Wednesday, May 8, 2013

Celebrity hair and makeup: 7 Beauty Panel members show you how to master their favourite red carpet looks


Who better to offer some insight than the Beauty Panel! Our team of expert beauty bloggers were eager to share their celebrity beauty inspiration and offer up easy-to-follow tips on how to duplicate popular red carpet looks. From Kristen Stewart’s signature smoky eye (and sassy smile!) to Jennifer Lawrence’s Oscar-winning red carpet look, there’s plenty of A-list hair and makeup influence.

For Gerry Xun from The Bunnie Hole, Hillary Duff’s bronzed smoky eye is one of her favourite looks to duplicate. Black eyeliner helps make this look stand out and adds some bold definition to the eye. Dani Fuentes from Call It Beauty loves how Leighton Meester isn’t afraid to experiment with her makeup on the red carpet. She gives step-by-step directions for duplicating one of Meester’s more colourful looks, which includes hits of purple and gold, finished off with a bright red lip. And for Secrets From Your Girlfriends’s JJ Cowan, the most covetable aspect of a celebrity’s style is sometimes a feature you least expect. She explains how Camilla Belle’s bushy eyebrows prompted her mission to define and fill-in her own set. But that’s not all! Read on for even more celebrity hair and makeup inspiration.

The fashion industry consists of four levels: the production of raw materials, principally fibers and textiles but also leather and fur; the production of fashion goods by designers, manufacturers, contractors, and others; retail sales; and various forms of advertising and promotion. These levels consist of many separate but interdependent sectors, all of which are devoted to the goal of satisfying consumer demand for apparel under conditions that enable participants in the industry to operate at a profit.

Industrial Design may also have a focus on technical concepts, products and processes. In addition to considering aesthetics, usability, and ergonomics, it can also encompass the engineering of objects, usefulness as well as usability, market placement, and other concerns such as seduction, psychology, desire, and the emotional attachment of the user to the object. These values and accompanying aspects on which Industrial Design is based can vary, both between different schools of thought and among practicing designers.

For women the flapper styles of the 1920s marked the most major alteration in styles for several centuries, with a drastic shortening of skirt lengths and much looser-fitting clothes; with occasional revivals of long skirts, variations of the shorter length have remained dominant ever since. Flappers also wore cloches, which were snug fitting and covered the forehead. Her shoes had a heel and some sort of buckle. The most important part was the jewelry, such as: earrings and necklaces that had diamonds or gems. The flapper gave a particular image as being seductive due to her short length dress, which was form fitting, and the large amounts of rich jewelery around her neck.

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