Good Looks
Do away with Janet-Jackson-style wardrobe malfunctions on your warm-weather retreat. These new bikinis are built to stay put. Read More>>
While natural skin-care and non-toxic nail polish brands have flourished, the world of hair color clings to its chemical roots. Read More>>
He doesn't believe in sexy marketing, hero ingredients, or using skin-care tricks to make us look better. Healthy products on the other hand...Read More>>
Almost passé pomegranate gets a second season as a nighttime skin-care treatment. Read More>>
Rarely do New Yorkers actually need skin primed like a canvas—or the ingredients that create the absolutely opaque look. Time to try a tinted moisturizer. Read More>>
Just like your pact to eat more produce, promise to slather your skin with healthier skin-care products in 2011. Five tips to help clean up your act. Read More>>
Handmade gifts don't have to be hokey—or hard. Like this four-ingredient organic Cocoa and Peppermint Body Bar, a perfect personalized present for the holidays. Read More>>
For the perfect last-minute gift that doesn’t feel last-minute, there's nothing ho-ho-hum about these beauty gift sets. Read More>>
This time of year is all about tinsel, glitter, and flashing ornaments. And that’s just the average holiday party outfit. What to wear if the sequined top, smoky eye, and up-do aren’t for you. Read More>>
After nutritionally dense foods become darlings of the New York City food scene, they're often adopted by the beauty cognoscenti, like acai and kombucha. Now it's stinging nettles' turn. Read More>>
Moisturizing under the influence. In New York State, the ingredient in this skin-care line could get you arrested. Read More>>
Birchbox, a new online beauty-of-the-month club, sends product samples to your door that have been cool-hunted by its New York City founders. Read More>>
You can smell both stores at least half a block away, but you can’t judge a store by its wafts. Or can you? We give you the dope on the soaps. Read More>>
The difference between unwashed and over-washed is all in the products—a distinction the New York Times missed. Read More>>