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:
This woman has to wear make up for cameras, every. single. time. Photo makeup is heavier and everyone knows it. Leave her alone, JFC.
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:
Anonymous wrote:NP - I agree with the posters who say this is really all about white women.
Women of color don’t age the same way white women do, so when we are 40, we don’t typically look like we are 40. There are obviously exceptions, such as people who work outside or with their hands a lot. Hair is not really a concern for Black women and Latinas as we age. Black women continue to do cool protective styles or whatever they want and it isn’t shamed. Latinas typically have long hair forever, and it looks great.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can anyone recommend a fragrant free tint moisturizer?
Laura mercier makes the best.
Anonymous wrote: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 Same with hair, outdated hair styles aren’t color/race specific.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.
I think this perspective is increasingly becoming an age-related/generational perspective. I have not used Botox or fillers. Both of my nearing 30 millennial daughters are planning to start Botox as a preventative measure. And one of them is a dermatologist so I am going to assume she's an informed consumer.
Your daughter has an advanced medical degree, so don’t patronizing “assume” she’s an informed consumer. She’s a freaking expert in skin health and care.
A lot of doctors are total nut jobs. Haven’t you seen the plastic surgeons who went waaaay overboard on their own faces?
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.
I think this perspective is increasingly becoming an age-related/generational perspective. I have not used Botox or fillers. Both of my nearing 30 millennial daughters are planning to start Botox as a preventative measure. And one of them is a dermatologist so I am going to assume she's an informed consumer.
Your daughter has an advanced medical degree, so don’t patronizing “assume” she’s an informed consumer. She’s a freaking expert in skin health and care.
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.
I think this perspective is increasingly becoming an age-related/generational perspective. I have not used Botox or fillers. Both of my nearing 30 millennial daughters are planning to start Botox as a preventative measure. And one of them is a dermatologist so I am going to assume she's an informed consumer.
Your daughter has an advanced medical degree, so don’t patronizing “assume” she’s an informed consumer. She’s a freaking expert in skin health and care.
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.
I think this perspective is increasingly becoming an age-related/generational perspective. I have not used Botox or fillers. Both of my nearing 30 millennial daughters are planning to start Botox as a preventative measure. And one of them is a dermatologist so I am going to assume she's an informed consumer.
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.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Black eyeliner - go softer, brown, it looks better
Navy and gray are also good.
Depends. My older cousin has been using blue eyeliner (kinda like Kate Middleton) for decades. It's such an outdated look as is my cousin's long feathered hair. Granted she went to college in the mid-west so I think her adult look has been frozen like this for at least 3 decades by now.
I think that look may be coming back again
Not for the middle aged
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Black eyeliner - go softer, brown, it looks better
Navy and gray are also good.
Depends. My older cousin has been using blue eyeliner (kinda like Kate Middleton) for decades. It's such an outdated look as is my cousin's long feathered hair. Granted she went to college in the mid-west so I think her adult look has been frozen like this for at least 3 decades by now.
I think that look may be coming back again
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Black eyeliner - go softer, brown, it looks better
Navy and gray are also good.
Depends. My older cousin has been using blue eyeliner (kinda like Kate Middleton) for decades. It's such an outdated look as is my cousin's long feathered hair. Granted she went to college in the mid-west so I think her adult look has been frozen like this for at least 3 decades by now.
I don’t think it’s the color that makes an eyeliner outdated, it’s the manner in which it’s used. Kate likes to outline the entire eye, which is a rough look after a certain age.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Black eyeliner - go softer, brown, it looks better
Navy and gray are also good.
Depends. My older cousin has been using blue eyeliner (kinda like Kate Middleton) for decades. It's such an outdated look as is my cousin's long feathered hair. Granted she went to college in the mid-west so I think her adult look has been frozen like this for at least 3 decades by now.
I think that look may be coming back again