A Swiss Super-lab Says It Has Put The World’s Most Potent Anti-pigmentation Ingredient In A Jar: Intense Illumination For All Ages. Hype, Just Like Before? Tracey Withers Shines A Light
ANYTIME anyone comes at me with a skin cream worth $895, I’m going to have questions. But first I’m going to want it all over my face. So now the esteemed Swiss lab of La Prairie has announced White Caviar Crème Extraordinaire, an intensively luxe crème moisturiser, billing it the most powerful pigmentation eraser on the market, I’m putting in a call to the Sydney HQ. The latte-coloured and intervention-resistant ‘truckie tan’ that splotches up the right side of my face, right where UV blasts through my driver’s side window, and I have been promised miracles before. I’m going to need a face- (mine) to-fingers (hers) meeting with Belinda Besant, the training manager who teaches La Prairie facialists how to put jar-trapped science into action. I’m all ready, a headband holding my fringe back, Belinda. Show me the money.
“We’re not just taking on the surface level of pigmentation,” Besant says, setting up for the mini facial you can get at department store booths. “The new ingredient only in Crème Extraordinaire, Lumidose, is the most powerful active we have for stopping melanin pigment, which becomes age spots, down in the cell where it’s made.”
Denne historien er fra May 2018-utgaven av Harper's Bazaar Australia.
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Denne historien er fra May 2018-utgaven av Harper's Bazaar Australia.
Start din 7-dagers gratis prøveperiode på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av utvalgte premiumhistorier og 9000+ magasiner og aviser.
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Grounded In Gotham
As she acclimatises to life under lockdown in her adopted city, model Victoria Lee reflects on fear, family and the fortitude of New Yorkers
Woman Of Influence Ingrid Weir
With a knack for elevating creative yet quotidian spaces and a love of bringing people together, the interior designer is crafting a sense of community among young artists.
CODE of HONOUR
At Chanel’s latest Métiers d’art showing, house alums Vanessa Paradis and daughter Lily-Rose Depp reflect on the red-carpet alchemy of Coco’s beloved bow, chain, camellia and ear of wheat.
Stillness in time
Acclaimed Australian fashion designer Collette Dinnigan’s new life in Italy has been a slowing down of sorts — but now, with coronavirus containment measures in play, life inside the walls of her 500-year-old farmhouse in Puglia has taken on a different cast, she writes
In the BAG
Aussie expat Vanissa Antonious from cult footwear brand Neous on going solo and stepping up her accessory offering.
uncut GEMMA
Forging her own path while paying it forward to the next generation, actor Gemma Chan is the (very worthy) recipient of the 2020 Women In Film Max Mara Face of the Future Award. She reflects on fashion, the Crazy Rich Asians phenomenon and red-carpet alter egos with Eugenie Kelly
THE TIME IS NOW
Esse Studios founder Charlotte Hicks’s slow-fashion model may just blaze a trail for the industry’s new normal. She talks less is more with Katrina Israel
COUPLES' THERAPY
Brooke Le Poer Trench ruminates on the trials and tribulations of too much time together
CALM IN A CRISIS
Caroline Welch was a busy woman who wrote a book on mindfulness for other busy women. Now, in the midst of a worldwide pandemic, she has started to take her own advice
ACCIDENTALLY RETIRED
As we settle into the new normal of lockdown, Kirstie Clements finds a silver lining in the excuse to slow down and sample the low-adrenaline lifestyle of chocolate digestives, board games and dressing down for dinner