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BEAUTY, STYLE AND LIFE OVER 50

Beauty batch 3

Guerlain Terracotta Bronzer: Mistake-Proof Chic

BeautyLiza Herz2 Comments

Guerlain Terracotta Light Healthy Glow is the best ‘Training Bronzer’ For Bronzing Newbies

Oh, bronzer. The fastest way to look glowy and well-rested. Even well travelled. (Did you get that tan in Bali?) But one errant sweep of your fluffy brush and you might look like you were attacked by a can of Hershey’s cocoa powder or that you are an aspiring Love Island contestant.

Guerlain Terracotta, the first and still the best compact bronzing powder (it launched back in 1984) can save you from this fate. The colours are carefully considered and natural-looking and - hooray - they have brought back their best, and my favourite, multi-hued version, Terracotta Light Healthy Glow Bronzer, $66 CAN, Sephora.com. It’s pleasingly luxe in its translucent, rosin-coloured case and the mix of bronze, tan and pink pigments creates a natural, warm tan with just enough soft shimmer to keep it from looking flat. The shade ‘Light Cool 00’ is the perfect training bronzer if you are timid, or it can be your all year round go-to if you like to keep things subtle. Level up to deeper shades as desired.

Sweep it on where the sun hits your face, building up the colour slowly. Remember that you can always add more but you can’t add less. Try the classic ‘draw a number three’ sweep: temples, under the cheek and under the jaw, or follow the example of Violette Serrat, Guerlain’s Creative Director of Makeup, in this video (starting at the 1:07 minute mark.)

In her Vogue Paris video, Jeanne Damas epitomizes effortless Parisian cool.

As you can see, casually sweeping on some Terracotta scores incredibly high on the French Cool Girl Beauty Meter. Here is further proof, via model/designer Jeanne Damas in a recent Paris Vogue video. Even if you don’t have your own French clothing line, a quick swipe of Terracotta over the high points of your face and I promise that you will sport the glow of someone who spent the morning perusing endless flats of just-picked strawberries at the farmer’s market.

Menopausal Skin Heroes: Vichy Mineral 89 Probiotic Fractions, Biossance Squalane + Copper Peptides

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Vichy and Biossance weren’t necessarily thinking of women with dry, ‘mature’ skin when they created these two serums, but I would like to thank them both from the bottom of my desiccated little heart.

Just adding moisture to dry skin always struck me as a wasted opportunity, so thank god for serums in general for their high water content plus skincare ingredients. But thank god for these two specifically, for boosting my skin’s defences for the long-term, while keeping me from looking like a wrinkly sphynx cat in the short term.

Vichy Mineral 89 Probiotic Fractions Regenerating and Repairing Booster, $49.95, Shoppers Drug Mart, is a Six Million Dollar Man (better, stronger, faster) version of Vichy’s classic Mineral 89 hyaluronic acid and thermal-water-loaded skin booster. Vichy Mineral 89 Probiotic Fractions adds 4% niacinamide to help even out skin tone and juice up your skin’s defences to protect against moisture loss while probiotic fractions optimize the good bacteria on your skin and strengthen its barrier function. All this in the original, cooling, jellified water formulation. It’s great straight out of the shower.

Because the entire Biossance line is built around squalane (a sugarcane-derived version of squalene, a component of our skin’s sebum that sadly diminishes as we age) it’s perfect for menopausal women. Squalane is a truly lightweight oil that absorbs easily to lock in moisture and its anti-inflammatory properties help reduce redness. Biossance Squalane and Copper Peptide Rapid Plumping Serum ($88, Sephora) gives menopause-dried skin elasticity, softness and moisture while the copper peptides stimulate the growth of skin-firming collagen and elastin to plump skin and soften fine lines.

Rosy Lips and Flushed Skin For Cheap

BeautyLiza Herz4 Comments

If you are sharp-eyed or just into beauty products, you may remember Cherry Chapstick’s brief appearance in the opening scene of The Devil Wears Prada as Ann Hathaway’s Andie absentmindedly swiped it on before heading out the door. It was cinematic shorthand to show her disinterest in elaborate grooming rituals, but actually served as a pointed reminder that quickly-applied reddish lip balm is a cheap and speedy way to get some enlivening colour on the fly.

Just to drive the point home, Andie’s Cherry Chapstick is the only item in focus.

Burt’s Bees new Gloss & Glow glossy balms (Shoppers Drug Mart, $11) in ‘Eat, Drink and Be Cherry’ (transparent red, pictured above) or ‘Wine Wednesday’ (a titch deeper) are loaded with coconut oil and mango butter and give your lips just the right amount of sheer, youthful colour. And a trio of dots stippled onto your cheeks blends easily for a natural ‘no makeup makeup’ flush.

I would be amiss if I didn’t give a shout-out to Maybelline Baby Lips balm in Cherry Me ($4.96, Walmart.ca), long a favourite of my dear friend and colleague, Janine Falcon, to use on both lips and cheeks.

And Cherry Chapstick? Well, it used to leave a hint of red, but Pfizer sold the brand to GlaxoSmithKline in 2019 and they must have reformulated because, even though the balm itself is still pinky red, it sadly no longer deposits any colour. End of an era, really.

Shaving Face: Peach Fuzz Belongs on Fruit (repost)

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Gillette Venus Extra Smooth Sensitive multi-blade razor is the best dermaplaning tool.

I’m reposting this from two years ago to remind you that you do NOT need single blade ‘dermaplaning wands’ to shave peach fuzz and dead skin cells from your face. Schick just launched a pack of six such ‘wands’ for $25 and I know you have better things to spend that money on. Keep reading to find out how to dermaplane safely with a well-made, proper razor and stop buying unnecessary things.

***

Some of the things that my mother didn’t warn me about turning 50:

• Thinning lips

• Increased chance of UTIs (That one was definitely unexpected)

• Overnight, weed-like growth of facial hair

And I don’t mean chin hairs — the stealthy ones that you don’t see until they're an inch long, that you tweeze and wonder if you’re becoming a werewolf.

What’s a real nuisance is the all-over “peach fuzz” that appears at menopause when your estrogen levels fall while androgens (primarily testosterone) rise. This ‘vellus hair’ (unlike the thicker ‘terminal’ hair of whiskers, brows, lashes and the hair on your head) may appear in a “male pattern distribution” that starts as pale, downy sideburns and can soon colonize your entire face. Get enough of it and you look fuzzily Muppet-ish when the light hits it just right.

You can go to a med spa for dermaplaning, where someone in a white coat goes at your face with a sharp, single blade, removing that top layer of dead skin to stimulate cell turnover and enhance the penetration of your anti-aging skincare products. As a bonus it takes all that peach fuzz along with it.

But because I am semi-lazy while also being high maintenance, I do it myself and remove the fuzz and dead skin with a proper, multi-blade razor. I don’t trust dedicated, lady face-shaving devices or single-blade ‘wands’ that come in multi-packs. Plus, using a razor with multiple blades “allow(s) you to cut more hairs with less strokes and less irritation," California-based dermatologist Dr. Peterson Pierre recently told Good Housekeeping magazine.

I want the sharp, safe razors built by the obsessives at Procter & Gamble who spend their days worrying about blade-on-skin friction ratios, say things like “we do more welding than most car manufacturers” and get excited by the fact that “the radius of the blade’s tip is 25 nanometers.” (That’s one millimetre divided by 40,000, in case you didn’t know.) 

The Venus Extra Smooth Sensitive razor is perfect for any face-shaving newbie, and with five ‘low cutting force’ blades and a lubricant strip, designed to minimize irritation, it’s already meant for sensitive skin.

Please note that this is an off-label use, that is NOT RECOMMENDED BY THE BRAND. They would say that their Gillette blades for men are designed for faces while the women’s are meant for the straight-away real estate that is your underarms and legs. 

But unlike men who have to go under the chin and down their tender necks and all over uneven terrain (a skill that takes years to master), female vellus hair really just grows in that afore-mentioned sideburn pattern, so you will only be shaving flat areas anyways.

Which I do. I make a point of shaving the fuzzy outer portion of my face in the shower whenever I change blade cartridges. That way I'm using the sharpest blades possible, ensuring an easier and closer shave. And don't worry about the hair growing back thicker if you shave it off. Hair is dead when you cut it, so that’s a myth. It might feel spikier because you razored the ends which makes them pointier. That’s it.

And do remember that peach fuzz and dead skin cell removal will leave your skin receptive to the brightening properties of a Vitamin C serum.

So shave, and then apply some vitamin C and consider that a morning well spent.

Spring Scents for Rain or Shine

BeautyLiza Herz6 Comments

Spring does not know her own mind. Chilly and rainy? Sure. Hot and blowy? Also possible. Both extremes are epitomized, above, by Christy Turlington, all bundled up on top, but with bare legs. If Christy were shopping for a blazer in Canada, surely she would get it from Smythe, known for beautifully made toppers and impeccable tailoring, season after season.

And they now have their own eponymous fragrance created by niche perfume house Fueguia 1883 (eau de parfum, $275, shopSmythe.ca) that is genderless and deeply, deeply sexy (I try never to use that word, but it applies here.) It’s loaded with sandalwood and cedar, like a fire roaring in the fireplace at the Gramercy Park hotel (going forward, all my references will be hotel-based because I yearn to travel) and is smokily earthy with patchouli. But then it’s shot through with sharp, sunny, almost astringent bergamot. I predict it will become the scent you smell on striking women as you attempt to dissect what makes their outfits so cool.

Feuguia 1883 also created the signature fragrance for Stockholm’s luxury Ett Hem boutique hotel, that was briefly available at Toronto’s Holt Renfrew for an eye-watering $514 CAN (photo, right.) I couldn’t spend that much on something ephemeral, no matter how much I wanted the cozy, black pepper, cedar and sandalwood scent. But I did take this picture, because I knew I’d never believe a perfume could be so expensive.

No-one does discreetly elegant and achingly expensive-smelling floral perfumes like Valmont. Just spray on their newest Collezione Privata, Just Bloom (eau de parfum $380, Holt Renfrew) and I swear a Chanel tweed jacket will magically appear draped over your shoulders, and instantly you will be ready for tea at the Paris Ritz. Just Bloom, which layers optimistic white flowers (lily of the valley and gardenia) over an enigmatic ‘damp forest floor’ scent of ambergris, has that transformative power.

Aerin Cedar Violet eau de parfum ($155, esteelauder.ca) may have came out last fall, but it quite accurately bottles the sensation of being out on a rainy spring day. Cedar Violet opens all fresh and positively herbal with bright violet leaf and lily of the valley before warming into creamily soft gardenia and cedar. It’s protectively cozy like wearing a paper thin, soft merino wool T-shirt under your rain gear when the skies open up.

Shower Joy: Haircare Dupes for Expensive Fragrances

BeautyLiza Herz10 Comments

There’s nothing as deflating as heading into your morning shower, half asleep, only to be jarred awake by the smell of aggressively scented, ordinary shampoo. We need beauty in those early hours to gently coax ourselves into the ‘what fresh hell awaits us today’ world.

These three haircare products above are excellent and their fragrances are “inspired by” best-selling perfumes. Do I like them more because they smell so good? Yes I do.

Left to right: Unbreak My Blonde Leave-in Treatment from Matrix, Chatters,ca $24.50, softens and strengthens straw-like, bleached blonde hair, all the while evoking Bvlgari’s classic Eau Parfumée au Thé Vert, ($130, Holt Renfrew), the smell of the early ‘90s. Endless copied since its launch in 1992, Bvulgari’s mix of seemingly disparate notes like bergamot, coriander, orange blossom jasmine and rose on a woody and green tea base still smells new.

Bounce.Me Curl shampoo from DesignMe, $27, (centre) is note-for-note Bobbi Brown’s Beach, $105, Sephora, another classic, this one an homage to 70s sunscreens like Coppertone and Bain de Soleil. Remember that metal Bain de Soleil tube of orange ‘gelée’? Nothing was more glamorous. Bounce.Me transforms even the most egregiously fuzzy steel wool hair into soft waves and defined curls. (I always adored the Beach scent and never forgave Bobbi Brown for discontinuing their Beach-scented ‘sandbar' soaps, with their thick crowns of sand for handy exfoliation. They were probably massively injurious to skin, but I loved them.)

From the singular white flowers and sandalwood scent to its suede-finished, parchment coloured bottles, Authentic Beauty Concept’s line for damaged hair both looks and smells like Donna Karan iconic Cashmere Mist deodorant (the Bay, $39). It makes sense given that - fun fact - Cashmere Mist stick deodorant, has been the #1 best selling prestige body product in the US since 1996. ABC’s replenish line (conditioner, above) provides much needed moisture to restore winter-battered hair. And the sueded bottles are especially nice to grip with soapy hands when you are still asleep during that morning shower.

For screen-capping:

Grab These Classics at Sephora’s Spring Sale

BeautyLiza Herz10 Comments

Former Vogue Germany editor Christiane Arp epitomizes cool, minimalist elegance.

The Sephora spring sale is in full swing (until April 11th) and rather than strolling the (digital) aisles with no game plan, it’s time to restock for spring. And get that 10-20% off, depending on your Sephora standing.

Here are some personal favorites both new and old. Left to right, from top:

Laura Mercier Tinted Moisturizer Natural Skin Perfector, $59, Sephora, gently evens out skin tone, provides a hefty dose of moisture and protects skin from environmental aggressors. Reformulated three years ago with boosted hydration and skin-loving ingredients, this classic is all you need for a dewy, natural finish. And its wide colour range includes everyone.

Canada’s own Ilia is a clean beauty line with great formulas and sophisticated textures. Lightweight Balmy Tint Hydrating Lip Balm, $37, Sephora, comes in a reassuringly heavy, metal lipstick case so you don’t have to muck about with pots and the shade Wanderlust is a universally wearable and buildable cool berry for a ‘Your Lips But Better’ flush.

Dermalogica Prisma Protect, $90, Sephora, is either a lightweight moisturizer with SPF 30 or it’s a sheer spf 30 sunscreen with added hydration. Either way it’s a truly stellar formula with a great texture, so applying and reapplying it will not be a chore. Did you know that compliance is 90% of sunscreen success (I just made that number up, but compliance is essential. Sunscreen doesn’t work if it never leaves your medicine chest.) One caveat: this one is pricey, so get it on sale!

Dior 5 Couleurs Couture Eyeshadow Palette in Soft Cashmere, $75, Sephora, is a finely milled collection of the most natural intuitive, subtly variegated shades from an eye-brightening soft peach highlight to elegant taupes and two rich browns to apply as a soft liner.

Westman Atelier’s Superloaded Highlighter in Peau de Peche, $100, Sephora, is the product you never knew you needed. One sweep up and out along your cheekbones gives dimension and warmth and makes you look instantly better. Not gonna lie, the price is a shocker, and the blender brush is another $166, but there’s no dupe for that brush (believe me, I’ve looked) and it’s made by Japan’s oldest brush maker. If you buy just one thing (well, two things) from this list, make it this duo.

Oh I still shudder thinking of early 90s matte skin. Tarte Cheek Stains burst onto the scene in 1999 and became best selling antidotes to chalky and deadening powder blushes. And the revolutionary gel formula in what looked like a men’s deodorant stick made the transparent colour so easy to apply for a natural looking flush. After being cruelly discontinued they are back with antioxidants, a higher percentage of water and a wonderful sheer finish. The shade Flush is the best. Trust. $40, Sephora.

Despite certain newer, splashy rose entrants into the field, Chloé Roses de Chloé, 75 ml, $130, Sephora, is still the choice of rose scent junkies. This classic from 2013 elevates roses with litchi and lemon for a spring-into-summer blossoming rose scent that is simultaneously mood-elevating and quietly elegant.

Welcome Spring: Self-Tan Those Sticky Outy Parts

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Canadian spring’s ‘two steps forward, one step back’ rhythm means you may find yourself bundled in a parka while wearing sneakers with exposed ankles. I don’t need the world to see how pale I got over the winter (Narnia’s White Witch pale-verging-on-translucent) so I self-tan, but only the parts that show: forearms and hands and shins to feet. It’s the beauty equivalent of cleaning only the rooms that guests will see.

For this targeted tanning, I use Clarins Radiance Plus Golden Glow Booster self-tan drops, $49, that you mix into your own lotion for a made-to-measure tan of whichever intensity you choose. And it’s not finicky at all. Just add three to six drops onto a squirt of your favorite lotion sitting in the palm of your hand — then rub it into your skin for a natural-looking, buildable tan. (Carefully wash your palms and scrub your cuticles with a nail brush, so you don’t look like a weirdo chain-smoker with brownish fingertips.)

My own proprietary blend is to add the Clarins drops to Caudalie’s new Vinotherapist Hyaluronic Nourishing Body Lotion, Sephora, $42, a star in the ‘body care with skincare ingredients’ firmament. Sure, it contains super-moisturizing shea butter, but also has water-attracting hyaluronic acid to counteract that weird seersucker puckering thing your skin does after menopause. Vinotherapist quickly absorbs into skin so you can get dressed right away, unlike heavy creams that require you to sit around, naked and freezing, while waiting for them to sink in.

The crowning touch is the Vinotherapist signature scent: light, airy and uplifting. You will get a beautiful faux tan and smell expensively French.

Chic Bathroom Accessories From the Pharmacy

BeautyLiza Herz8 Comments

A minimalist bathroom tableau for tired eyes. Toothbrush, Hello Products, soap: Yardley London, marble cup: Homesense.

I will die on this hill. The most important part of a hotel room is not the firmness of the mattress, the strength of the wifi signal or the number of electrical outlets. It’s the quality of the bathroom amenities. I want weighty, hard-milled soaps from beloved or cool new brands, rich bath gels and velvety body creams. Fiddling with a strange hot water dial is difficult enough, but to be stuck using public restroom-grade soaps and thin lotions make the whole affair feel like a women’s prison episode of Charlie’s Angels.

A hard no: bright colours disturb a serene bathroom.

The black toothbrush and soap, above, give my humble bathroom some much-needed ‘fancy hotel room’ energy. The black soap hints at luxurious impracticality (will it stain my towel? No. It will not) while the black toothbrush is a minimal chic alternative to all the kiddie toy-coloured ones on offer nowadays, (right). Bathrooms should be serene, not searing your eyeballs right before bed.

Low key luxe: Stockholm’s Ett Hem hotel bathrooms are stocked with Marvis toothpaste and black Fueguia soap..

My new beloved black toothbrush didn’t come from some ‘curated’ (translation: overpriced) boutique. It’s from Hello, a line of dental care products that launched in Canada last year, bringing newness to the sleepiest aisle in the drugstore.

Hello toothpastes contain real peppermint and breath-freshening tea tree oil, their whitening toothpaste is peroxide-free and there’s even travel-friendly toothpaste tablets (right).

But it was the black toothbrush, $5.99, drug and grocery stores, with its plant-based handle and sustainable, charcoal-infused bristles that made my bathroom look a little newer and cooler. And as if that weren’t enough, Hello tubes, caps, mouthwash bottles and brushes are now easily recycled through a free mail-back program with TerraCycle.

The beautiful, hard-milled charcoal soap in the photo is courtesy of venerable soap maker Yardley London, who have expanded well beyond their classic rose and lavender bars (which are great for scenting your lingerie and sock drawers and you should definitely get some just for that purpose). Their black charcoal soap purifies skin and wakes you up with the scent of spearmint. There’s also a new hemp seed oil bar scented with herbs and rose that makes your bathroom smell like a spa.

And a final shoutout to Homesense. Remember when lockdown ended and there were long lineups outside every last Homesense store? All the online shopping in the world cannot replace walking those aisles in peace. And it was in the Homesense bathroom accessories section that I found the above marble cup for $9.99. Bless.

Let’s Keep Chanel Cuir de Russie Our Secret

BeautyLiza Herz12 Comments

Chanel Cuir de Russie, photographed against a sweater because it is the most luxurious #sweaterweatherperfume ever.

With all this (social) distance, some of us have been ‘free pouring’ our perfume to make a big olfactory statement. Forget that ‘your fragrance should only be detectable by your lover in your arms’ nonsense. We need scent that can be smelled across a room and through a mask, and perfume houses have obliged with ever-bigger smoky, leathery fragrances (Tom Ford’s new Ebène Fumé is selling out everywhere) that are as brash and aggressive as a banker bro loudly ordering ‘top shelf’ vodka shots in a noisy bar.

But the perfect bold leather-and-woods scent already exists and surprise - it’s from 1927.

Les Exclusifs de Chanel Cuir de Russie, (75 ml, edp $250 CAN) is a velvety, smoky dream created by Ernest Beaux to sate Madame Chanel’s obsession with all things Russian. In addition to birch tar (that ‘Russian leather’ note) it packs in musks, woods and smoke all encircling a very Chanel-esque rose and jasmine heart. (Ernest Beaux, after all, created Chanel No 5 six years earlier.)

If you’re going to spring for one Verdura Maltese cross, you might as well get two. (This pair actually belonged to Mme. Chanel herself.)

It’s arguably a men’s fragrance for women, although what does ‘unisex’ even mean anymore? Cuir de Russie would be equally at home on a gentleman in a Charvet shirt or a woman who pushes up the sleeves of her Chanel jacket to show off twin Verdura Maltese cross bracelets. But you can just wear it with your athleisure and marvel as it makes you unconsciously put your shoulders back and stand straighter than any Pilates class ever could.

And unlike formerly niche scents (remember when Le Labo Santal 33 went from cool to over-exposed?) you still don’t smell Cuir de Russie everywhere. It has maintained its ‘deep cut’ status. So if you buy it and someone asks what you’re wearing, just fib, ok?