Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:1) Color your hair if going gray, cute cut.
2) Fix that BRF (Biitchy Resting Face, not British Royal Family)
3) Better bras
4) Update your wardrobe.
Best tip ever, thank you!
It's a useless tip, because there's not much you can do about it, short of surgery. I guess you could plaster a fake smile on your face so that it's never actually resting.
Also, it's RBF: Resting B*tch Face.
No, it's b*tchy resting face. Resting face is modified by the adjective b*tchy. I don't have a b*tch face that is resting. I have a resting face that looks b*tchy. Not everyone's resting face looks b*tchy. Most people have a neutral resting face.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:1) Color your hair if going gray, cute cut.
2) Fix that BRF (Biitchy Resting Face, not British Royal Family)
3) Better bras
4) Update your wardrobe.
Best tip ever, thank you!
It's a useless tip, because there's not much you can do about it, short of surgery. I guess you could plaster a fake smile on your face so that it's never actually resting.
Also, it's RBF: Resting B*tch Face.
Anonymous wrote:I think the biggest mistake I see my 40-something friends making is "waiting until they lose the weight" to get new clothes or update their look. This means they're wearing out-of-date clothes, frumpy sweats, etc., rather than just investing in a couple nice outfits that work for their *current* bodies.
Another mistake IMO is going for a really matte makeup look. I think people who have a little glow look healthier and more vibrant.
Anonymous wrote:I think the biggest mistake I see my 40-something friends making is "waiting until they lose the weight" to get new clothes or update their look. This means they're wearing out-of-date clothes, frumpy sweats, etc., rather than just investing in a couple nice outfits that work for their *current* bodies.
Another mistake IMO is going for a really matte makeup look. I think people who have a little glow look healthier and more vibrant.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:1) Color your hair if going gray, cute cut.
2) Fix that BRF (Biitchy Resting Face, not British Royal Family)
3) Better bras
4) Update your wardrobe.
Best tip ever, thank you!
It's a useless tip, because there's not much you can do about it, short of surgery. I guess you could plaster a fake smile on your face so that it's never actually resting.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:1) Color your hair if going gray, cute cut.
2) Fix that BRF (Biitchy Resting Face, not British Royal Family)
3) Better bras
4) Update your wardrobe.
Best tip ever, thank you!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Dated hairstyle. Just because it looked good on you in your twenties doesn't mean it necessarily still looks good on you with changing jawline, skin and hair texture, etc.
I mean, it can still be right for you. The mistake is not re-evaluating to check.
I agree with this. I think the same goes for makeup. Getting stuck on a look and not evaulating if it continues to work for you and flatter as your age. One of the worst makeup offenders:
She’s also example of the mistake of making yourself too thin. Lack of fat in your face makes you look haggard. It also really brings out wrinkles.
I can’t speak for the Duchess, and I know she’s quite thin, but many of us have narrow faces that do not reflect our overall body fat! I have plenty of junk in my trunk but if I tried to lose any of it, the weight would undoubtedly come from
my already thin face instead of my ass. I short, some of us can’t help the thin faced aging.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All of these tips are for white women.
NP - I was thinking the same thing LOL.
Ummmm.....black, brown, Asian, bi-racial women can wear too much make-up, not just white woman. Actually, women of all colors/races can wear too much make-up. Same with hair, outdated hair styles aren’t color/race specific. Nor or outfits. The last time I checked Botox and other cosmetic procedures aren't race specific either.
I would have to disagree there. Black and hispanic women are not getting Botox and fillers in any significant numbers unless they are celebrities. Our skin doesn't age as fast and it's just not something we worry about.
PP here. I agree with you, black and Hispanic women probably aren’t getting Botox and fillers, because they have great skin & don’t age as fast. But, that’s not to say they can’t. It’s not something that just white women do. They just may start it earlier, do it more, etc than other races/ethnicities.
Sorry, wrong. I work at a dermatology practice. We see people of all colors for Botox and related procedures.
Botox is only noticeable when it’s done poorly.
Anonymous wrote:And here, from 2021 (Easter and January Scotland trip).
You might like it, but let's at least agree she is still doing it. That nonsense about it only being in old photos is just incorrect.
Anonymous wrote:For eyeshadow, you don’t want the ones that get huge reviews because “they’re so pigmented”. You want the ones that take some building so you can put on just a bit. I also have started using nude/pale pink eyeliners in the lower last line to open up my eye. No smoky eye, ever. Satin and light shimmers can work as eyeshadow, but no glitter.