I'm in Las Vegas for the ShoWest Festival. It's been a whirlwind since the Oscars and I've been traveling so much. I just shot upcoming covers of L'Officiel and Harper's Bazaar, as well as Makeovers for Us Weekly. I had so much fun doing the makeovers and I loved reading their stories. Check out this week's issue of Us Weekly for all the details and photos.
Get the Look: Amy Adams Oscar Hairstyle
I first applied Biolage Volumizing Whipped Mousse to her damp hair and blow dried with a Spornette Mixed Bristle Round Brush. Then I took 2 inch sections of her hair and sprayed Matrix Vavoom Gold Heat Iron-In Control Protective Dry Mist to the hair and curled each section with a 1 1/4" HAI elite Rod Curling Iron. I secured each curl with a hair clip and let the hair set while Molly did Amy's makeup.
After her makeup was finished, I took out all the hair clips and brushed out the hair. Next, I took some Biolage Molding Soufflé in my hands and raked it through her hair to break up the curl and create some texture. It was a completely modern take on a classic hairstyle. The texture is what kept the hair looking fresh and young throughout the evening.
Visit welovebeauty.com for more info on Amy's look and on my favorite hair accessories.
Comments
i have a few questions that i am trying to find some anwsers to for a senior project. maybe if you have any sort of anwsers to these that you can e-mail me back with some anwsers. thanks.
1. Why do men seem to normally shy away from the salon atmosphere?
2. What can salons that aren't exclusive to one sex or another attract men?
3. Does having an all women staff seem to attract more men than if you had a man working there?
4. Are there diffrent ways to handle a male client rather than a women client?
5. Does having an exclusive salon to men work better than haveing both sexes in the same atmosphere?
Posted by: Pamela Parks at March 28, 2008 03:50 PM
I'm a new owner and new stylist at a salon where I work by myself. Do you have any advice on how to make blond highlights more natural and closer to the scalp. I feel like everytime I do hightlights they seem to already look a little grown out. Any advice?
Comments
i have a few questions that i am trying to find some anwsers to for a senior project. maybe if you have any sort of anwsers to these that you can e-mail me back with some anwsers. thanks.
1. Why do men seem to normally shy away from the salon atmosphere?
2. What can salons that aren't exclusive to one sex or another attract men?
3. Does having an all women staff seem to attract more men than if you had a man working there?
4. Are there diffrent ways to handle a male client rather than a women client?
5. Does having an exclusive salon to men work better than haveing both sexes in the same atmosphere?
Posted by: Pamela Parks at March 28, 2008 03:50 PM
I'm a new owner and new stylist at a salon where I work by myself. Do you have any advice on how to make blond highlights more natural and closer to the scalp. I feel like everytime I do hightlights they seem to already look a little grown out. Any advice?
Posted by: Stephanie Steere at April 3, 2008 04:09 AM
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