Mar 17, 2009

Toxic Beauty - Campbell Live, TV3, March 16th




'Synthetic chemicals in our skincare.' 'Harmful toxins in beauty products.'

Saying that parabens have been found in breast tissue is kind of like passing on that hypey, scaremongering email you received as a forward in your inbox.



I've decided not to write a response to Toxic Beauty here: how synthetic ingredients can actually be safer than natural ones, why parabens aren't evil (or at least have little conclusive evidence against them) and the fact that EVERYTHING ON EARTH has chemicals in it, because, why reinvent the wheel?

Paula Begoun has decades of experience and research behind her in the field of cosmetics: the science and the ingredients in them. I'm happy to recommend her website where you can read hundreds of balanced and fascinating articles on this very topic. You could start with this article on 'natural' ingredients.

The Beauty Brains in another fave of mine. They are female cosmetic scientists who apply science to every beauty-related question and product they come across, then dish the dirt to their readers. Posing dilemmas like Why You Should Be Suspicious Of Beauty Authorities, Does Origins Skin Care Open Your Pores?, Can Saliva Cure Acne? and The Top 5 Reasons Skin Care Products Stop Working, they can help you avoid the marketing 'BS' so common in the beauty industry.

Go there now! I promise you'll thank me. :-)

Mar 15, 2009

Bling Evening Fundraiser

My colleague, Margaret Stodart from Person Style, is speaking at a fundraiser for 'FABS Awhi Awhi'. FABS work in the area of providing proven programmes aimed at early intervention of child abuse. They're holding a Bling Evening at 7pm, Thursday March 26th in the Totara Room at Bureta Park. You can help in two ways: If you have jewellery you no longer wear & you'd like to donate it then please phone Lee on 573 8636 or Pam on 549 0724 or Augustina, 552 5295. And/or you can come to the evening. Tickets include a complimentary glass of wine and are $15. As well as the pre-loved jewellery sale, there'll be music, face reading and colour and style advice from Margaret. You can visit Margaret's website here.

Mar 13, 2009

Friend me!




Are you on facebook? Or tweeting on Twitter? Or just online? (You obviously ARE if you're reading this blog). ;-)

And have you been looking for a makeup artist to use on your wedding day?

What better way to 'meet' a new potential makeup artist than *online* from the comfort of your home (or perhaps while slacking off at work)!?! You may have already checked me out via my website:

www.abeautifuleducation.co.nz

If not, I invite you to do that now.

But you can go ONE STEP FURTHER and stay in touch with what I'm up to in the world of makeup, see photos of me & my work and even have a conversation online, by adding me as a friend on Facebook (www.facebook.com) and/or, if you're real savvy, following me on Twitter (www.twitter.com).

So, friend me! Hit me up - I'm good for it, and if you tell me you found me through my blog, I'll be sure to add you too.

Instant bonus! You get another friend or follower AND you can suss me out in real time before booking my services as a makeup artist. I know how important it is to feel confident your face and beauty is in expert hands. Do I know my stuff or am I just another wannabe in the beauty industry wearing too much makeup? See for yourself!

Join the Facebook page of 'A Beautiful Education'

Follow me on Twitter

With much love (and all the best for your wedding planning),

xx

Lillybeth
Makeup Artist
Makeup Coach
www.abeautifuleducation.co.nz

Mar 11, 2009

NATIO's Paraben Hypocrisy


Walking past the pharmacy in Tauranga Hospital, I was (rather easily!) enticed off my path and into the store when I noticed the pretty stand of NATIO cosmetics. A relatively new brand, NATIO is a reasonably priced "bridge-brand"; designed to fill the gap between supermarket and department store brands. Natio's tagline is "Natural Australian Beauty", although in the FAQ on their website you can read the following:

Quote:

Q: Are Natio products 100% natural?

A: Natio creates skincare and cosmetics that combine the best of nature and science. We use botanical extracts instead of mineral oils, and pure essential oils to fragrance the products. We also avoid animal testing and ingredients derived from animals. However, we do use the best compounded stabilizers to ensure that our products reaches you without contamination and remains pure until your very last drop.

End quote.

In other words, the answer is 'no.' But that's OK! 'Natural' doesn't equal 'better' or 'safer'. So let's see what stabilisers they are refering to here...

What they refer to here as 'stabilisers' are chemical preservatives they use in their products, predominantly from the group of chemicals called parabens. Parabens have gotten a bad rap in recent years-but most of it without conclusive scientific evidence- so as far as we know, they're not all bad. In fact, if a product isn't preserved somehow, it would last as long as a forgotten banana in the staffroom fridge, become susceptible to bacteria, fungus and mould and make you sick.

( You can read what 'the Cosmetics Cop', Paula Begoun, has to say on parabens. She explains the fears and the reality HERE)

So why then does the display for their mineral loose powder foundation say:


NATIO Mineral Loose Foundation.

PURE

No parabens, No talc...(and something else I can't remember, perhaps no synthetic dyes or something).

See!??! No Parabens!

So I go around the counter to the shelves of skin care, pick up a night time moisturiser, quickly scan the label and find methylparaben and a couple of other parabens listed in the ingredients! The same is found to be true for the eye cream and other products.

WHY, Oh, WHY would they make a 'no paraben' claim a selling point for their foundation, when they add parabens to their skin care products?

Marketing products like this is simply hypocritical.

The way they advertise this product is unethical as it plays on the consumer's prejudice against and misunderstanding of parabens and leads the customer to assume that if NATIO says "paraben-free = pure", then the entire range would be paraben-free, which is not the case.

So, if you come across the NATIO range, have a play with their makeup; enjoy the gorgeous lip colours and shimmery eye shadows, but don't be fooled by their 'natural' greenwashing. It's an attempt to take the moral high-ground which, in this case, is unnecessary AND untrue.

RELATED ARTICLE:  Read the discussion between myself and a NATIO employee who took issue with this article here.