Thursday, May 29, 2008

HK shopping list for the lawyer

The lawyer is going to Hong Kong on Monday! While I have no real wish to visit that place again, it is still a cause for envy that she will be having a holiday while I continue being irritated by fools at work (not my colleagues, it's clients that are annoying me). Plus, HK is the nearest fix for H&M...

Urgh.

So anyway, ms lawyer, here's my shopping list, with pictures as per request.

Firstly, a bunch of Tweezerman products which, according to the website, can be found in these places in Hong Kong:

The Jasmine Room (Check out this article, the place actually looks rather pretty.)
15th Floor, The Loop
33 WELLINGTON STREET
CENTRAL, HONG KONG
(659) 843-8678

Zenith Cosmetics Trading Co. Ltd
RM 201-203 WESTIN CENTRE
KOWLOON, HONG KONG

I'm not sure if Tweezerman will be available in beauty stores such as Sasa and the like, but I'm guessing not as I couldn't find it when I was there.

I'm also guessing that there will be mark-up. I will think about my limit and let you know when we meet on Saturday.

#1
Tweezerman Folding Ilashcomb (USD 7 which is approx HKD 55 and SGD 9.50)

#2
Tweezerman Corner Lash Curler (USD 10, approx HKD 78 and SGD 14)
#3
Tweezerman Slant® Tweezer in midnight sky or neon pink (USD 20, approx HKD 157 and SGD 27.50)


#4
Also, I would like the RMK eyelash curler which looks pretty much like any other silver metal curler at a glance.

RMK counters can be found at Sogo Causeway Bay, Lane Crawford Kowloon and Kowloon Hotel Seibu.

According to a Hong Kong website, it should cost HKD 70 which is approx SGD 12.50.

#5
Lula Magazine. When I saw it in Taiwan, I think it was SGD 20+. But it's being peddled on ebay for something like GBP 20 - 30 so I'm no longer certain I actually saw the right price. If you could sms me the price when you see this, would be great.
There is an agent in Hong Kong according to the website:
Foreign Press Publishing Services Ltd
Ground Floor, 328 Kwun Tong Road
Rommely Chan – Managing Director
HONG KONG, CHINA rommely@foreignpress.com.hk
Tel: 00 852 2566 4183 / 756 8193

Below are the likely locations if it can't be found in the typical bookstores (not that I actually saw any bookstore while I was there).

Page One, 2/F, Century Square 1-13 D'Aguilar Street, Central Tel: 2536 0111
Page One, Festival Walk, Kowloon Tong Tel: 2778 2808
Page One, Harbour City, Tsimshatsui Tel: 2271 5200
Page One, Times Square, Causeway Bay Tel: 2506 0382

Basheer Design Books
, 1/F, Flat A, Island Building, 439-441 Hennessy Road, Causeway Bay

#6
Lastly, Maybelline Great Lash Mascara in Very Black

I'm not sure why Singapore doesn't stock it and I don't know if HK has it but if you do see it in Watsons or the like, please grab one for me. This shouldn't be expensive.

#7
I just need to check prices of the new Chanel Hydramax + Active products at duty-free. I'm still devastated by the knowledge that the old Hydramax has been discontinued. No more gel-creme. What am I to do?

And that would be all I can think of now. Thanks!

Wednesday, May 28, 2008

Looking forward to...

Tizzy Bac and Sodagreen are hitting town!

Tizzy Bac is doing a cosy session at Esplanade Recital Studio, which is great because you'll get to enjoy the music up close.

And and and. Sodagreen will be holding a full-fledged concert!

Can't wait.

Signing off in anticipation,

Sideshow Bob, Tizzy Bac




蘇打綠 - 這天


$100 for a mascara?

One day in the office, colleague was using this mascara her friend gave her. She was told it's from Korea and it costs one hundred freaking bucks. Now. What can make a mascara be worth so much?

I spent some time peering at all the Chinese characters on the box and checked out the website address printed there as well and figured that it's actually from China.

There are two tubes in the box. One says natural fibres and if you observe the wand, it looks furry - another colleague said it looks like someone rubbed the wand over a carpet. That's how fine and tiny the fibres are. In that aspect I can imagine that it will do a good job lengthening lashes without putting so much weight on it that it collapses.

The second tube says transplanting gel and it looks just like normal black mascara. The colleague tried it and while the extension effect was most excellent, it didn't look smooth. Individual lashes had that cakey, clumpy effect that makes them look like spider legs. I'm not sure whether it's due to application since I didn't try it myself.

According to the website, the natural fibres have a positive charge which make them adhere to the negatively-charged lashes closely. This is then secured by a bonding ingredient that also has lengthening properties.

The product claims to extend lashes by 300 percent and while I think it may be pretty close to fulfilling that promise, I'm not sure the overall effect is worth $100 when a good mascara can be as cheap as $11.

Still, the colleague said that while her friend got the one she was using for free, she had friends who enthusiastically bought it. It's amazing how much money women will spend on beautifying themselves. Ourselves.

Tuesday, May 27, 2008

MIA

Have been sick since Fri and spent the weekend basically lying in bed sniffing, sleeping and watching random variety programmes. Started the week in a foul mood (sickness and stress makes a grumpy woman) and have not had the urge to write till now - back again to bombard this space.

Since yesterday, I have been having delusions. I keep thinking to myself it's Friday only to realise the harsh truth two seconds later. It's really pathetic considering it was Monday yesterday.

Anyhow, here are some random buys I've been indulging in for entertainment.



(I don't know why my images got rotated in the uploading process...)

#1
Finally found a belt the exact width I was looking for. The colour was never my intention but I could imagine it working and it was discounted at $49 (courtesy of Great Singapore Sale) so I bought it anyway. You cannot imagine how hard it has been searching for the right belt - right width, leather, silver hardware, does not look cheap - for less than 50 bucks. How is it reasonable to have to pay $89 or $93 or $129 or even more for a belt? Okay. Maybe it is. Just not to me.

#2
Also bought a patent purple belt from Topman for something like $13. Most happy. Am thinking of getting it in another colour and wearing them all linked together.

#3
Kose Cosmeport Clear Turn sheet mask from Sasa at $16.90/5 sheets. This covers the neck and back of ears as well, how amazing is that? I just had to get it.

#4
Frivolous socks to wear over tights and under extra-long leggings. Polka-dotted and striped from favourite cheapish Jap anything-and-everything store Daiso, super soft woven ones from MUJI.

#5
Brought colleagues to People's Park, Chinatown to buy tights from my favourite store. It's on the second level and they sell a very good quality 80 denier tights in many colours for just $8.90. I'd say Topshop tights quality is still superior but these ones are at least 80 percent as good. Seeing I already have the beginner's sombre palette of colours, I indulged in a bright blue and toned down pink while the rest grabbed the purples and greys.

This shop is so aware of the trends for tights you'd be wondering what magazines they are reading. Right now, they are stocking opaque whites. They were the place I went to for sheer brights when Jonathan Aston was still unattainable. Actually, I still find it unattainable even though you can now find it at Tangs, because there's no way I'm going to pay so much for 15 deniers.

#6
OG was having a 30 percent discount on Neutrogena products. I gasped embarrassingly loudly when I saw the tag and quickly grabbed a box of the whitening sheet masks made using the new smart fit fabric. We're talking $10 off here, which is a lot if you mask on a daily basis. Now I'll be able to know whether it's just the Hydration masks or the smart fit fabric I do not like.

Monday, May 19, 2008

"There's no sun! Why do you still need to use an umbrella?"

I get that question a lot. My reply is always a calm, "What I'm afraid of are UV rays," or "UV rays are ever present."

Just two to three years ago, I was one of those people who know that I should be wearing sunscreen daily but just am too lazy and too cheap to. This was even when I was a beauty writer - when it came to sun protection, I wasn't exactly tanning but I wasn't practising what I preached either.

One roundabout later. I now wear sunscreen daily and I carry an UV-protective umbrella everywhere I go. I open it almost everytime I step into the open, even if it's just to cross a small road. The only exceptions are when the sky is heavily overcast and even then, I know I should, because UV rays penetrate clouds. But I am a lazy person and there are times when laziness wins over common sense. However, I do still use sunscreen, rain or shine, so I guess there's redemption there.

My biggest loophole is body sunscreen. I skip it when I am running late, which is too often. This is something I need to work on. When it comes to sunblock for the face, however, the thought of not applying it gives me the shudders now. I can literally envision the UV rays cutting into my skin and destroying it.

Yes, the word is destroy.

Actually, lots of people don't take me seriously. They think it's funny I don't like to go into the sun, that I have my frilly, polka-dotted umbrella with me all the time, that I use it even when it looks like it's going to rain. It is not a given, I'll admit, but it is very likely that if you're that smart-ass woman walking past me and then looking up into the sky asking mock-quizzically, "Is it raining?" you're also the one whose skin is going to collapse first, if it hasn't already.

The first signs of sun damage, or ageing, is considerably mild. Skin loses that bit of tone and looks that little bit more dehydrated, pores look that wee bit bigger and just the finest of lines. You can go for a while thinking your skin is doing very well and then suddenly, it hits you like a train wreck and your life in front of the mirror will never be the same again.

Okay, maybe I sound a little menacing but this is nothing but the truth. I'm not touting skincare or sunscreen so I have nothing to lose or win. The truth is, I don't really like to force people to adhere to my sometimes strange ways and while I sometimes give shit to my friends about what they should or should not do (baby girl gets the most shit from me, I think), at the end of the day, I won't say it again if you don't feel compelled to help yourself. I'll explain what I can if you ask, but it's really up to the individual.

In the May issue of Allure, there is a feature on the sun, skin and skin cancer. When I saw the images below, I think my brain froze for a moment. I don't know about you but the thought of something as innocent as stepping into the sun causing such turmoil under the skin scares the shit out of me.

According to the sidebar where these images appeared, sunburn and wrinkles are the obvious effects of UV exposure but there are also insidious and invisible damages such as DNA damage.

Structural changes occur in many skin cells' DNA in less than one second of contact with UV light. The cells are able to fix most of these defective segments but some become permanent mutations... In a study, properly applied broad-spectrum SPF 15 sunscreen reduced this damage to undetectable levels in 99 percent of UV-exposed cells.

And do note that sunburn is actually an inflammatory response caused when skin is over-exposed. It means the damage has set off a wound-healing response. People who tan think of it as a prelude to bronzed skin, but there's really nothing goddess-like or romantic when you think about "sun-kissed" skin - you're just a giant walking wound.

Of course, not everybody has the same priorities I do, there are people who like their time in the sun. Personally I don't but there's nothing wrong with enjoying your sporting activities or simply, walking in the sun, if you take adequate care with sun protection.

Sun-tanning or tanning salons, however, are another form of stupidity altogether.

I started this hiding from the sun because I wanted to try to be milky white. That is an uphill battle I've more or less given up on, because it requires more resources than I'm prepared to give. Now, it's still a vanity project, but it's about ageing as best as I can.

My skin suffers because of my laziness. I've seen what it can look like when I spend more time nourishing it but I've never been able to force myself to go back to my fanatical ways. So I suppose my fight against UV-penetration is my way of slowing down the ravages of time.

I'm still refining my sun protection techniques but one thing is for sure, we use less sunblock than we ought to. The correct amount to use is never quantified noticeably, if at all, on packaging but SPF is actually based on a uniform application thickness of 2 mg/cm2 and yet most people never use more than 60% of what is correct. When you don't use enough product, you are slashing your SPF by much more than half.

#1
What the hell is 2 mg/cm2 though? I read an article in W years ago and if I remember correctly, it explained that it's an amount that will leave your face pasty white.

#2
Which is why then it becomes pertinent to find a lightweight, non-oily formula. I've been using Boots No. 7 Whitening sunscreen for a while now. The black blob indicates the size of a dollop I use on one side of my face. So on a daily basis, I use three blobs - face, face, neck. And I'm beginning to wonder if it's enough. Which is why on some mornings now, I do one face-face-neck rotation and then go back to the first section again to apply just a little more.

The good thing about this No. 7 product is that it absorbs really quickly and doesn't feel greasy, which is why I can afford to use so much at a go. But I'm considering a change, because I suspect the whitening actives in it are too strong for me if I'm using it so liberally.

#3
If your sunscreen is of a consistency that is more difficult to absorb, I learned a new method the other day, though I've yet to try it. Slather on a layer over your face and just leave it. Go ahead and do other stuff and then come back to it after 5 - 10 minutes to massage it all in. By then, some of the product would have been absorbed and it would be easier to work it all in.

#4
Don't neglect your neck, back of neck, ears and back of ears. I'm guilty of those myself so here's a reminder to myself as well. Also, back of hands, in between fingers, ankles and feet including toes.

#5
Sunscreen needs to be applied half an hour before you step out. Otherwise, for the first 30 minutes outside, you're unprotected.

#6
The correct amount of sunscreen for the body? I usually only do arms as the rest of me would be covered. You need to squeeze out a line as thick as this black stroke along about two-thirds of the exposed arm length and then work it all in.

#7
SPF 15 is the minimum. But that's if you use enough of it. Moisturisers, foundations or makeup bases that contain SPF should be add-ons to your sunscreen, not your sole source of protection. Because the amounts used of such products are dictated by other needs. Especially in the case of foundations and bases - nobody in the right mind is going to slater on enough foundation to offer full SPF 15 protection.

#8
Physical protection. Clothing and umbrellas, especially of the UV-protective variety, are your best bets. This is beyond what many people are willing to do, so it's subjective, really.

If you care though, colour and material also play a part. Dark coloured and tightly structured fabrics protect against UV best. This means black, navy, dark green, red, etc and closely woven materials. I know you're thinking it's rubbish because black is more heat-absorbent. I still don't quite understand but I'm sure there's a very good physics explanation for it. And I've googled enough to decide it's true. Dark colours are more protective against UV, as seen here and here.

Which means, if you're combating our recent heat wave in billowy, white, light cotton tops, you might want to slather on the sunblock.

#9
Your chest. If you dress with low necklines, you need to slap on sunscreen there too. Imagine damaged collagen and skin structure collapse there - we're talking saggy boobs now.

#10
Sunscreen might not just be a day or outdoor thing. Even lamps emit UV. Fluorescent and tungsten-halogen incandescent lamps, for instance.

#11
It's unhealthy to avoid the sun completely. Of course. But since Singapore is positioned so conveniently in the equatorial belt, Vitamin D-deficiency is hardly a problem. No matter how much you hide, you'll get enough sun from inevitable exposure. Waiting for the train on the platfom, standing by the window on the bus, walking out for lunch, etc. You don't need to feel the heat on your back to know you're getting sun, there's plenty of reflection off the ground and incidental exposure all over the place. Unless you are indoors 24-7, you do not need more sun.

#12
Lastly, sunscreen needs to be removed with something specialised, not just facial cleanser. I was resistant to this for a long time. It bothers me because I don't really wear makeup and yet, I need to use makeup remover to take off something I can't even see. Now, it's just routine. Call it paranoia but my skin feels different when I don't do this step now - like there's an additional slick.

I recently sat through a product training to familiarise myself with a client's products and one of the things we were told about was cosmetic acne - a field of tiny bumps that look a little like giant whiteheads. Happens to people who should have used makeup remover but didn't, and appears after six to nine months of abuse. Imagine, the powder you put on a year ago will still be on your face, just, under the skin instead of on it.

Honestly, I'm not happy at all with the condition of my skin lately. I've been really lazy with my exfoliation and skincare regime and it shows. It's definitely time to start caring again, beginning with a redefined suncare routine.

Fasio Hyper Stay Mascara Curl Volume

It's slow, considering how Fasio mascaras are already known to be fab to a lot of beauty junkies and beauty insiders but still, after I tried the lengthening formula, I now tried the volumising one. And I'm happy to say I like it just as much, if not more.

The only boo-boo is that I bought the wrong colour - blue black instead of black. Still, the formula is intensive enough such that it still looks inky dark. I might get another tube of the black (now only $11+ thanks to 20% discounts), we'll see how it goes.

The brush is double-sided. On the inside of the curve is shorter bristles and on the outside, fanned out spokes. You're supposed to coat lashes with the inside first, then use the outside to comb it out.

Even though this is a volumising formula, the lengthening effect is almost as good as the Curl Long version. And because it's thickening, the effect is better - repeated coats of Curl Long can start to look spidery and scary because it's just long and skinny and hard. But with Curl Volume, it has a sooty, doll-like effect.

Personally, I don't like doing the swizzle, Z-shape application. Many girls swear by it but it's something that works with only some formulas. With thickening formulas, I find that it causes clumping. It's much better to make sure your brush is clean of clumps and then to swipe on in straight upward-and-outward strokes.

The only downside is that it's heavier than the lengthening formula, so my curled lashes started its way downwards. However, the mascara hardens so quickly that it was fixed in shape before it fully collapsed.

Conclusion? I'd say to use Curl Volume when you're looking for a sooty, very lush and slightly hooded effect, and Curl Long for the wide-eyed, slightly more natural look.

Tomorrow I'll try using Volume over Long. Let's see how far we can go in the pursuit of lashes that look like falsies without having to spend that kind of money.

Lagerfeld Confidential



I like reading profiles of these slightly eccentric and one-of-a-kind creative characters but watching documentaries about them, I've always been a bit lazy. Still, this was available and since it is Karl Lagerfeld - one of the top eccentric fashion types I find interesting - I decided to go with it.

1.5 hours down from the initial cut which was four hours and which, in turn was edited from more than 300 hours of footage the director Rodolphe Marconi trailed Lagerfeld for two years to obtain. Apparently, the finalised version we see is the same one shown to Lagerfeld. Nothing was changed and there was no censorship in the course of the director's work. Naturally, I'll still take that with a pinch of salt since you can probably expect any director who pursued this opportunity and who actually got it, to proceed with some deference.

Still, I like knowing the conditions behind the making of a documentary, it aids the evaluation and enjoyment of information.

I don't find it a particularly good film but it is still a rather interesting expose of the man who revived Chanel. Without him, would anyone even give a hoot about the 2.55?

I liked seeing the clutter in his living quarters and office. Stacks and stacks of books and magazines strewn all over, numerable iPods scattered over, his Chrome Hearts and etc collection, rails of clothing waiting for their turn.



Watching him do a sketch was also a treat - the way he'd sign off with a flourish after drawing a frame around the paper.



Couple of things he talked about remain with me.

How he loves his job but emphasizes that fashion is not what he thinks about all the time. He spends just as much time on his photography and his reading.

He travels with a small, old pillow he'd put over his stomach when he flies. Slipped my mind but I believe he said his mother gave it to him. The picture on the pillow has faded and it's so old he puts it in a black pouch but he holds it over stomach in order to sleep well.

On the whole, Karl Lagerfeld came across most affable, humorous and likable on screen. It wasn't at all flamboyant, and if it was an act, he has spent his life cultivating and living it. But still, I found that while it was interesting, it wasn't very satisfying and left me wanting more.
#1
Spiked bubble tea, anyone?

#2
8,000 press articles written about a campaign sounds like a publicist's wildest dream come true. And that's not including blogs, streamed videos, forums and casual conversations. This thing about viral marketing, it's interesting. How to dream up gigs like this?

#3
And how's this for wtf? A website touting perfume churned out based on your DNA. You're supposed to take a cheek swab, then send your DNA sample flying through the mail, then sit back and wait for your personalised scent to arrive.

At the very least, you'd think the site could be less tacky.

The Host, Stephenie Meyer



Just spent the last 6 - 7 hours reading this.

Better than expected and quite a page-turner. Totally fulfills the requirement of being a riveting, plot-heavy and un-burdensome read.

Meyer has quite a penchant for self-sacrificing female protagonists. I'm not sure what that says about her but it makes it really annoying to read sometimes - you either roll your eyes or want to slap the girl. But at least this Wanda character is not half as irritating as Bella.

Which brings me to the discovery that the Twilight Trilogy has become the Twilight Saga with a fourth book, Breaking Dawn, coming up in August that's supposed to be the final.

Let's just hope that once Bella becomes a vampire, she would be less of a self-righteous, thoughtlessly self-sacrificing twerp.

Sunday, May 18, 2008

Things to do in this %$!@#&!!! HEAT

1. Yearn for overcast skies and whipping winds.



2. Wish for loud, heavy rain.


3. Look for ice-cream everywhere you go. Venezia dark choclate gelato is blissful but so are the traditional ice-creams from the sidewalk uncles. Raspberry ripple blocks between thin wafer crisps, tiny round scoops of attap seed, sweetcorn and chocolate flavoured ice-cream in a plastic cup. Sucking on potong ice-cream in an air-con room is also most excellent.



4. Ice-cold drinks. H-Two-O and peppermint flavoured bubble tea for double the chill are particular favourites currently.

5. Hide in malls. There are people who cannot get used to the temperatures in our air-conditioned retail malls. I say bring it on to sub-zero. If you're cold you can always throw on a something or the other. But if you're hot, you're fucking hot. Malls which believe in giving you a comfortable shopping experience - Ngee Ann City and Wisma Atria are alway trusty. If all else fails, go to Cold Storage and roam the frozen food and dairy aisles, pick out a cold juice while you're at it.

6. Hide in movie theatres. Lido is most obliging, Cine is comfortable. Bring in a slushy ice-blended drink for additional temperature dips.

7. Hide in your room with windows shut (to prevent hot air from sauntering in and invading your sanctuary) and fan blasting or with air-con on. Here, you can:
  • Watch movies and variety programmes. In this heat, light-hearted is key. Overly emotional films that lead to crying will cause the pressure in your head and chest to mount and coupled with the unforgiving heat, migraines will occur.
  • Snuggle under the duvet with a book - we're talking air-con on here. Again, easy reads will work better. Nothing that requires too much thinking or appreciation of language. Plot is slightly more crucial than language for now. Think Stephenie Meyer with the Twilight Trilogy.
  • Magazines work equally well. Frankie is quite a good cool-down read.
  • Alternatively, use the heat to get into the mood. Love in the time of Cholera, Water for Elephants... Books that make you feel sweaty and grimy. But this is just a suggestion. I would never subject myself to such an ordeal.
8. Cold showers. Panadol Extra and a shampoo with cold water will alleviate migraines instantly. Wash away all the sweat and grime and immediately leap into a spot and keep the fan on you. This will maintain the lowered body temperature.

9. Of course, this air-con abuse is very bad for the environment. But I don't see how having a constant migraine or smelling bad due to excessive perspiration from heat can help anything or anyone. Still, some small tactics to save energy:
  • Go out and hole up in the library, catch a movie, shop. Use what is already being used.
  • When you wake up and off the air-con, keep the windows and door shut and on the fan. This will circulate the cold air and keep the room relatively cool for a long while.
  • Use thick glass for your windows, or use impenetrable curtains or blinds. The heat and light coming in will just up the temperature which means more energy is wasted combating it.
  • Drink iced anything to keep body temperature down.
  • Avoid hot soup.
When will this stupid heat and humidity go away?

“This shade is mine. Go get your own.”


Was intrigued by this Revlon foundation I saw advertised in Allure. The tagline is Jessica Alba telling you to get your own shade. (Also, Jessica's shade is Medium and she turns to click 2.)

This is tremendously interesting because pro makeup artists sometimes advocate owning two shades of foundation so you can adjust to your lighter and darker moments. But who really wants to sit around and blend skin colours? It's a lot of approximation and it'll be difficult to get it exactly the same each time.

According to Revlon site:

Innovative bottle offers five shade settings, making it easy to fine-tune your foundation shade for the perfect match. Simply turn the dial to adjust shade from lighter to darker. Lightweight formula blends seamlessly into skin for a naturally flawless look. Available in a range of skin tones from light to deep. SPF 15.

If it's really lightweight and blends seamlessly, I want to try it.

While googling, I also found this fascinating site - Packaging Digest. They have an in-depth article on the science of the packaging and it's both comforting and interesting to read about the precision behind this bottle.

Wednesday, May 14, 2008

#1
I should sleep, because I'm pretty tired.

#2
I'm reluctant to sleep, precisely because I'm so tired from work. If I sleep, the next thing I know would be me getting up for work again.

#3
So I shall just while away time for a bit.

#4
The heat is killing me. It keeps me in a constant bad mood and always craving for sweet or sweet, carbonated ice-cold drinks. And ice-cream. I fucking hate this hot, humid, scorching, sunny weather.

#5
Watched Gossip Girl Ep 17. Seriously do not like Dan's hair. Shall not comment on the rest as I do not want to be spoiler-girl. Just, Georgina is so horrid. And Dan is pathetic. Oh and Nate suddenly has a personality? Lastly, black dress Lily wore at mock wedding dinner is marvellous.

#6
I need a holiday.

#7
I need money to fall from the sky so I can stop working.

Sunday, May 11, 2008

Bara no nai Hanaya

Finished the drama today and I conclude it's really good, surpassing my expectations. The direction can be a bit melodramatic at some points, but in the beginning of the first episode, the six-minute or so montage of scenes depicting Shizuku growing up to the age she is in the show is the best execution of a time-summary I've ever watched.

Topshop has gone and done it again




Balenciaga Spring 2008 RTW, style.com

The high street mainstay has been overrun with florals for a while now, not to mention what seems like 10,000 different Luella-"inspired" tiered ruffled minis. Now they've done their versions of the most distinctive Spring 08 RTW collection.

Of course, the beauty of the Balenciaga collection lies in the juxtaposition of the florals with clothing architecture, and this architecture can't be replicated by mass production - not a level where it's profitable anyway.

Still, I'm curious to see the actual pieces in Topshop. They've been trying their hand at sculptural pieces - there was a black cropped jacket with an awkwardly curved sleeve a while back - so I'd like to see how far along they are now.

Not even almost

Let's just say that there was a wee bit of a chance that I could have worked on a project that would involve Mark Eley of Eley Kishimoto, and that it was dashed even before the pieces were laid out on the chess board.




Fall RTW,
style.com

Mark Eley was one of the designers I had the fortune to meet and interview back when I was in publishing. Again, I no longer remember the details, only that I was fascinated by the design duo (him and his wife Wakako Kishimoto who didn't come), their creative process and their trademark prints.

Essentially, I like what they do and I'd have been very happy to work on something involving them. Unfortunately, it's not mean to be.

At the end of the day, it's business

Apart from well-written profiles of designers and editors, the fashion-related articles I find most interesting are those to do with money. How the brand makes money. What the brand is doing right to make even more money, or wrong to lose money like that. The money-spinner in the company. The brain propelling the money spinner to greater heights and hence, earning even more money for the company. Brand-building and the value of such strategies in dollars and cents.

Absolutely delicious to know that the richest people in fashion are the ones who own Zara, H&M, Chanel, Gap and LVMH, according to Forbes here.

Or how about how chief executive Valerie Hermann has done marvellous things for Yves Saint Laurent's books since her appointment three years ago, as reported by Financial Times? Coupled with the work of creative genius Stefano Pilati, YSL is starting to see light after 10 years of losses - the number has halved from 70 million euros to 31 million euros ever since she came on board.

That's a lot of money made from selling bags. But it's hardly as simple as that. There are tonnes of brands trying to cash in on the bag-owning syndrome, but it doesn't always work. YSL has the lethal combination of brand heritage and defining design which results in a sentiment - I want.

The unfortunate thing is that so many people want, and have, that it becomes a bit of a turn-off, which is why I had to remove it from my list of considered brands in the planned acquisition of my first real bag. But I really did love the Downtown when I first saw it. Maybe I'll change my mind, I don't know. Plans have been shelved until I see something I truly love anyway, so we shall see.

In any case, The Business of Fashion is great for industry trends, news and commentary.

Fasio Hyper Stay Mascara Curl Long

Suddenly, my mascara routine has been shaved down to five minutes from 20.

Allow me to explain why anyone needs 20 minutes to slick on product on such a tiny bunch of little hairs.

My lashes tend to collapse from its time with the curler when they are too heavy. This is particularly so with the left eye because it's a single eyelid there. Double lids on the right make that side easier to work with. Also, I have oily lids, which means I get mascara migration and end up with smudged undereyes and flaky bits on my cheeks after some hours.

So no heavy fibres or thickening formulas, not as a first coat anyway. And always water and sebum-resistant.

I've experimented with lots of brands - L'Oreal, Maybelline, ZA, Helena Rubinstein, Lancome, Chanel, Clarins, Kose, Shiseido and MAC all left me with something good and bad to say but generally my trials have led me to the following regime.

Ipsa Optimum Balance as a first coat - it has the finest, tiniest fibres I've ever encountered and maintains a curl like you're born with it. After which I use Deja Vu Fiberwig at the ends to lengthen and finish with Kose Mascara Fantasist to thicken and blacken. Finally I finish with Clarins Fix Mascara, which is clear and acts as excellent resistance against oil and water.

Yesterday, I finally ripped open the Fasio mascara I bought a while back. I've been keeping it sealed because I have 60 - 70 mascaras and opening one more just made me feel a little bad. I bought it after watching Queen (Taiwanese variety programme) when makeup artist/stylist Kevin said it has very light fibres.

It's damn good. All I needed was one coat and suddenly, my lashes were longer and sooty black. The curl stayed put and before I knew it, I was done. I added on two or three more coats for good measure and it's almost like falsies. Throughout my time out from 5pm to 3am, there was absolutely no smudging and the curl never once drooped. Take into account that I did rather a bit of walking and it was horribly humid yester-evening, I was impressed.

Just a couple of issues with it. It tends to look a little clumpy here and there which results in a rather scary looking stiff lash but it might be due to my application - it takes time to get used to a product and deduce the best way to apply it. It might be due to how it hardens so quickly and resolutely, I'm not quite sure yet.

Also, I wish it could thicken, then my mascara routine would truly be down to just one product. But one cannot ask for too much so I think I'll just go get the volumising formula. At around $14, it's hardly expensive.

A grouse that I've heard is that it's difficult to remove and requires the Fasio brand of makeup remover. Well I went at it with my normal Clarins eye makeup remover and it came off fine, although it did take longer than with my usual mascaras. I'll try it with the Fasio one as well to see if it makes it easier but honestly, given its benefits, I think it's worth spending a bit more time on the cleansing. And even if you do have to buy the Fasio remover, it's not going to hurt the wallet.

On the whole, damn good buy!

(I still feel like replenishing my Ipsa Optimum Balance mascara though. But at $49, it's a little... extravagant. Shall just sit on the urge for the moment.)

Happy 2009!

Hopefully, I'll be shouting that with the following sight right in front of me.



Decided that I want to cross over to the new year in Taipei. This conclusion came about after funny girl and I started mulling over where to and when to fly this year. The urge to return to Taiwan is simply too strong. With any luck - it all depends on work - we'll be able to pull it off.

Another scene I wish to see is this.



Hopefully, I can also make it to Japan in March/April 09.

One of the conversation practices in my Jap textbook was all about arranging a picnic under the cherry blossom trees, and there was an illustration that looked like the picture below. I knew sakura season is a really huge deal but I didn't realise that picnicking under the trees is such a national activity. It's gonna be really fun experiencing something like that.


Wednesday, May 07, 2008

Succinct

What: Metropolitan Museum of Art’s annual Party of the Year

Theme: Superheroes: Fashion and Fantasy

Anna Wintour in reference to her Storm (X-Men) gown: “I control the weather.”

I love it when people like that say things like that. Can't help but chuckle and give it to her.

Sunday, May 04, 2008

Don't listen to everything beauticians tell you

Image from here

Miss Malcontent seeks Truth in Beauty has some excellent advice for choosing a good facial.

I had a friend who would go for facials once every three weeks. She would come back with red, inflammed spots all over her face and over the next couple of weeks, they would scab and peel off. When I questioned her about her very questionable facials, she defended them by saying, "It's only for a while. Once they've recovered my skin becomes really good!"

Once they recovered it was time for her next facial. So it's accurate to say she spent two-thirds of her existence with a scabby face.

That was my pre-beauty writer days, when I was still ignorant about all these beautification processes and wonders but even then, I knew that was a tremendously silly piece of logic.

Sometimes, when you're lying back and someone is wielding sharp metal tools over your face, I guess it's easy to misunderstand what is being told to you as absolute truth.

That may have been extreme but she's hardly the only person I know who is in the "no pain, no gain" camp.

Me, I back away hastily from all facials that are said to be the slightest bit painful. I like extraction but I believe it should be pain-free and it certainly should not irritate my skin. Kose at Takashimaya have been not too bad for me the three times I've been but thus far, I've yet to try a facial that is so marvellous I want to rave about it.

Your time is NOT more important than mine

There must have been thousands of stories written about how technology has bred unpunctuality. With the click of a send button, an SMS arrives in place of the friend who is supposed to meet you at the stipulated time.

Generally, I am quite a punctual person. I won't say there haven't been slips but on the whole, if I'm supposed to meet you at 2pm, you can find me where I'm supposed to be anytime between 1.50pm and 2.10pm. This also means that my threshold when it comes to waiting for friends is also around 10-15 minutes.

I don't see why it's so difficult. It boils down to basic respect and manners. If you're meeting me at 8pm and you called me at 7.30pm to tell me you're leaving the office now, you can be sure I will be pissed off when I call you at 8.05pm, expecting you to be coming up the building, only to discover that you had just left the office. And your flimsy excuse is that you were so busy.

If you're that busy, just don't bother arranging to meet up. I've better things to do with my time than waste it waiting for people who don't have the decency to respect mine.

When I was staying in hall in university, I had this neighbour who would be sitting at her laptop at 7pm when she was supposed to meet her friends at 7pm. Apparently, all her friends never show up on time and can be as late as an hour, if not more. The entire group had developed the habit of trying to be later than the rest so she wouldn't be the one waiting.

Say it with me, what the fuck?

I have zero interest in breeding such a ill-mannered system. I do not believe in rubber time and I think I've wasted enough of my life waiting for people for really no good reason at all, and I've seriously had it. So don't blame me if you pull that kind of stunt on me and arrive to find that I've gone off.

Saturday, May 03, 2008

I like the skirt

Rules are meant to be broken

One of the things I always skip when flipping through mags are articles on dressing guidelines. Dressing for your figure, style dos and don'ts, you must do this to flatter your assets you must do that to hide your flaws... blahblahblah.

I mean, in theory, it's all good to be sensible. And it's not like I've never read them, I've read enough to recite all the usuals and if I abide by these "rules", I probably should:

- avoid crew neck tees that emphasize my chest and make me look bigger and instead, opt for lower necklines that are "slimming"
- say no to volume
- say no to skinny stripes and accept that only thick stripes are acceptable in my life
- wear black or monotones
- keep away from bubble skirts and restrict my existence to "flattering" A-lines
- only ever pull on dark-coloured tights and look wistfully at riotous colours such as shocking pinks and blues

and so on.

The truth is, I love crew neck tees although I do appreciate how a lower neckline is truly more flattering. I prefer skinny stripes. I seriously do not agree with thick stripes. I love black but I think it's more of a character issue. I do not like bubble skirts but I am amassing some voluminous tulips like nobody's business. And when it comes to tights, I love the brights and patterns as much as the dark solids.

It's not complacency or delusion. It's just that I don't see why dressing up should be synonymous with figure-flattering. How about pulling on pieces you love to look the way you like, even if it means your ass looks that bit bigger than it should?

It's not that there are no rules. More like, as you understand yourself better, you pull together your own set of rules based on intuition and a sense of adventure, lots of time in fitting rooms and a healthy dose of wince-worthy mistakes. For instance, I am careful with skinny belts and would never hitch them around my hips, I do not attempt to wear most shades of grey when it comes to clothing and I've never found a flattering yellow. And while I'm most happy to encase my legs in neon pink, I do not delude myself into thinking horizontal stripes on the calves are an option.

These are pretty common-sensical and rather like what you would see as textbook fash guidelines but what's important to me is that I won't say no until I've proven to myself it doesn't work. There are always exceptions to the rules and ways to get around it if you want to. It applies in life and it applies to what you wear as well.

Generally, I find restrictive style tips patronising what with all their cover this up hide that. On the other hand, there are some how-to tips I've found interesting and more educational. For instance, if your calves are chunky and you want to wear ankle straps, look for those that start low on the ankle because your legs look longer. And instead of covering with with mid- to knee- length skirts, slightly shorter skirts worn with heels can create the illusion of longer, leaner legs.

So there you go. Wear what accentuates who you are, not your figure-type. If you want to wear volume, rein it in or pick closer-fitting volume, if you want to wear bright-coloured tights, sheers work easier than opaques, if your poufy skirt is making you look dumpy, throw on super high heels and stick your hands in the pockets whenever you can to weigh it down. And if you want to slouch around in what looks like a garbage sack, it's still your choice.

And of course, even though I've been living with this attitude for a while now, this entry was triggered by the purchase of two Topshop skirts (May Day sale lah).

Cream flouncy and big bubbly tulip - not the most flattering of skirt choices for me. But I like them too much to care.

(Been hankering for a floral piece, finally got one!)