Saturday 30 July 2022

Fashion with Trend

Jenny Bird drops JB Sun

jenny bird jb sun campaign sunglasses
Photography courtesy of Jenny Bird

Jenny Bird knows how to accessorize, so the Canadian jewellery queen’s move into eyewear makes perfect sense. Bringing her signature contemporary, bold designs to the world of sunglasses, the new Jenny Bird JB Sun collection comprises three silhouettes: ‘The Brow,’ ‘The Wrap,’ and ‘The Y2K.’ Made from sustainable materials, the frames are available in a chic selection of hues and pair perfectly with a set of JB hoops.

Brunette the Label and The Birds Papaya get cozy

mom daughter matching loungewear from brunette the label and the birds papaya
Photography courtesy of Brunette the label

You can never have too much loungewear, and Brunette the Label is here to help you grow your collection. The Canadian brand is collaborating with influencer Sarah Nicole Landry of The Birds Papaya on a collection of matching mom and child sets. Promising to fit sizes 00 through to 26 (XS/S-4XL/5XL), the sweatpants, sweatshirts, tee, biker shorts, tote bag, dad hat, claw clip and keychain are offered in soft pinks and black featuring roses, with prices ranging from $19 to $129.

Celine’s Spring 2023 menswear film is here

It’s one thing to see the photos from Celine’s Spring 2023 menswear show in Paris this past June, but it’s another to watch it all unfold on film. Directed by Hedi Slimane with music by New York band Gustaf, the video takes us back to that presentation that marked the 20th anniversary of Slimane’s inaugural show at the at the Palais de Tokyo in 2002. A reminder of the runway’s electric energy, now’s the time to reminisce on the collection’s co-mingling of punk and grunge.

Psycho Bunny hops into Canada

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by Psycho Bunny (@psychobunny)

New York City’s Psycho Bunny is bringing its special brand of edgy menswear to the Great White North. Best known for remagining classic pieces like the polo, the label’s Canadian expansion comes almost two decades after its launch in 2005. Since then, Psycho Bunny has developed a cult following for its timeless yet contemporary clothing, which you can see for yourself at its new location in the Toronto Eaton Centre, opening July 31.

Toronto’s Adidem Asterisks* releases two capsule collections

Adidem Asterisks* summer campaign image model in bucket hat sweater and pants lying down
Photography courtesy of Adidem Asterisks*

Listen up, Torontonians: if Adidem Asterisks* isn’t already on your radar, here’s why it should be. The label just launched its dreamy Summer 2022 campaign, “Summer of Sounds,” along with two capsule collections, the Women’s Graffiti Capsule and Asterisks* Sport. The former is a selection of Y2K-esque tees and hats, while the latter freshens up sportswear pieces like jumpers and shorts. Supporting a small designer and building your collection of versatile fashion staples? Sounds like a win-win to us.

Olaeda opens its Toronto showroom

olaeda toronto showroom
Photography courtesy of olaeda

If you’re looking to add more Canadian brands to your jewellery collection, look no further than Olaeda. The Toronto-based company, founded by Talia Massaroni, has opened its own showroom at 2814 Dufferin Street, where customers can shop its 14k-gold filled or solid gold pieces in-person on Saturdays and Tuesdays from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.

The post Jenny Bird’s Debut Sunglasses Collection + Other Fashion News appeared first on FASHION Magazine.



from FASHION Magazine https://ift.tt/uWg5EHA

Fashion with Trend

Shea Moisture celebrates Toronto’s Caribbean Carnival with a pop-up

Photography courtesy of Shea Moisture

The Toronto Caribbean Carnival is back in full force this weekend after two years of pandemic-related cancellations, and Shea Moisture, a popular haircare brand among those with curly and coily hair, is joining in on the important cultural celebration with a four day pop-up (the brand’s second Toronto Caribbean Carnival-themed event to date). Taking over the city’s downtown Stackt Market until Monday, August 1st, the Shea Carnival experience features complimentary hairstyling services provided by local black owned and operated salons and barber shops (shout-out to JouJou Hair Studio, The Curl Lounge, Hair By Glenna and Big House Barber Studios), as well as community talent including musicians, artists, media personalities, community leaders, speakers and local vendors.

Herbivore Botanicals releases an eye cream

For those making strides to shop all-natural and plant-based, vegan skin and body care line Herbivore Botanicals has a new eye treatment worth noting. Dubbed Moon Dew, the creamy a.m. and p.m. formula is powered by bakuchiol extract — a non-irritating plant-based retinol alternative — as well as botanical peptides to help reduce the appearance of fine lines and wrinkles over time with zero irritation.

Hey Humans is available at Shoppers Drug Mart

Photography courtesy of Shoppers Drug Mart

Now shoppers this side of the border can easily get their hands on Hey Humans, the eco-conscious and vegan body care line launched by the Smith family (hey Will, Jada, Jaden and Willow) back in 2021 and that features science-backed formulas bottled in sustainable packaging to help reduce plastic consumption. The full dermatologist-tested product line-up includes aluminum-free deodorants, hydrating body washes and nourishing body lotions and can be purchased at select Shoppers Drug Mart locations across Canada and shoppersdrugmart.ca.

Quo Beauty has a collaboration with Oceanworks

Photography courtesy of Shoppers Drug Mart

Shoppers Drug Mart’s in-house cosmetics brand, Quo Beauty, recently dropped its Big Planet, Big Love collection in collaboration with Oceanworks, a platform that strives to help brands measure their plastic footprint and find sustainable alternatives. Featuring close to 30 vegan and cruelty-free beauty products and accessories (think colour cosmetics, hair and makeup accessories, nail colour and jewellery), forward-thinking packaging is the focus here: Within you’ll find Oceanworks reclaimed ocean-bound plastic in the eye and face palettes, reusable accessories such as swabs and cleansing pads, and the use of bio-sourced materials from renewable vegetal sources in the brand’s plant-based nail colour range.

Meet e.l.f. Cosmetics viral Halo Glow Liquid Filter

If you haven’t heard about it all over the internet yet, drugstore beauty brand e.l.f. Cosmetics dropped its Halo Glow Liquid Filter earlier this month, and, according to TikTok fans and beauty gurus, it’s a dupe for the iconic Charlotte Tilbury Hollywood Flawless Filter — at less than half the price. Available in eight shades, the multi-use, skincare-meets-makeup hybrid is infused with squalane and hyaluronic acid to help both smooth and brighten the skin for a radiant soft-focus look. Don’t think of it as a foundation — it’s more of a complexion booster, meaning you can wear it alone or under makeup, add it to your foundation or even use it like a highlighter. You can find it in-store at Shopper’s Drug Mart and also online at shoppersdrugmart.ca (as of this week).

Benefit Cosmetics drops a new brow pencil

When you’re working with sparse brows, a good eyebrow pencil is high on the makeup bag list. Benefit Cosmetics’s innovative GimmeBrow+ Volumizing Pencil combines silk cotton tree fibers and fine powder to help you build visible depth, dimension and lightweight volume on existing hairs.

Oribe launches a limited-edition texturizing spray

Photography courtesy of Oribe

So many hairstylists count Oribe’s Dry Texturizing spray among their all-time faves for adding quick shine, volume and texture to the hair. This week, the iconic hair spritz has received a limited-edition makeover. Featuring an illustration of co-founder and legendary hairstylist Oribe Canales, the playful packaging pays homage to Canales who was instrumental in the creation of the popular product.

First Aid Beauty has a vitamin C serum for sensitive skin

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by First Aid Beauty (@firstaidbeauty)

Vitamin C is one of those do-it-all skincare ingredients. The powerful antioxidant promises to do everything from fading dark marks to fighting free radicals (which break down collagen) to diminishing fine lines and wrinkles. For those with sensitive skin, First Aid Beauty has you covered. The brand’s new lightweight 10% Vitamin C Brightening Serum has been specifically developed to treat hyperpigmentation and defend against surface-free radicals without causing skin irritation or leaving any stickiness behind.

The post Shea Moisture Celebrates the Toronto Caribbean Carnival + More Beauty News appeared first on FASHION Magazine.



from FASHION Magazine https://ift.tt/nQah2B6

Friday 29 July 2022

Fashion with Trend

July 29 is National Lipstick Day 2022, and what better way to celebrate than by shopping some of the best formulas to be released so far this year?

One of the most valuable products in your makeup bag, nothing completes a look quite like a good lip colour. Whether you prefer it in the form of a stick, stain (the Fenty Beauty Poutsicle Hydrating Lip Stain is one going viral on TikTok right now) or tint, there’s been plenty of new launches so far this year to choose from.

Before you swipe on your new hue, prep your lips by gently exfoliating and moisturizing. Let the balm absorb in and then perfect your pout. When it comes to technique, the options are endless — define your shape or create contrast with lip liner; layer colours to get the perfect shade; or add some gloss on top of your freshly stained, dry lips.

From liquid formulas to balmy textures, click through the gallery below to find your new perfect shade for National Lipstick Day 2022.

The post 21 Lipsticks to Buy on National Lipstick Day appeared first on FASHION Magazine.



from FASHION Magazine https://ift.tt/w3UAYPm

Fashion with Trend

A few weeks before the release of her second studio album, Maggie Rogers is still grappling with its title. Surrender, out July 29, is an ode to giving in, breaking free and finding joy amid chaos. But on our video call in late June, Rogers is quick to state that she doesn’t yet have all of the above figured out. When I ask what freedom means to her, her response is understandably unclear. “I think that if I knew that, I would probably be out of business,” she quips. Even still, her new 12-song project gets pretty close. With the overwhelming state of the world, listening to the pop indie record feels like a liberating antidote to apathy.

For the singer-songwriter, few things bring about this emotional release like cutting her hair. “It’s like the most essential me,” she says of the short strands peeking under a blue paisley bandana. “Because you can’t hide.” Surrender is another vessel for Rogers’s vulnerability.

In 2016, the musician (then a senior in college) skyrocketed to stardom after a video of Pharrell Williams listening to her song “Alaska” went viral. The cover art for her subsequent debut studio album, Heard It In A Past Life, showed Maggie Rogers with chest-length tresses blowing in the wind. The project was her way to “set the narrative straight” on her sudden fame. But when making Surrender, Rogers (now a Harvard University master’s graduate) didn’t feel bound by any public expectations. And this time, she appears on the cover with a face-framing pixie cut.

Maggie Rogers Surrender album art
Photography courtesy of Universal Music Group

Maggie Rogers has always gravitated towards this type of physical transformation. “I have cut my hair super short every four years for most of my life,” she notes. “I used to do it myself when I was a kid. It was always a problem that I would find scissors and try and cut my hair.” Come September 2020, she chopped off her locks in true quarantine fashion: with a pair of kitchen scissors in her backyard.

“Every time I get a haircut, I feel a sense of rebirth — no matter whether it’s short or long,” she explains. “There’s something about that freshness, that pruning. Hair cuts are super spiritual, and you get to remove parts of you that you’ve been carrying for a long time.”

Maggie Rogers up close
Photography by Quil Lemons

Relinquishing what doesn’t serve you is a defining theme of Surrender. With its stream-of-consciousness subject matter comprising friendship, anxiety and running away, the album is a result of Rogers making music to pass the time, not to meet deadlines. “It felt like a pure artist thing,” she says of working on the album, which she began in 2020 while staying at her parents’ house. “It’s about making art when no one’s looking and making art when it’s not for your job. You’re not thinking about anyone hearing it.”

After channelling all her feelings over the past few years into the project, Rogers says she was surprised by its undercurrent of what she calls “feral joy.” “It’s a joy that comes from your teeth. It’s a joy that’s hard-earned,” she says.

The album is not just a soundtrack, it’s like a home you can go live inside. “I love the world-building aspect of making a record,” Rogers says, noting the font, colours and clothing featured in the visuals for Surrender have been selected with mindful precision. The result? A kaleidoscopic colour palette of purple, green, black, orange-y tangerine and dusty yellow. “I showed my friend the mood board and she said, ‘That looks like a bruise,’” Rogers laughs.

Clothing has played a big role in crafting Maggie Rogers’s new music era. Usually, she knows what she likes. “I wear one outfit pretty consistently,” she says of her tried and true uniform: a pair of Levi’s 501s, a white t-shirt or tank top, a black suit jacket and a pair of steel-toed Calvin Klein boots. “But I’m having fun mixing it up right now and experimenting.”

Maggie Rogers nautical shirt
Photography by Olivia Bee

Lately, Rogers has been flirting with a sundry of style influences, from French fashion to nautical stripes to Victorian ruffle shirts. “Getting dressed feels like inviting the divine feminine or the creative voice into my every day. And that is how I feel the most like an artist, in getting to express myself in that way.” Citing her love for androgyny as one of the driving forces behind her self-expression, Rogers is inspired by iconic short-hair references like noughties Agyness Deyn ads and ‘60s Twiggy looks.

But it’s been a journey to get her hair just right. “When I look at photos [of myself] while making this record, I’m so clearly in the middle of a transformation emotionally,” she says. “So at this moment, with the record coming out and my hair finally feeling like it looks good, it’s like a crystallization that’s happening.”

Just like her connection to hair, Maggie Rogers has an ever-evolving relationship with the concept of surrendering. “To me, it is so deeply empowering and something I struggle with. It’s something I’m still actively thinking about on daily basis,” she says. As a listener, Surrender doesn’t claim to have the answers to your emotions, it just welcomes you to find power in them. For Rogers, that means feeling joy as a form of resistance, dressing solely for herself and finding freedom in a haircut.

“[Hair] is actually old parts of you. It’s been with you. It takes on things,” she says. “What’s so crazy is that right now, as I’m in the midst of this really rapid transformation of coming out of grad school [and] coming into release week… I also have to get my hair cut every three to five weeks because it’s super short. That, to me, feels like a symbol of constant regeneration.”

The post Maggie Rogers Finds Catharsis in a Haircut appeared first on FASHION Magazine.



from FASHION Magazine https://ift.tt/alWigLw

Thursday 28 July 2022

Fashion with Trend

The world of curls is vast; kinks, coils, cuts and braids barely scratch the surface of natural hair possibilities. Mindful of the lack of natural hair education and styling capabilities in the beauty industry, curl-informed stylists across Canada have been filling the gap with specialized salons catered to textured haircare and styling. After launching our countrywide search for some of Canada’s best curly hair salons in Toronto, next on our list is charming Montreal.

Here, cobblestone streets lined with historic monuments host a well rounded posse of stylists and salons equipped for your natural hair needs. As we continue to research the best curly hair salons in Montreal, check back for future updates and new additions below.

Artizans 4/22

Salon founder Lovely Racius (left). Photographs courtesy of Artizans 4/22

For the earth conscious curly client, consider booking your next appointment at eco-boutique and salon, Artizans 4/22. The eco-friendly ethos that drives this salon manifests in the selection of products used on and sold to clients. As part of Green Circle Salons — the beauty industry’s first sustainable salon solution designed to combat beauty waste and climate change — salon waste from hair clippings to product bottles at Artizans 4/22 are recycled, recovered and repurposed. Need a chic cut? A fresh set of faux locs perhaps? Pamper yourself comfortably and consciously here.

Aura Beauté

Salon founders Cyan Caruso-Comas (left) and Sherrie Virtue. Photograph courtesy of Aura Beauté

Collectively trained in Vidal Sassoon, Toni and Guy, Deva Curl, Rezo Cut and Cut it Kinky methods, Aura Beauté co-founders Cyan Caruso-Comas and Sherrie Virtue are the curl cut experts to book. Equality and inclusivity are highly valued at this spot — with gender neutral pricing offered to clients. “We’re tired of the pink tax that many women are familiar with,” say the stylists on equal-length haircuts taking the same amount of time regardless of gender. “We recognize that many people don’t fall into traditional gender binaries, and we want to create a space for all people to feel comfortable.”

Inhairitance

Photography courtesy of Inhairitance

At self-proclaimed ‘curl spa’ Inhairitance, founder Abisara Machold explains that this term is meant to convey the salon’s focus on the “health and celebration of curly hair textures.” Implementing no compromises on toxic ingredients, Inhairitance carries its own self-titled products and 14 other black and female owned natural hair brands. Aiming to spread natural hair knowledge that has been lost throughout history, in-house classes are also offered to hairdressers in practice. “The word ‘Inhairitance’ is not for nothing because it really connects you with your ancestry, your background and your pride where maybe you’ve felt shame before,” Machold tells FASHION.

Melissandre Coiffure Inc

With an emphasis on African braiding techniques from twists to crochet braids, Melissandre Coiffure salon owner Melissandre Nsoumb delivers aesthetically pleasing results while considering hair health. “It takes a lot of time to take care of natural Afro hair, so braiding it requires an extra touch in order to not only allow it to grow properly but to protect it as well,” she says. “This goes a long way to reduce how much time my clients would normally have to engage in protecting their hair from breaking and getting dirty.” Nsoumb also offers specialized braiding classes at all levels.

Salon Académie Nancy Falaise

Salon founder Nancy Falaise. Photographs courtesy of Salon Académie Nancy Falaise

Inclusive of each unique curl pattern from loose waves to tighter coils, Salon Académie Nancy Falaise covers all the bases. Though tangible updates on a Quebec-based curly hair education petition launched by founder Nancy Falaise in 2020 are still pending, Falaise does offer her own occasional curl workshops teaching clients curl etiquette from wash to finish. Inspired by her own haircare journey post-breast cancer treatment, Falaise also tells FASHION that the salon now offers ‘PRP’ (Platelet-Rich Plasma), a regenerative hair treatment performed with a doctor to promote hair growth.

The post Texture Talk: A Guide to Montreal’s Best Curly Hair Salons appeared first on FASHION Magazine.



from FASHION Magazine https://ift.tt/RyNlmBT

  Introducing ProDentim: The Revolutionary Probiotic for Your Teeth, Gut, and Beyond In today's world, dental care has evolved far beyon...