Get paid To Promote at any Location

Blog $ 100 Miliyar

Showing posts with label Teen Vogue. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Teen Vogue. Show all posts

Sunday, 7 November 2010

Lauren Conrad

The hot hair iron episodes of Lauren Conrad



There have been some really funny episodes of ‘The Hills’ that involve flat irons of Lauren Conrad.



The Hills-Fashion and Hairstyles: Lauren Conrad


In the first season, when Lauren Conrad arrives in her apartment, she receives a call for an Interview at the Teen Vogue and she uses a flat iron for removing wrinkles from a skirt. She points out that if she can use the flat iron to make her hair straight, then why she can’t use it on her skirt.



The Hills-Fashion and Hairstyles: Lauren Conrad Fashion


In the third season also, she ruined a designer gown she was given for a party in Paris with her curling iron. Her hair curling iron made contact with the dress, burned it and stained it.



The Hills-Fashion and Hairstyles: Lauren Conrad looking Good


There have been rumors that Lauren was forced to pay for the expensive gown which she had ruined. Apart from that, she also had to beg for a new gown so that she could go to the ball.



The Hills-Fashion and Hairstyle: Lauren Conrad with Her Book


Although these episodes seem to be funny and exhilarating, they show how Lauren Conrad is used to her hot hair curling irons. After all, apart from the straight hair and ponytails, she has also been seen with some curls and bangs in her hair which must have been achieved with her curling irons only.

Friday, 12 March 2010

30 Days to 10 years younger--10 minute tips. Tip 11: Make new friends


I remember my first trip to the magazine rack as a newlywed. After years as a single woman and months of planning a wedding, all of a sudden it felt like there was nothing for me to read. Magazines seemed to be aimed at three kinds of readers: Cosmo girls, aspiring socialites, or parents of young children. It was either sex tips, fall runway fashion, or "can this marriage be saved?"

Where were the magazines with style tips for impoverished graduate students?

That's when I discovered Sassy. Which I was way too old to read. I mean, I was insanely outside of their demographic. But I read it anyway, because it had great take away information.

And this is what I advise you to do, too. Find sources of information that are outside of your comfort zone.

I look for inspiration everywhere, and you should, too. Look for sources of style that are aimed at women who are older, younger, artier, or more bourgeois than you are. And find your sources in old and new media, please. I mean, of course I'm BFFs with the internet, but think about it:

  • newspapers alert you to sales and get you up to date on local sources for stylish goods in :gasp: brick and mortar stores.
  • magazines have big beautiful pages--and you don't have to wait for them to load.
  • books pack a ton of information into a relatively small amount of space, and the best ones provide invaluable information (I'll be doing book reviews on this blog, as soon as this series is over.)

All of them tend to be more thought out, more reasoned, more deftly written, and less hey-look-something-shiny than web sites and blogs. Even this one.

So that's why I subscribe to a bunch of magazines--including Teen Vogue, which seems to be the closest I can get to my beloved Sassy. I also pick up foreign editions of Vogue. It doesn't matter that I can't buy the stuff they show. My goal is to wake up my eyes, and reading a magazine out of my demographic and comfort zone is a great way to do it.