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Scalp Care: Skin-Inspired Hair Products for Healthier Strands

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Scalp Care: Skin-Inspired Hair Products for Healthier Strands

To say that Augustinus Bader has disrupted the skin-care space would be an understatement. Surely you know the story by now: Building on more than 30 years of research, Bader, a German stem cell and biomedical scientist, launched 2018’s The Cream—a facial moisturizer based on his groundbreaking hydrogel, which activates regeneration of the body’s own stem cells and allows some burn patients to forgo skin grafts—and built a cult following virtually overnight. So naturally, when the brand announced it would be applying its revolutionary, science-led approach to hair care, we were full of intrigue. It’s certainly a marker of the burgeoning “skinification” of hair, i.e., the industry’s shift toward all-encompassing scalp care to sustain stronger, healthier-looking strands.

Augustinus Bader The Scalp Treatment

Augustinus Bader The Hair Oil

“We’re not a skin-care brand, we’re a technology platform,” says Charles Rosier, CEO of Augustinus Bader. “Skin care was just the easiest way to start.”  Because hair concerns can be heavily affected by a number of factors like stress and hormonal imbalances, he insists that it “may be even more complex than skin health.” But leave it to Bader himself to crack the code—and do so in characteristically mold-breaking fashion. The Augustinus Bader Hair Collection, which includes a shampoo, conditioner, scalp treatment, hair oil, and leave-in treatment, is formulated with Bader’s patented TFC-8 or Trigger Factor Complex, made from natural amino acids, vitamins, and synthesized molecules naturally found in skin to activate the body’s stem cells, supporting cellular renewal. “The theory about aging that’s behind [our skin-care] developments is that we have less and less access to repairing environments—the cells that sit on the scalp also need a healthy environment,” explains Bader. “It’s as if the stem cells behind your body are behind a steering wheel and they decide where they want to go. We’re just giving them a roadmap. They have the knowledge.” According to Rosier, optimizing the cellular environment boils down to nurturing overall hair health for “stronger hair that will have better texture, better shine, and better resistance to environmental pollutants, coloring, and heat styling.”

Dr. Barbara Sturm Anti-Fall Scalp Serum

Dr. Barbara Sturm Super Anti-Aging Shampoo

As Bader, the man and the brand, pioneers new research and innovation into the hair-care space, another science-powered launch from a major player in the skin-care arena comes from German molecular scientist and aesthetics doctor Barbara Sturm, who today launches her molecular hair care collection with three core lines—Balancing, Super Anti-Aging, and Anti-Hair Fall—each featuring a targeted shampoo, conditioner, and scalp serum powered by a number of base ingredients, like soothing and moisture-boosting panthenol and strengthening purslane (which Sturm has dubbed the “fountain of youth enzyme”), to support the scalp microbiome and in turn encourage healthy, beautiful hair.

“We often overlook our scalp and don’t give it the same attention as our faces and bodies, but the scalp is an extension of our skin,” explains Sturm, stressing that this especially pertains to aging hair. “Though the hair on the scalp offers varying degrees of protection, the scalp ages in the same way the skin does—involving both biological factors and damage-related factors, including internal and environmental assaults, such as UV and growing pollution levels.” New York City trichologist Bridgette Hill calls attention to the effects of hair coloring and other in-salon chemical treatments on the scalp. “The impact of aging and chemical services affects the tissues and cells required for protein synthesis, the building of hair fiber and the structures and functions of the scalp that support our hair follicles and hair fibers,” explains Hill, who encourages her clients to build scalp awareness and restore proper vitamins and nourishment to the scalp and hair fiber by making dedicated scalp care a regular, well-honed ritual.

Drunk Elephant T.L.C. Happi Scalp Scrub

Drunk Elephant Laini Latherless Conditioning Co-Cleanser

Nécessaire The Conditioner

While luxury skin-care companies are disrupting hair care, other coveted but more accessible next-generation brands are also getting into the game. In 2020, Drunk Elephant launched four clean core hair products with skin-loving ingredients, and the brand just unveiled its pH-balanced Laini Latherless cleansing conditioner, laced with scalp-supporting ingredients like argan and sacha inchi seed oils. Nécessaire entered the space over the summer with a plant-powered, fragrance-free Scalp Duo featuring ingredients like moisturizing aloe vera leaf juice and antioxidant-rich niacinamide.

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From the Met Gala to Custom Engagement Rings, Evangeline AdaLioryn’s Jewelry Is Turning Heads

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From the Met Gala to Custom Engagement Rings, Evangeline AdaLioryn’s Jewelry Is Turning Heads

In September, at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, the actress Hunter Schafer walked onto the red carpet as if it were a rocket to the moon. Styled by Law Roach for the 2021 Met Gala, the Euphoria star wore a metallic midriff-baring two-piece ensemble inspired by Prada’s spring 1999 collection, featuring a curved corset top and an ankle-length skirt inlaid with rectangular jewels arranged like the diodes and fuses on a circuit board.

The cyborg look was a standout, calling to mind the dystopian dreams of American retrofuturism, but what really got folks talking was the nearly fist-sized chunk of metal shimmering between her pupils, which were veiled by white contact lenses: On the bridge of Schafer’s nose rested a massive, many-tendrilled white-gold brooch by the rising Los Angeles-based designer Evangeline AdaLioryn, held in place by invisible wires tied to hidden braids and a dollop of special effects glue. Cradled at its center was a gigantic aquamarine, which seemed to absorb the light of the surrounding flash photography like vital life energy or a generator.

Hunter Shafer at the 2021 Met Gala wearing a connecting bracelets for lovers, piece of facial jewelry by Evangeline AdaLioryn

This moment marked the splashy world debut of AdaLioryn’s namesake jewelry line which, in addition to brooches as big as your face, also includes intricately hand-carved rings and earrings that often clutch sparkling oversized gemstones. “Hunter is one of my best friends, my sister, and someone that has always supported my work so deeply,” the designer says. The two were introduced by a mutual friend in early 2019 on the night of a lunar eclipse, and in many ways, their collaboration at the Met Gala felt written in the stars: They had begun envisioning the stunt over a year prior. Even so, AdaLioryn could never have foreseen Schafer’s delightfully irreverent placement of the pin, until she received a text message with a selfie from the actress as she was getting into hair and makeup the evening of the opening.

“It was such a gag,” AdaLioryn says. “I just FaceTimed her, and I was like, ‘Bitch, what?!’” It was a simple, last-minute decision, and yet the choice to present the shield front-and-center, and on a platform as watched as the Met Gala, made for a radical statement of sisterhood. “That brooch could have gone anywhere—in the center of her chest, on the back of the top—and it would’ve had a different power. When she put that brooch on her face, it centralized the piece and made it huge,” she says. “It shows how much she cares about the works that she wields, and about trans women making work, and that magic that we all possess.”

Photo: Courtesy of Evangeline AdaLioryn

There was a bit of magic involved, certainly, but there were also years of tireless work on the part of the 28-year-old artist, who put a beautifully manicured hand to nearly every medium imaginable along the way. Hailing from a town in Minnesota where “the land reflects the sky,” AdaLioryn studied photography at California Institute of the Arts in Santa Clarita, and during that time, she would often sew her own dresses for ritualistic performances. In 2017, she began “touching ceramics,” she says, as if to imply her porcelain vessels and clay wall hangings are not made but brought into existence by some divine intervention. There may be some truth to that, too: The ideas for the fly trap-shaped vases she made in the years that followed, and the stoneware sigils inscribed with personal prayers, appear to her in surreal visions.

“When I started taking estrogen, bitch, mermaids came right to me and were coming into my dreams,” she says. “And every time I’d go to the ocean, I would close my eyes and I could see them. They started communicating with me.” Soon after, she began molding her sculpture The Pearl Eater (2021), an exquisite, eight-foot self-portrait of sorts with a stoneware fishtail and cascades of black baroque keshi pearls. Currently showing in a solo exhibition at Hunter Shaw Fine Art in L.A., the artwork’s focal point is a plaster rendering of AdaLioryn’s head, which she cast prior to undergoing a gender-affirming surgery that would alter her visage forever. “It was the last offering to my old face,” she says.

The sea continues to rule her thoughts and, by extension, the jewels she fashions. In 2019, after taking a series of classes at Precious Metal Arts in Santa Monica, she began translating the horn, spike, and bow shapes that defined her ceramics practice to wearable works. The anemone-esque brooch Schafer wore to the Met Gala, for example, looks almost like a jagged fin, while the band of one ring with a diamond-cut tourmaline is formed as if to resemble the hard, pointed edges of coral. “You lose a lot of people when you transition and … I’m always wondering how you can hold onto things more. Those tendrils, that’s what you get stuck on. That’s what snags on things and holds the ribbons and threads.”

All of her pieces are big, made to be seen and, especially, to last. For AdaLioryn, that was the initial appeal of the craft, the longevity of a well-formed pendant or bangle. “It’s so beautiful to have these strong alloys that you can’t break with your hands, that will even carve into your bone, perhaps, rather than breaking,” she says. Of course, the cost of precious metals and gemstones, and thus the price of entry, are high; the artist has at times subsidized her various art practices with part-time hosting gigs at local restaurants. But AdaLioryn has the invaluable support of her community, like Darius Khonsary, the designer behind the fine jewelry brand Darius Jewels, to whom she has sometimes turned for advice and encouragement. “I remember showing her the [first] ring that I was working on, and she was like, ‘Bitch, if you don’t cast that in 18-karat fucking gold…,’” she says. “And I did. That’s my rubellite mermaid ring. It’s solid, it’s heavy, and it changed my life.”

The wax mold for that band was slowly carved into shape in AdaLioryn’s home studio in Hollywood, where she whittles down her creations using an assortment of dental tools, saws, and X-Acto knives. She often works at night with a lone candle burning at a wooden desk littered with antique bronze sculptures and a book of poems by the American writer Henry Wadsworth Longfellow (who wrote an epic, Evangeline: A Tale of Acadie, that shares her name), and always while wearing heels: Lately, it’s been a pair of calfskin pumps from Balenciaga.

“We’re talking birthing luxury in the world,” she quips. “You need to be starting from that point of feeling luxury!” From there, she’s also planning the release of her first collection of yellow-gold pieces speckled with Ceylon-blue sapphires, deep-red garnets, and pink tourmalines that she describes as “mermaid candy.” A fan of Studio Ghibli films, AdaLioryn says her latest series reminds her of the villainess in the 2001 animated feature Spirited Away, Yubaba, a witch whose sense of faded glamour is matched only by her greed, and whose wrinkled fingers explode with stacks of hefty gemstones.

Photo: Courtesy of Evangeline AdaLioryn

More often, though, AdaLioryn works on commission from friends and a select roster of in-the-know clients, with whom she collaborates closely, often imbuing the gold with thoughts and prayers. “I ask people for their intentions. I ask what energy they’re trying to bring in their life, and I really meditate with it,” she says. “And honestly, their rings come to me in dreams, too.” She recently completed a ring inset with a rectangular rubellite for the actor Bobbi Salvör Menuez to gift to their partner, the artist Quori Theodor, to toast their engagement. Before sending it off, AdaLioryn ran the band through a flame burning from the candle on her desk, a final testament to its lasting power and immortal beauty. “It feels like magic,” AdaLioryn says. “Creating a gold halo to go around someone’s finger, and just to protect them, to guide them, to love them through whatever phases in their life, and to be passed along. [It’s a] sacred spell because, one day, it will outlast us.”

Chella Man, Indya Moore, Gisele Bundchen, and More Leaders Celebrate the First-Ever Renaissance Awards

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Chella Man, Indya Moore, Gisele Bundchen, and More Leaders Celebrate the First-Ever Renaissance Awards

Honoring cultural luminaries of all sorts through a digital show, the first-ever Renaissance Awards took place this past week. Brought to audiences by Eco-Age and Pulse Films, the award show was presented through a decorative film set at the iconic Palazzo Vecchio in Florence. Augmented reality and special effects played a supporting role to the evening’s presenters, which included Nile Rodgers, Colin Firth, Gisele Bundchen, Ahad Raza Mir, and Annie Lennox. Ben Harper treated audiences to a serene guitar performance towards the end of the show.  

“A renaissance is made up of a lot of ideas—contagious ideas that spread and infect others, that grow, to make up an irreversible shift. This year the Renaissance Awards reflect a reimagining, rebuilding, and reframing of such scale and opportunity that there is an obvious parallel,” says Livia Firth, creative director & co-founder of Eco-Age.

The new age that Firth is alluding to expands beyond the arts. Instead, it encompasses young thought leaders that are working to create a world that is socially just, economically inclusive, environmentally restorative, and technologically balanced. Presented by actress and model Indya Moore, the premiere Renaissance Awards Digital Creator title was awarded to LGBTQ+ activist Chella Man. “I feel so appreciated and understood. The world that I’m striving towards exists at this moment,” Chella Man said.

Alongside recognizing innovation, the awards show also replaced physical statuettes with non-fungible tokens donated to each winner by strategic partner method.

As a digital green carpet followed the ceremony featuring stars like Julianne Moore and Stanely Tucci, one couldn’t help but be excited for this dawn of a new age. 

Watch the awards here.

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Fleur Du Mal Celebrates Its Los Angeles Flagship Opening With A Game of Never Have I Ever

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Fleur Du Mal Celebrates Its Los Angeles Flagship Opening With A Game of Never Have I Ever

If it were up to Fleur Du Mal designer Jennifer Zuccarini, last night’s festivities might have taken the form of an unexpected block party. Instead, for obvious precautionary reasons, Zuccarini, co-host Langley Fox, and an intimate lot of friends of the lingerie brand spent the evening blissfully tucked away under the iridescent poolside patio lighting of West Hollywood’s new restaurant Issima for a belated celebration of the brand’s first West Coast store opening.

After moments mingling over cocktails, guests, including Gillian Jacobs, Dree Hemingway, Grace Johnson, Mimi Cuttrell, and Heidi Bivens were met at their tables with a candle-lit tablescape bearing gifts. Thoughtfully placed among the marble-backdropped arrangement were lace eye masks, a variation of silk thong and bikini style underwear (discreetly packaged in tiny boxes labeled “Fleur Du Mal essentiels”), and a first look at the brand’s handheld Never Have I Ever game, which was enough to keep a few attendees hooked until closing time. The display rang true to Zuccarini’s pursuit of shifting the way women approach lingerie and the idea of sexy, an apt way to solidify the brand’s new flagship location in the heart of the free-spirited city.

“I like having a cultural hub,” Zuccarini tells Vogue on why she set up shop right off of Melrose Avenue after a three-year hunt for a new location to complement the New York store. It’s a welcomed celebration of femininity alongside streetwear boutiques such as Palace, or less sensual ready-to-wear such as Ganni. “I always think about how we’re making a woman feel. I design things that give you a confidence boost, even if no one else is around.” The proof of a mission well executed is in Gillian Jacobs’s takeaway observation of the night: That attendees were giddy and felt good in the brand’s signature silks and bias cuts. And it didn’t take a block party to have a grand time. 

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With the Launch of Neiman Marcus’ Christmas Book, The Holidays Have Officially Begun

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With the Launch of Neiman Marcus’ Christmas Book, The Holidays Have Officially Begun

It would be fitting that Neiman Marcus should have its Los Angeles debut celebration for the 95th edition of their annual holiday Christmas Book during a week of 80-degree temperatures, but if you don’t come to LA for the weather, you’re missing the point. 

Indeed, after last year’s pandemic-enforced plateau of holiday events, Neiman’s took advantage of the venue with their holiday rollout, themed “Celebrate Big, Love Even Bigger,” which took place last night and outdoors at Hollywood’s Paramount Studios. 

“Each year, we spend eight months creating and sourcing the gifts that will go into the Christmas Book,” said Daz McColl, the brand’s Chief Marketing Officer. “It starts with the fantasy gifts, and then we curate a collection of other items inspired by them.” 

Surrounding the perimeter, “boxes” housed such over-the-top fantasy gifts that included a Bronson van Wyck–created, roaring ‘20s party at the Apollo for you and 19 of your closest friends ($395,000) and a trip to Portugal to design your own bespoke fine porcelain place setting for 12 with Vista Alegre ($80,000), while around the corner was a Barrett-Jackson Hummer EV Edition 1 ($285,000), proving the ‘90s really are back in fashion. 

“I’m really thinking about gifting experiences this year,” said Lisa Aiken, Neiman Marcus SVP fashion & lifestyle director. “I’d love to not just buy my mom a gift but take her for a day of shopping at the store and letting her choose something. It’s about spending time together.” 

Also among the countless gifts on display and in this year’s holiday book are an assortment of fashions, finds, and furnishings for everyone on your list. A few of the highlights, sorting by price, high to low: a 30.86-carat Mughal Heart Diamond ($6.1 million); a ski trip to Jackson Hole’s Caldera House with Lindsey Vonn ($235,00); sequined Dolce & Gabbana boots for him ($2,645); Byredo’s new Mumbai Noise ($270); Vietri’s handpainted ceramic nutcracker cheeseboard ($170); and Neiman Marcus’ own dark chocolate–covered potato crisps ($22).  

The evening’s hosts, Ted Lasso’s Juno Temple and Phil Dunster, each had their own selects. “My partner and I are moving into a new house, and I’ve been spending an ungodly amount of time looking at crockery, so the Portugal trip is really speaking to me,” said Dunster. “I never thought I’d put crockery on my Christmas list, but I’m seeing dinnerware as something really great this year.” 

“I love little things,” said Temple, wearing a Dior jacket, McQueen dress, and Versace boots. “This little Versace bag [which is also part of the Christmas Book] is the best one I’ve seen. It even fits my mini highlighter and blush, and a really mini mascara and lipstick.” 

With celebrating and gifting in mind, we asked everyone what some of their favorite gifts were from the previous years: “I once got a guitar. I had this silly notion that if I could play and sing that girls would fall in love with me. Once I realized that didn’t work, I just learned to play and loved it,” said Dunster. 

 “I love jewelry, but one of the best gifts was actually a jewelry box my mom got me,” said Aiken. “My wife got me socks with little rubber dots on the bottom last year, and they were absolutely fantastic for working from home,” said McColl. 

As the night went on, DJ Alexandra Richards spun upbeat tunes (no Mariah Carey holiday album), while guests browsed gifts before there was a live performance of the holiday campaign video, choreographed by the Emmy-award-winning Al Blackstone. 

Also in attendance: London Hughes, Jessica Wang, Julie Sarinana, Stormi Bree, Brad Goreski, Slick Woods, and Lisa Rinna, who ignored the weather—but not the holiday vibe—and stunned in head-to-toe red with a McQueen puffer and slinky dress paired with glittery Balenciaga boots.  

“You can really see tonight in the way everyone is dressed that people are looking to celebrate more this year,” said McColl. “Just the fact that we’re all together in person this year is worthy of celebration.” 

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Merck’s COVID pill is factory ready—but only with the FDA’s approval

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Merck’s COVID pill is factory ready—but only with the FDA’s approval

Overseas, two pills are being studied as treatments for severe COVID-19 symptoms. stevepb/PixabayWhat you need to know in COVID-19 news this Halloweekend.
The post Merck’s COVID pill is factory ready—but only with the FDA’s approval appeared first on Popular Science…
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Worried about COVID vaccine side effects? Try this simple trick.

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Worried about COVID vaccine side effects? Try this simple trick.

There’s reason to think that looking on the bright side could improve your COVID vaccine experience. Eye for Ebony via UnsplashHaving a positive mindset about side effects could have surprising benefits.
The post Worried about COVID vaccine side effects? Try this simple trick. appeared first on Popular Science…
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Michelle Obama set to guest star on final season of Black-ish

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Michelle Obama set to guest star on final season of Black-ish

Michelle Obama will guest star on the final season of the Black-ish sitcom.

The news was announced on Thursday via the show’s official Instagram account, where the former First Lady can be seen posing with cast members, including Anthony Anderson, Tracee Ellis Ross, and Yara Shahidi, on Sept.

“#blackish is going all out for the final season! We are honored to have trailblazer @michelleobama

The Becoming author shared the news on her Instagram Stories, writing, “I’ve long been a fan of @blackishabc’s wit and all-around brilliance, and it was such a thrill to join in an episode. I can ‘t wait for you all to see it!”

In May, show creator Kenya Barris announced that the Emmy-nominated sitcom would end after eight seasons.

“To ALL the people in the world I love, honor, respect and care for it is both exciting and bittersweet to share that black-ish has been RENEWED by ABC for it’s EIGHTH… and FINAL SEASON (sic) ,” he wrote on Instagram.

“In this day and age it is rare to get to decide when your show should come to an end,” Barris continued. “We are grateful along with ABC to be able to make this final season exactly what we’d hoped for (sic) and to do it with the entire and AMAZINGLY STELLAR cast coming back to close this chapter out with us the right way!”

The final season is set to premiere in 2022.

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