Saturday, June 5, 2010

PS


2010 started fairly quietly however thanks to many wonderful client referrals, there have now been more workshops than this time last year. Recently a brief mention in the Herald on Sunday followed by a photo and item in the BOP Times led to even more enquiries and bookings.

Meanwhile, we're waiting to hear of the arrival of grand-child number 3 (Cherie & Ben's second). We're going to visit them on the Gold Coast; really looking forward to some family time together and giving the new mum a hand (they'll be heading back to Cambodia towards the end of the year).

M

now on FaceBook

Personal Style now has a FaceBook page: www.facebook.com/personalstylenz

If you're a FaceBook member, please 'like' my page (it helps build my internet profile) and you can get the brief updates automatically.

Subsidised Workshops

The Katikati Resource Centre is hosting Personal Style Small Group Workshops AND they're heavily subsidised (only $20!!). Only two more are planned for 2010 - Saturday 14th August and 20th November. Phone them early to book your place on 07 549 0399

Looking Slim

continuing a series based around Leah Feldon's 10 Rules for Dressing Slim. Her Top Ten are all covered in the Personal Style Workshops.
Rule 9 Don't Let Your Accessories Bring You Down (part 3)

Hair can be your shining glory or a horror story; it's always there for everyone to see (no wonder bad hair days are so depressing)

While hair can't make you look fat it can change your face shape, influence how tall/short you look, and affect your overall proportion and balance.

The ideal style is compatible with your body type, face shape, hair texture, facial features, lifestyle and personality.

Be persistent and find a good stylist, it may cost more but it's worth it (you could settle on the perfect style then alternate between the maestro and someone less expensive).

If you see someone with a great cut and similar hair texture, ask her who cuts her hair - she'll probably be flattered and happy to tell you.
my stylist is Beks at B.Hair ph 07 571 4603
  • Do take into account your head size (you can't change it)
  • Your hairstyle needs to be consistent with your style personality
  • Don't get stuck in the past; your face changes as you age so your style needs to too
  • Think proportions: if you're small be wary of big-volume hair whereas big women need volume.
An asymmetrical style can make you look taller as the angle brings the eye up.

Hair-styles which show the neck create an elongating line (especially important if you have a short neck). Keep knots and chignons relatively high rather than low (as that creates a horizontal line in profile).

Long straight centre-parted hair pulls the face down, side parts are more flattering.

Identical Twins

from a UK fashion stylist

I had known the twins for around ten years ... they were utterly beautiful girls. Their father was Italian and they had inherited his Mediterranean dark eyes and curly darkest-brown hair. And for ten years no-one I knew, apart from their mother, had ever been able to tell them apart on a consistent basis.

I dressed them both in custard yellow and then got a real shock. One of them looked absolutely ghastly while the other sister look perfectly wonderful. I got out my drapes and discovered, to my total amazement, that the one who looked fantastic was an Autumn and the one who didn't was a Winter.

I had assumed they would be exactly the same season ... big mistake! One I have never repeated.