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Watch Pat McGrath Transform Hailey Baldwin, Hari Nef, and More Into 24-Hour Party People

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Follow the flashing neon lights, past pots of cobalt powder and bright silver streamers, to find a pink-haired Xiao Wen Ju with sketched-on harlequin lashes, dancing on top of a Formica table next to Hanne Gaby Odiele, whose winged blue eyes wink beneath her signature shag. That was the scene last night in Brooklyn at Pat McGrath’s takeover of Kellogg’s Diner, where the crowd unleashed their inner club kids with a little help from the makeup artist, who painted their faces in bright eyeshadow shades. From Hari Nef whipping her hair back and forth on a barstool to Sophia Ahrens going full Ziggy Stardust—plus the surprise arrival of The Wolfpack—here’s to a madcap celebration of color and New York nightlife that Williamsburg won’t soon forget.

The post Watch Pat McGrath Transform Hailey Baldwin, Hari Nef, and More Into 24-Hour Party People appeared first on Vogue.


23 After-Dark Makeup Portraits by Sofia Malamute

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Lexi Boling

Last night, as Pat McGrath and her makeup team conjured a thrilling tribute to after-dark makeup at Kellogg’s Diner in Brooklyn, photographers snapped candid shots of Julia van Os dancing to Beyoncé and a cat-eyed Hailey Baldwin in the corner. But just outside, where Sofia Malamute readied her Hasselblad camera, it felt like another scene entirely.

Steadily, Malamute shot for nearly five hours, switching between Polaroid tests and film, and framed her subjects within the soft glow of Kellogg’s neon lights. What emerged was a striking series of portraits: Harry Brant smoldering in flannel with a dark smoky eye; a gamine Tavi Gevinson with bright blue lids and Twiggy lashes. “I wanted it to be more timeless, more real,” Malamute said of her close-up shots, meant to highlight McGrath’s makeup and hairstylist Guido Palau’s handiwork. “For me, it’s important to see the person behind the makeup, too.”

It was the same touch of grit and glamour that Malamute brought to Vogue.com’s model casting call this past September, only this time, with a dose of explosive color at the forefront. Her favorite model of the night? A glam-rock Eddie Angulo from The Wolfpack, who mugged for the camera like a Twisted Sister. “I never fan out on anyone,” Malamute said, “but I went on and on with the Wolfpack kids.

“When you have a makeup artist like Pat,” continued Malamute, “she makes it so easy to take amazing pictures.” But as these compelling photos reveal, having someone like Malamute behind the lens certainly doesn’t hurt either.

The post 23 After-Dark Makeup Portraits by Sofia Malamute appeared first on Vogue.

Adele Debuts a Jaw-Grazing Choppy Bob: Why We Love the Singer’s New Cut

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Photo: Splash News

With her soul-shattering voice, record-breaking album sales, and legions of adoring fans, one has to ask: Can Adele do no wrong? Tonight, on Britain’s X Factor, the 27-year-old British singer supplied the answer (a resounding no) when she unveiled a new haircut that promptly took the Internet by storm. Razing a few additional inches off last month’s lob at Daniel Galvin’s London salon, Adele’s textured bob featured shaggy, face-framing layers enhanced by a little wintertime frizz. The universally flattering chop, which puts a fresh, jaw-skimming twist on her signature look, seems destined to become an instant classic. Think of it as the style you’ll be seeing everywhere next year.

 

Go behind the scenes at Adele’s March 2012 Vogue cover shoot:

The post Adele Debuts a Jaw-Grazing Choppy Bob: Why We Love the Singer’s New Cut appeared first on Vogue.

The French Girl’s Guide to Wearing Perfume: 5 Rules From Ines de la Fressange

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From Pierre-François-Pascal Guerlain’s first bottled scents, unveiled on the Rue de Rivoli in 1828, to the game-changing launch of Coco Chanel’s iconic No. 5 in the roaring ’20s, the French love of fragrance runs deep. Who better, then, to ask about perfume—when, where, and why to wear it—than a Parisienne whose laissez-faire approach to beauty has become a full-blown global phenomenon in recent years.

Enter Ines de la Fressange, the fashion icon and muse, who is living proof of the Gallic dedication to scent. “Every day!” she exclaims with a laugh, when asked how often she wears perfume. “Even if I stay home alone.” Here, de la Fressange breaks down five simple rules to wearing perfume à la française, from the importance of subtlety to the reason why she’ll never change her signature scent.

Rule No. 1: Find One Scent and Stick to It

“French women are very faithful to their perfumes. They wear the same one for years and do not change it, whether it’s morning or evening, winter or summer. I think American women like to have several. They appreciate new perfumes and buy things that they discover in magazines or at department stores, where quite energetic sellers are jumping on them. This does not exist that much in France. Don’t ask me about new perfumes: I generally hate them. I find them too aggressive, with too much iris, grapefruit, or I don’t know what!”

Rule No. 2: But Let Your Perfume Evolve With You

“When I was a young girl, I started to wear this patchouli scent—very ’70s!—until my grandfather became totally upset and told me a young girl shouldn’t wear this type of heavy fragrance. So he offered me Sandalwood by Floris instead. Later, a friend at school was wearing Chanel No. 19, and I so admired that she would have this kind of grown-up style that I copied her—funny that, later, I worked for Chanel, which is where I learned a lot about perfume.

In those days, I wore Chanel Cuir de Russie, which was available only at Rue Cambon, until my husband stole it from me! Now, and for a long time, I’ve been wearing Mitsouko from Guerlain. Very often, cabdrivers give me compliments, and my children would hate me if I even thought of changing it!”

Rule No. 3: Keep It Subtle

“French women do not wear very strong things. Perfume should be discreet, like a little secret. I spray perfume around the neck, on my wrists, and on my scarf. I guess I saw my grandmother [doing that]. She used to like perfumes so much that when I visited her at the hospital once, she only had flasks of perfumes on her table and not one medicine. It was a dainty way to receive visitors.

Personally, I like musky scents and hate ones that smell like food—vanilla, chocolate notes—or that remind you precisely of something. I think French people appreciate brands that are not so famous but admire great quality, like Frédéric Malle or Serge Lutens. However, Shalimar by Guerlain is still very successful.”

Rule No. 4: Never Mix and Match

“When you know a little about perfumes, you learn how difficult it is to make them and how important the work of the “nose”—the guy who imagines the fragrance—is. For instance, they need some bases that don’t smell nice to mix with other ingredients to reach excellence, so never think you can mix different perfumes yourself—it won’t work! Listen, French women are not perfection! [laughs]. But French brands are great . . . trust them!”

Rule No. 5: Fragrance Your Entire Life

“In my drawers, I put potpourri from Santa Maria Novella; in my car, Cyprès from Diptyque, which is a house perfume; and I also have perfumed sticks from Rigaud in the entrance of my home. I keep fragrance in my office, and I am an addict also for perfumed candles, which I travel with. When it comes to [fragrance], I never go out without it!”

The post The French Girl’s Guide to Wearing Perfume: 5 Rules From Ines de la Fressange appeared first on Vogue.

Is Daisy Ridley’s Star Wars Hair Making Its Way From the Big Screen to the Street?

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It was nearly four decades ago, in a galaxy far, far away, that Princess Leia first pulled her hood back to reveal two buns, tightly coiled around her ears—and set a serious expectation for high-impact hair in the world of Star Wars. This week, 10 years after the last film premiered, Star Wars: The Force Awakens will finally set the stage for a new statement-making look: Three messy knots down the back of the head, worn by Daisy Ridley’s desert scavenger, Rey.

Rey’s triple bun is the latest evolution in Star Wars hair history—after Leia’s twin buns and Padmé’s black Kabuki wig—and it puts a surprisingly modern spin on interstellar style. And so we wondered: Like the Katniss Everdeen braid and the Mad Max buzz cut before it, could the Star Wars triple bun become the next cinematic hairstyle with crossover appeal to hit the streets?

To find out, I head to Bumble and Bumble’s downtown salon, where editorial hairstylist Tiffani Patchett has agreed to help bring the look to life. “It’s a little more modern, a little more wearable than Princess Leia’s,” she says as she rakes my hair back from the temples and starts dousing it with product—Bumble and Bumble Prep, Styling Creme, and Thickening Spray—to craft enough volume and hold.

 

24 hours of love, lightsabers, and Star Wars in New York City:

 

 

A messy, lived-in feel is key, Patchett explains. “She’s out in the elements, her hair is all over the place, so we’re going to need a dry, matte texture,” she says. Dividing my hair into sections and tugging the highest one flush against the scalp, Patchett anchors the top bun just below the curve of my skull and secures it with an elastic and hairpin. The center knot is placed squarely beneath the first and curled into an open loop, and once the bottom bun is arranged, hanging low by the nape of my neck, the mood shifts sharply. “That totally changed the look,” Patchett says. “It took it into sci-fi territory, but those wispy bits are so Valentino.”

Back at the office, the triple bun is a hit. “I like it!” a colleague tells me, noting that the undone feel is what makes it appear modern. Patchett agrees: “It’s totally runway, and I can see girls doing different versions with that texture.” Inspecting the finished product, there’s no doubt that it’s fantastic, a sculptural sci-fi creation—but I’m surprised by how universal it feels. The knots are a little bit punk, giving the look a polished-in-the-front, party-in-the-back vibe. But they’re also windswept, dreamlike, and oddly romantic—like something hairstylist Guido Palau might dream up for the runway—and by sporting them, I become, in my mind, a playful space renegade, ready for anything. Here’s to one Star Wars hairstyle that’s truly out of this world.

The post Is Daisy Ridley’s Star Wars Hair Making Its Way From the Big Screen to the Street? appeared first on Vogue.

Lupita Nyong’o Wears a Metallic Blue Lip to the Star Wars London Premiere

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Though rebel pilots, Stormtroopers, and droids all rolled down the red carpet at tonight’s London premiere of Star Wars: The Force Awakens, it was actress Lupita Nyong’o who smartly channeled the sci-fi spirit with a bold slick of metallic blue lipstick. Keeping her skin quite bare and glowing, the unconventional color lent Nyong’o’s look a futuristic edge that played tribute to Maz Kanata, the alien space pirate she portrays in the film, while her sculptural hi-top fade haircut, wrapped in black net, helped push the outré shade into new territory. Consider it further proof that an out-of-the-box lip is the simplest way to make a high-impact statement, whether you’re on the red carpet in London; in a galaxy far, far away; or anywhere in between.

 

 

Lupita Nyong’o on Star Wars, Shakespeare, and secret talents:

The post Lupita Nyong’o Wears a Metallic Blue Lip to the Star Wars London Premiere appeared first on Vogue.

The Ultimate Star Wars Workout: Watch Model Andreea Diaconu’s Body-Sculpting Lightsaber Skills

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A long time ago, in a galaxy, far, far, away, everyone wore billowing robes—but hidden beneath those folds of fabric were rock-solid C-3PO–style cores. How exactly, you might ask, did Jedi Masters, Stormtroopers, and galactic princesses stay Star Wars fit? Well, Luke Skywalker practiced one-armed handstands and bounded around Dagobah swampland; Chewbacca, of course, was just born that way. But for those looking to train in this solar system, there’s New York Jedi’s lightsaber workout.

“It’s good physical activity,” cofounder Mike Zhang explains of the two-hour fitness classes where, alongside a troupe of martial artists and stage-combat specialists, he helps lead a group of energetic New Yorkers through wuxia kicking courses, sword-wielding swings, and Escrima sessions. “You use your arms, your [abs] to stabilize—it’s a fun way to exercise, if you otherwise wouldn’t.”

As proof, Zhang and his co-Jedi Sharon Bell-Reiser came to the Vogue.com offices to guide Andreea Diaconu—our model turned Leia—through a basic series of lightsaber techniques so easy a youngling could do them. What follows are five full-body moves to help you harness your latent Force powers and tighten that core. No, it’s not a trap—your path to the Light Side lies straight ahead.

 

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Diaconu in a J.W.Anderson printed puff sleeve blouse, $1,095, for information: maxfieldla.com; J.W.Anderson elasticated cuff trousers, $630, Dover Street Market, NYC, 646.837.7750; Giuseppe Zanotti design white nappa cowboy leather boots, $1,250, for information; giuseppezanotti.com Giuseppe Zanotti, NYC, 212.6500455

This hip-swiveling sequence of twists will tone your legs and make you queen of the Mos Eisley Cantina.

 

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Diaconu in a Louis Vuitton small stripes georgette embroidered blouse, $4,000, for information: louisvuitton.com; Louis Vuitton light viscose skirt, $2,900, for information: louisvuitton.com; Tees by Tina long-sleeve mock neck, $58, teesbytina.com; Yeezy 950 boots, $631, mytheresa.com

A well-timed Force jump is a cardio-boosting combat essential—as is a hairstyle with serious staying power.

 

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Diaconu in a Louis Vuitton small stripes georgette embroidered blouse, $4,000, for information: louisvuitton.com; Louis Vuitton light viscose skirt, $2,900, for information: louisvuitton.com; Tees by Tina long-sleeve mock neck, $58, teesbytina.com; Yeezy 950 boots, $631, mytheresa.com

Here’s a one-armed move and old Jedi party trick that sculpts biceps and triceps—while wowing the Wookiees, Ewoks, and Nerf herders.

 

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Diaconu in a Louis Vuitton small stripes georgette embroidered blouse, $4,000, for information: louisvuitton.com; Louis Vuitton light viscose skirt, $2,900, for information: louisvuitton.com; Tees by Tina long-sleeve mock neck, $58, teesbytina.com; Yeezy 950 boots, $631, mytheresa.com; The Wookiee in a Dickies basic coverall, $32, dickies.com

Twist and shout as you stabilize your core, young padawans. Just watch those hands . . .

 

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Diaconu in a Louis Vuitton small stripes georgette embroidered blouse, $4,000, for information: louisvuitton.com; Louis Vuitton light viscose skirt, $2,900, for information: louisvuitton.com; Tees by Tina long-sleeve mock neck, $58, teesbytina.com; Alpha Industries MA-1 slim-fit flight jacket, $140, alphaindustires.com; Yeezy 950 boots, $631, mytheresa.com

Combine all you’ve learned in one challenging choreographed sequence. Balance your body, balance your mind—so the learner becomes the master.

 

Director: Cass Bird
Fashion Editor: Jorden Bickham
Featuring: Andreea Diaconu
Hair: Ilker Akyol
Makeup: Jen Myles

DP: Tyler Kohlhoff
Filmed at the World Trade Center Transportation Hub, The Port Authority of New York and New Jersey
With thanks to New York JediUltra Sabers and Matt Clevy of Mpire Comedy

 

24 hours of love, lightsabers, and Star Wars in New York City:

 

The post The Ultimate Star Wars Workout: Watch Model Andreea Diaconu’s Body-Sculpting Lightsaber Skills appeared first on Vogue.

I Did It All for the Wookiee: 24 Hours of Love, Lightsabers, and Star Wars in New York City

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“I met this guy.” So begins Leia’s epic New York adventure, which sees the Star Wars space princess come down to Earth for the day—and promptly fall in love with a dashing young Wookiee. Starring model Andreea Diaconu, the whirlwind affair takes our heroine on a romantic spin around the city (including an interlude with a lightsaber workout and a selfie-stick break in the park) before heading back to her white-winged Oculus pad, which is a bit of a fixer-upper—not that her new boyfriend cares. From an impromptu swing dance session to a game of urban leap frog, by the time it’s all over, there’s no question you’d do it all for the Wookiee, too.

 

Director: Cass Bird
Fashion Editor: Jorden Bickham
With thanks to New York Jedi, Ultrasabers, and Matt Clevy, Mpire Comedy

 

On Diaconu (Look 1): J.W.Anderson printed puff sleeve blouse, $1,095, for information: maxfieldla.com; J.W.Anderson elasticated cuff trousers, $630, Dover Street Market, NYC, 646.837.7750; Giuseppe Zanotti design white nappa cowboy leather boots, $1,250, for information; giuseppezanotti.com
(Look 2): Louis Vuitton small stripes georgette embroidered blouse, $4,000, for information: louisvuitton.com; Louis Vuitton light viscose skirt, $2,900, for information: louisvuitton.com; Tees by Tina long-sleeve mock neck, $58, teesbytina.com; Alpha Industries MA-1 slim-fit flight jacket, $140, alphaindustires.com; Yeezy 950 boots, $631, mytheresa.com

(Look 3): Paco Rabanne mixed matte napa and nylon sleeveless dress, $7,090, for information: barneys.com;
Tees by Tina long-sleeve mock neck, $58, teesbytina.com; Obermeyer Bond II pants in white, $200, obermeyer.com; Giuseppe Zanotti design white nappa cowboy leather boots, $1,250, for information; giuseppezanotti.com

On the Wookiee: Dickies basic coverall, $32, dickies.com

 

The post I Did It All for the Wookiee: 24 Hours of Love, Lightsabers, and Star Wars in New York City appeared first on Vogue.


Can You Get Thicker Hair In an Instant? Introducing the New Split-Second Party Fix

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From Gisele’s windswept waves to Solange’s brushed-out natural curls, beautiful hair spans a wide spectrum of striking cuts and color. But generally speaking, it’s rich, full-bodied, and thick. Especially in winter, when humidity drops and hat-head sets in, more is more is more.

So, what’s the secret to envy-inducing body? Some women are born with it, of course, while others swear by fish oil, biotin, or coconut oil. But on a visit with hairstylist Harry Josh, who works with Victoria’s Secret bombshells, he gives it to me straight. “It’s all smoke and mirrors!” he says. “Some girls have a ton of hair—Lily Aldridge has a ponytail like that—but to really create dramatic, glamorous, finished hair, we add even more.” Josh says that a new type of partial extension is sweeping the red carpet: a style that’s hidden beneath existing layers and matched exactly to your head, so that it doesn’t add length—only thickness.

Recently, walk-in bars like RPZL in New York City’s Flatiron District, Los Angeles’s Just Extensions, and Locks & Mane in Toronto have been making extensions more accessible—like blowouts before them. And according to Josh, it’s custom-made, removable lengths that do the trick best. “You literally plop them in, and have instant thick hair for the night, then take them out and you’re good to go,” he says. “It’s a Hollywood secret and an innovative way of doing this type of process.” One insider source for the technique is Kennaland, tucked away on a quiet stretch in Greenpoint, Brooklyn, whose off-menu salon services include a bespoke set of clip-on extensions customized to your cut and color.

“A lot of people want that length for events, but we have started to see more people asking for thickness,” says Kennaland stylist Amy Bradbury. “The clips make it super-easy; a lot of people don’t realize how easy.” After I relax into a plush ‘60s barbershop chair, Bradbury lifts seven extensions that she carefully color-matched, measured, and hand-sewed in-house, a process that took two weeks. “We’ll cut them to the length of your hair and keep the look you have now, but make it look fuller and thicker,” she says, sectioning off my strands, then teasing the roots to give the clips better grip.

As Bradbury begins combing through tangles, I try to remember what it was like to have thick hair. Growing up, it took two hours to trim my locks and razor them thin; I needed three strong elastics for ponytails. Then, last year, I noticed that I’d shed roughly two-thirds of it, and panic set in. I started to pop Viviscal twice a day, which I learned helps not only with length, but with fullness. I visited hairstylist Tim Rogers, who sheared a few inches to craft a blunt edge, and used Living Proof‘s Full product line, formulated with special thickening molecules by MIT scientists. I obsessively pored over stray patches of scalp. Extensions, though, had seemed too high-maintenance, too intimidating—but these clip-ons were different.

After trimming the ends to blend them, Bradbury stands back and hands me a mirror. Unexpectedly, I see myself at 16—only better. “It’s subtle, but makes a huge impact,” Bradbury says. I leave Kennaland with a spring in my step—it’s a reverse 13 Going on 30. A few hours later, at a friend’s holiday party, my hair becomes the night’s hot topic. “It looks different, but I can’t say how,” one says. “Tell me your secrets.”

Later, I head out to meet my boyfriend for dinner, and he whispers three little words I’ve been dying to hear: “You look younger.” I’m sold. After all, why have less hair, when you can have more?

The post Can You Get Thicker Hair In an Instant? Introducing the New Split-Second Party Fix appeared first on Vogue.

5 It Girls Share Their Surprising Winter Beauty Secrets: Leandra Medine, Irene Kim, and More

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The holidays are in full swing, winter is here, and we’ve already made our seasonal product swaps, exchanging sheer SPF for a richer night cream, and sea salt spray for a smoothing hair oil. But for novel beauty ideas that can help stave off our wintertime blues, we say: The weirder, the better! With this philosophy in mind, we asked a few of our favorite It girls to share the most clever, inventive uses for their go-to cold-weather products. From a deeply hydrating hair mask to an illusive smattering of freckles, these five beauty hacks will provide a fun diversion from the cold, until the warmer months return.

The post 5 It Girls Share Their Surprising Winter Beauty Secrets: Leandra Medine, Irene Kim, and More appeared first on Vogue.

Is Bojutsu the Next Fitness Craze? 5 Ab-Sculpting GIFs From a Star Wars Stunt Double

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Thanks to her first-rate survival skills and slick signature hairstyle, Star Wars: The Force Awakens’s Rey has been hailed as the next Katniss Everdeen, a strong, model heroine who deftly handles a more unexpected weapon—in Rey’s case, a metal bo staff. So considering that Everdeen sent fans to the archery range in droves, we’ve wondered: Could bojutsu become the next martial workout to go mainstream?

“100 percent!” That’s Chloé Bruce, the British stunt double and martial arts expert who helped bring Rey to life, on the 17th-century staff that’s been lesser known until now. “It’s such a great weapon—not too dangerous, not evil-looking—so hopefully, now that more people have seen it, there’ll be more interest.”

In bojutsu, there are five strikes and five blocks to conquer, plus two figure-eight spins—all of which Bruce, a longtime East Londoner, has been practicing since age 12. See her twisting a staff rapidly around her body, shifting her weight from side to side—this, she tells me, is a basic sequence that can be more or less mastered after just one year. “It’s definitely not as difficult as it looks,” she says. “Once you have that foundation, it’s more about linking moves and spins and throws, and being creative.”

It’s a full-body workout that mixes heart-pumping cardio with muscle-toning postures and stances. “There’s a lot of upper body work on the arms and shoulders, from moving the staff around your body, and it definitely works your core,” Bruce says. And though the sequences below combine traditional bo movements with XMA spins and Tang Soo Do kicks, the end result (those rock-solid abs) gives us the feeling that bojutsu—and Bruce—are poised for one big breakthrough.

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“There are a few flashier elements here with the footwork, but this is a very basic combination of strikes, blocks, and figures of eight—just sped up. With the stance switch, you get a full-body workout—the forward stance is like a high lunge—and your arms, shoulders, and core obviously get a lot of work, as well.”

 

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“One of the kicks I’m most famous for, and that I invented, is called the Scorpion Kick, which I do here. I found a way of maneuvering the bo staff under my leg to the chamber position to incorporate it into that kick. You’ll definitely feel this in your glutes and core.”

 

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“That’s a 360 leg spin. As you can see, the bo staff is a weapon that stays in close contact with your head and body, so the more you practice with it, the more you get a feel for it and build trust with your weapon. When you’re linking combinations like this together, it definitely gives you a good cardio workout.”

 

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“This attack sequence is more of an XMA move—you wouldn’t wrap the staff around your body in a fight, that’s more for a competition or demonstration. I got a kick out of learning different tricks and spins around my body.”

 

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“Stunt work has taken over my life, but I do try to get in two hours of training per day to keep it up. When I was a child, I focused just on martial arts, but now I’ll start with a half hour of HIT training, then a CrossFit or weight-training class, or a kicking session. No matter what, I always have at least a half-hour of stretching at the end—it helps with moves like this.”

 

24 hours of love, lightsabers, and Star Wars in New York City:

 

The post Is Bojutsu the Next Fitness Craze? 5 Ab-Sculpting GIFs From a Star Wars Stunt Double appeared first on Vogue.

Predicting the 10 Big Beauty Trends of 2016: Statement Lips, Single Braids, and More

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It was the year of the half-knot, of hoverboards and pink hair—but now, with New Year’s Eve just days away, is the time to consider the bold beauty ideas that we’ll be trying next year. Our bet? That 2016 will be a year that celebrates individuality, one that calls for an unorthodox approach—think strong statement lips and daring short cuts. From shimmering blue shadow to off-kilter bangs, here are the 10 emerging trends you’ll be seeing in the months ahead.

The post Predicting the 10 Big Beauty Trends of 2016: Statement Lips, Single Braids, and More appeared first on Vogue.

Is Perfect Posture the New Six-Pack? 3 Ways to Straighten Up

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A ribbed sweater at Loewe, slashed below the collarbone. A white bolero blouse at Proenza Schouler dripping off both arms. If the Spring 2016 collections are any indication, the shoulder is the new décolletage. And much like the crop top and toned abs before it, the shoulder-baring piece brings with it a new yen: for perfect posture and the strong, straight neck and shoulders that come with it.

Acquiring the season’s most coveted pieces before they sell out will be easier than striking and holding the regal pose they require—particularly for people like myself, who spend a lot of time in front of screens. Over the years my own posture has taken on a sort of hunched resting state—with an alarmingly crooked neck. But with party season in full swing and off-the-shoulder frocks in my future, I decided it was high time I straightened myself out.

The Pilates Class

First on the list is New York Pilates’s new Soho studio, a bright white space scattered with calming  quartz crystals and potted succulents, for a private Reformer II class. Here I will attempt to fix what founder Heather Andersen refers to as “the Instagram pose”—the forward head and shoulders position common to users scrolling through the app—by building strength in my upper back and core. “It’s not a situation where you have to think about standing straight,” says Andersen. “[Pilates builds] this structure that holds you up.”

And with that I’m sent into the studio with trainer Katherine Williams for a full-body workout focused on shoulder stability. As Williams guides me through the seemingly simple exercises, I focus on stretching my chest open and squeezing my shoulder blades together, which she tells me to sink down my back “rather than letting them creep up like [you’re] sitting at a desk.” Miraculously, it works: With Williams’s gentle prompting, I become more conscious of my shoulders tensing forward and drop them during class and in the hours that follow.

The Massage

Before leaving, Andersen tells me that it’s important to stretch out my muscles before I begin strengthening them, particularly in the chest. “Once you address the tightness, your posture can change rapidly,” she says, suggesting a visit to see a massage therapist. At Haven’s new Soho spa, I meet Wanda McMonagle, who specializes in The Geek Massage, a 60-minute treatment that targets the upper back, neck, shoulders, and chest—areas affected by long hours in front of the computer. “We do a lot of these, what with everyone hunched over their desks all day,” she says. “Half of the city is walking around like Quasimodo, if you get my drift.”

After a quick evaluation, McMonagle declares me the New York normal in terms of muscle tension. “That snap, crackle, pop, those are the knots,” she says, driving a tennis-ball-like device into my shoulder blade. “The knots are adhesions that build up and push your shoulder forward, so by removing them, you improve your posture.” Next comes a series of deep chest and shoulder stretches, followed by a hot towel to relax the muscles. I feel incredibly loose. “We have to get you in here once a month, and we’ll sort you out,” she says. No arguments here.

The Posture Tracker

To carry my practice beyond the studio and massage table, I turn to Lumo Lift, a wearable posture tracker that senses when your body slouches forward and vibrates sharply in response. Though the company launched its first device two years ago—the Lumo Back, which focused on the lower back—last year’s Lumo Lift is a gadget that clips just below the collarbone. By tracking your upper torso, “[It] helps you create positive muscle memory to re-elongate your back muscles and chest and get rid of that hunched-over look,” says cofounder Monisha Perkash.

A two-minute reminder is recommended, but I set the response time to instant so that the second I begin to slouch, it buzzes. At first, it’s a fun challenge and I emerge from the day with more than seven hours of excellent posture. But before long it gets irritating. When I’m stressed, it’s soothing to crouch forward—it may be wrong, but it feels natural. I scale my Lumo use back and decide to keep my own watchful eye on the curve of my spine.

Now, over a week later, I realize that I am more aware of my body. Even without the vibrations, I pull my shoulders back more, and when I look in the mirror, my neck is lifted, straighter than it was. I made a resolution: By the time spring arrives, these shoulders will be flawless—and bare.

The post Is Perfect Posture the New Six-Pack? 3 Ways to Straighten Up appeared first on Vogue.

Who’s the Best Beauty Muse for 2016? 11 Vogue Editors on Their Icons for the Year Ahead

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beauty muses

New Year, New You—or so the saying goes. But before you dash on a bright violet lip or chop six inches off your hair, why not first give careful consideration to your muse for the months ahead? Whether you’re dreaming of pastel lengths or an extreme cat-eye, channeling one ultimate beauty icon will help keep your look grounded and focused, no matter how daring it may be. From a seductive French vampire queen to a model turned mermaid, here are 11 Vogue editor–approved choices that guarantee a knockout year.

The post Who’s the Best Beauty Muse for 2016? 11 Vogue Editors on Their Icons for the Year Ahead appeared first on Vogue.

How Kate Hudson Masters the Art of the Bold, Bare Shoulder

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kate hudson people's choice awards

Is the shoulder the new décolleté? From a look at Kate Hudson, who took the bare-shoulder trend to the red carpet with ease at tonight’s People’s Choice Awards, the answer is yes. Wearing a stark white jumpsuit that highlighted her SoCal glow, Hudson chose to forgo loose waves and statement jewelry for sleek minimalism in the form of a neat low bun that further accented her gleaming neckline. The lesson? When it comes to showing a strategic flash of skin, less is always more.

 

Photographed by Taylor Jewell

The post How Kate Hudson Masters the Art of the Bold, Bare Shoulder appeared first on Vogue.


The Exquisite Beauty of Japan’s New Year’s Geishas

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Kyoto New Year

On the stone-paved streets of Gion, a quiet district in Kyoto lined with wood-latticed teahouses, photographers captured a striking tableau today: stiff black wigs, pinned with falling orchids; white-painted necks with stripes of skin left exposed. Here, dozens of geiko (Kyoto’s geishas) had gathered in front of a 19th-century theater to celebrate the New Year with traditional dances and rounds of hanafuda, a game played with flower cards—but we were transfixed, above all, by their elaborate hair and makeup. The women sported bright red lips and alabaster skin, drawn on with a painterly hand; dustings of sakura-pink shadow around the eyes; and jeweled ornaments struck into those architectural black buns. The effect was proof of the power beauty has to transport us through time—and halfway around the world.

The post The Exquisite Beauty of Japan’s New Year’s Geishas appeared first on Vogue.

The Mad Max Effect: How Buzz Cuts, Braids, and Sweaty Skin Became an Off-Screen Phenomenon

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mad max hair

It was the year of the Star Wars triple bun, of Carol’s perfect red pout. But of all the whimsical films that inspired our beauty routines last year, Mad Max: Fury Road remains king. The quixotic, dystopian adventure—which is nominated for two Golden Globes, including Best Picture—struck all the right chords, thanks to a dynamic cast of women whose impact would eventually make its way to the street, the runways, and back again. And from Charlize Theron’s radical crop to Zoë Kravitz’s ethereal glow, here are five Mad Max beauty moments that went from the big screen to the mainstream. Who knew life in a desert wasteland could look so cool?

 

The post The Mad Max Effect: How Buzz Cuts, Braids, and Sweaty Skin Became an Off-Screen Phenomenon appeared first on Vogue.

The 21 Best Golden Globe Beauty Looks of All Time

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Cher

Since the first informal ceremony in 1944, the Golden Globe Awards have become a night for Hollywood to hang loose—a chance for television and film stars to hit the red carpet together, sporting playful hair and makeup that, looking back, have become a benchmark of beauty by decade. See the ’70s glamour of Anjelica Huston, a white flower pinned into her dark hair and a young Jack Nicholson in tow, or Drew Barrymore fearlessly defining the ’90s with a flipped bob and pencil-thin brows. Unlike at the Oscars, there’s no playing it safe—and that has made the Globes’s hair and makeup moments all the more compelling. From Grace Kelly’s sleek ’50s bun to Lupita Nyong’o’s ethereal skin, here are 21 standout looks that prove that risk-taking beauty is timeless.

The post The 21 Best Golden Globe Beauty Looks of All Time appeared first on Vogue.

The Best On-Screen Makeovers and Make-Unders From This Year’s Golden Globes

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Tilda Swinton

From Charlize Theron’s Monster moment to Nicole Kidman’s prosthetic nose in The Hours, a startling on-screen transformation is a guaranteed way to grab attention—and the awards season nods that come with it. This year’s Golden Globe nominees are no different: take January Vogue cover star Alicia Vikander, who replaced her soft brown waves with a metallic dome to play Ex Machina’s sci-fi siren, or Theron (again), who built up her biceps and shaved her head for Mad Max: Fury Road’s post-apocalyptic adventure. Their looks packed a punch, both on- and off-screen—though perhaps none were as shocking as Tilda Swinton in Trainwreck, who went, of all things, basic.

Not to be left out, this year’s Best Actor nominees, too, gamely played with their hair and wore makeup. In The Danish Girl, Eddie Redmayne transformed completely to tell the story of transgender artist Lili Elbe, wearing a beautiful auburn wig; Christian Bale, on the other hand, suffered a terrible bowl cut for The Big Short. But it was Leonardo DiCaprio who went all in for The Revenant, stepping fully into the 19th century: eating raw bison liver, fording frozen rivers, and growing an insane wilderness beard. It doesn’t get much more extreme than that.

 

The post The Best On-Screen Makeovers and Make-Unders From This Year’s Golden Globes appeared first on Vogue.

Golden Globes 2016: The 13 Best Beauty Looks on the Red Carpet

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Photo: Getty Images

Photo: Getty Images

The Golden Globes 2016 red carpet tonight saw its fair share of classic updos and striking red lips, but the evening’s best beauty looks played with convention. Brie Larson, nominated for her star-making turn in Room, made a bold metallic statement against the carpet’s green backdrop with long blonde strands and sun-kissed skin that matched her Calvin Klein Collection column. Kate Hudson, too, showed up in head-to-toe gold, including her soft waves and shimmering lids, while Vogue’s January cover girl Alicia Vikander shone in a white Louis Vuitton pinafore flattered by an au naturel glow, cementing her reputation as Hollywood’s freshest face.

Elsewhere, Emilia Clarke wore an elegant half-up hairdo that felt romantic in its simplicity—and offered an unexpected departure from the standard red carpet blowout. She wasn’t the only actress to do so: Zoe Kazan unveiled a graphic blonde bob that immediately caught our eye, while Olivia Wilde reinvented the ultra-low ponytail via loose pieces unfurled around her face. But it was Rooney Mara’s geometric single braid, pulled tight and worn high, that really turned heads—the kind of risk-taking beauty we hope to see more of this awards season.

 

 

Here’s how a Vogue Editor does the Golden Globes:

 

The post Golden Globes 2016: The 13 Best Beauty Looks on the Red Carpet appeared first on Vogue.

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