in Fleur de Paris, a shop on Royal Street, are perfectly frivolous and ridiculous, beautiful visions of silk and lace.

    3. Nowhere else in the country do so many Roman Catholic churches coexist peacefully with so many voodoo shops.

    4. If you are a grown man, this is the only place in America where you can step off an airplane, and be guaranteed that within 30 minutes a respectable woman unknown to you will call you "baby," as in, "How you doin', baby!" If you are a grown woman, you will be called "darlin' " whether you are the least bit darlin' or not.

    5. The beads of sweat on the unlined face of the conductor on the St. Charles streetcar.

    6. Mardi Gras beads, but only the ones you catch, thrown by an actual masker on a float. The ones that hit the ground don't count unless they bounced off your hand or arm first.

    7. The Lucky Dog is a venerated local frankfurter that has come a long way, culinarily speaking, from the days when Ignatius J. Reilly peddled them to tourists in "A Confederacy of Dunces." Now they are really good, especially if it is 4 a.m. and you are hungry.

    8. I once met Thelma Toole, mother of John Kennedy Toole, author of "A Confederacy of Dunces," who asked if I would buy her a "very expensive meal at the finest restaurant." This lady rolled her R's like an 1860's stage actress to indicate her intellectual superiority to the rest of us. I took her to the restaurant of her choice, and by evening's end she had all the waiters gathered at our table, spellbound by stories of "Kenny." "My son was a genius, with a large and oddly-shaped head," she boomed. Imagine what other great books Kenny might have written, she said, had he not killed himself in a car on that beach in Biloxi.

    9. Every Twelfth Night, Henri Schindler, a local historian and Mardi Gras curator, holds a magnificent masked ball on the second floor of the Napoleon House, at the corner of Chartres and St. Louis Streets. White curtains blow in and out of the large empty rooms as masked figures glide past on a cushion of mystery.

    10. Locals go to the Maple Leaf and Tipitina's to hear music. Also to Frenchmen Street, a cluster of 10 or 12 small bars and clubs featuring, on any given night, 10 or 12 kinds of music, about 8 of which will be funky. (The other four will be too loud.) Usually at the better places there's a Neville involved, or a Marsalis.

    11. My friend Martha Ann Samuels, a real estate agent, revealed to me the actual location of Stanley and Blanche's house on Elysian Fields Avenue, a secret she learned from Tennessee Williams himself when she helped him buy a condo in the Quarter. (I'm not telling.)

    12. Oyster loaf at Casamento's on Magazine Street. The crunchy local French bread showers crumbs on your hands. Each bite contains bread, mayo and the delectable local bivalve, breaded and brilliantly fried. Casamento's closes down for the summer because oysters are better other times of the year.

    13. At JazzFest, citizens happily stand in long lines in the blazing sun for a chance to eat crawfish bread, white boudin sausage and alligator gumbo to the thump of Rockin' Dopsy from the Congo Square stage. (Could someone please put the JazzFest committee in charge of the Superdome?)

    14. You can stand at the foot of Ursulines Avenue and watch a huge oceangoing ship slide by above the level of your head.

    15. Along the promenade where the river passes Jackson Square, tourists still fall for one of the oldest New Orleans scams. A friendly fellow proposes that for a dollar he can tell you where you got them shoes. When you accept the bet, he says, "You got them shoes on your feet!" He keeps the dollar.

    16. It has the only airport named for a jazz trumpeter, the indelible Louis Armstrong.

    17. In the Confederate Museum near Lee Circle is a crown of thorns said to have been woven by Pope Pius IX himself, and sent as a gift to Jefferson Davis while he was imprisoned shortly after the Civil War. For me this artifact represents the height of Southern absurdity, and must be preserved for those future generations who will not believe it.

    18. Every Thursday night at Donna's on Rampart Street, Tom McDermott plays the fastest, wildest ragtime, Brazilian and stride piano you've ever heard. It's scary how fast his fingers move when he gets going. His feet come up off the floor.

    19. Rich people live on the high ground. Poorer people live on the low ground. Last week some of the rich folks' houses got wet, too.

    20. Piety Street is one block over from Desire. Not a long walk at all.

    21. On a foggy night the moon grows fat and full, and hangs in the sky above the big old river. It pours light on the water and makes a magical brown glitter that doesn't exist anywhere else. The water is the reason the city is there. The full moon pulls the tides into Lake Pontchartrain.

    22. The city's sanitation department is considered among the finest in the nation. Its work during Mardi Gras is legendary. Can we please get this water out of here so they can get to work on this mess? The sooner the better.

    Wednesday, September 2

    Fly Butterly....



    "Spread your wings and prepare to fly,
    For you have become a butterfly,
    If you should return to me,
    We truly were meant to be."
    --M

    Tuesday, September 1

    How to Add Volume to Hair Style

    How to Add Volume to Hair Style

    Are you one of the many who is searching for a way to get the most instant volume for your hair without spending a fortune doing it? There are many natural ways you can adapt to add volume to your hair and many cost nothing at all. Some of these volumizing ideas you may already know and may have used and some you may be hearing for the first time. The key is to try them and find the right one that will work with your personal hair type. What works good for one individual may not work for another. The best way to find the right volumizing method is to try and try again!

    Keeping It Light

    The best thing to do is to make sure your shampoo and conditioner are not weighing your hair down. Not all products will help your hair to stand up and be noticed. There are ingredients in some of the products on the market that will definitely cause your hair to be heavy and lifeless. Once you determine if your products are designed to give body to your hair, you should concentrate on only adding the conditioner to the ends of the hair and not the entire hair shaft. This will give the appearance of fullness without making your hair so soft it will frizz or fall. Also, make certain you are aware of your specific hair type when choosing the right conditioner and shampoo. You can really make your hair lifeless if you use a product designed for another hair type other than your own. You may also want to invest in a product called a root lifter to achieve instant volume for your hair. This is specially designed to bring the roots of the hair up and out to give the appearance of a fuller head of hair. You can find this item in many of the regular stores but, you may want to spend a little more and purchase it straight from your hairstylist. Most of the root lifters will require you to add it before you blow dry your hair and only apply it to the roots and up to the middle of the hair shaft.

    Volume Can Be A Free Experience

    For those who do not like to pay for a hair product, there are some free ideas to try at home. The first is the ever popular hair flip method of blow drying your hair. This adds instant volume for your hair but can also give you an unpleasant hairstyle along with it. To add volume with this method, you simply blow dry wet hair upside down and then flip and spray with hairspray. You may need to style it in place afterwards but this usually will plump up your hairstyle considerably. Best of all, instant volume for your hair requires absolutely no money out of pocket. You can also blow dry the hair in a lifted position without flipping your head over. This will also give a boost to your style. Try a new style that lifts the hair up and makes it the focal point. Also make sure that the amount of hairspray you add to your style is a minimal amount. The more product you add, the heavier the hair will become and will cause it to lay flat on the head. Remember, less is best.

    Trial And Error Is The Only Way

    It would be nice if there was a sure fire way to know exactly what is required for our hair to be perfect each and every time we style it. Unfortunately, there is no correct mix. To find what works for you, you must try each technique and several products until you find the one that best suits your hair condition. There is an endless supply of products in the market claiming to work wonders for lift and volume. There are also a few free ideas to try at home. To what extremes you go to achieve instant volume for your hair is completely up to you and your checkbook.