Jenette Bras is hosting a special FIT EVENT on Sat. May 1st.

April 28, 2010

Jenette Bras is hosting a special fit event – open to the public – to celebrate their one year anniversary on 5/1. They’ll have a professional fitter on hand who has fit the Queen! Eighty-five percent of women wear the wrong bra size and I promise you, a proper fitting can be a total game-changer and confidence booster! Stylish undergarments abound for new mamas too – amazing nursing lingerie – just in time for Mother’s Day! 


Please join us for Tea to Toast our One Year Anniversary


What: An English Tea to celebrate our 1st Birthday

(scones, jam, finger sandwiches included)!

When: Saturday, May 1st,12 – 4 pm

Why: We couldnt have done it without YOU  & are excited to bring you a special guest to commemorate this occasion

Come meet the irrepressible Frederika Zappe

Fit Specialist from our favorite English brands, 

Freya, Fantasie, Fauve & Elomi

This affair will also kick off Jenette Bras very first charitable initiative and our association with CASAGlamour Gowns – an annual event for high school girls in LA County Foster Care, in which each girl is given a free formal dress & accessories for her Prom.  But guess which critical item of apparel has been heretofore overlooked? Thats right galsa properly fitted strapless bra. Shock-horror! It’s great that there are places out there similar to Rank & Style that could help girls find the right strapless bra for them. 


We are pleased to announce…….Jenette Bras Supports the Girls


A campaign to ensure each glamorous girl receives a personal bra-fitting and strapless bra to support her on her special day, courtesy of Jenette Bras and her Gals.  


A portion of our anniversary partys sales will be donated.

4308 Melrose Ave.

Los Angeles, CA 90029

RSVP

323-665-7490 or

jenette@jenettebras.com

 


 
  
 
 
 

 

 

BWell Fit- Month long Bridal Boot Camp kicks off May 1st. Not just for brides!

April 27, 2010

THIS JUST IN!

THE FIRST GROOMED L.A. READER/SUBSCRIBER TO SIGN UP WILL GET THEIR FIRST BOOT CAMP FOR FREE ON MAY 1ST WHEN YOU MENTION YOU HEARD ABOUT IT HERE!

THE REST OF THE SESSIONS WILL ONLY BE $150 FOR THE MONTH!

  DON'T PASS UP A FREE GET SWEAT OPPORTUNITY!

On May 1st BWell Fit is kicking of their month long Bridal Boot Camp, where everyone is invited – not just brides! 

At the end of the month long boot camp, there will be gift bags filled with all kinds of goodies and special deals from various businesses.

I've never tried these trainers out but the program sounds kick-ass.

Check it out…

What is included?

  • Weekly Saturday Boot Camp Fitness training
  • Wedding date/date specific programs
  • Complete fitness & health assessment
  • Day by day personalized nutrition program
  • Day by day personalized fitness program
  • Regular tracking and adjustments
  • Connections to valuable wedding vendors and gift bags!!
  • Resources and tools to help you reach your goals
  • Motivation and coaching   
  • HAVE FUN, GET FIT, BE MOTIVATED, AND SEE RESULTS!
  • $199/ Per Month

 

NEXT SESSION:  BRIDAL BOOT CAMP RUNS May 1 – May 22, 2010

 

Bridal Boot Camp Class Times:
8:00am-9:00am 4 Saturdays
**Day 1 check-in time is at 8am for assessments and info**

Bridal Boot Camp Location:
Burton Chace Park 
13650 Mindanao Way, Marina Del Rey, California 90292

*Bridal Boot Camp Instructors & Coaches: Linda Okwor and Toneka Pires*

Lavish Tan – Custom Airbrush – in Venice on Abbot Kinney- new digs!

Wow, this place is just so, so pretty.  All white and turquoise and flooded with natural sunlight. (Ok not my fave light to be standing butt-ass-naked in even in front of myself let alone another person, but perfect for airbrush tanning cuz you can see every last pore- and wrinkle- and hair- and what not. In other words, nary a spot-o-skin will go uncovered.)  And it's cozy and personal.  Not a giant factory.

The rates are very reasonable, the people are amazingly sweet, knowledgeable and most of all, skilled.

I asked for super dark as I'm already naturally Mediterranean colored. Alex who has been doing this for years did a great job – very even, thorough, no streaking,etc.  And while the tan didn't turn out as deep-n-dark as I imagined, (or as is my preference) it looked VERY natural. Not even a tinge of orange. In fact, it was just a subtle bronze-glow, like I had been in the sun, maybe a week ago. Man, it's amazing how just that little of bit warmth in your skin tone makes such a huge diff.  A week later and it's faded nicely.  And Alex said we can def go darker next time (yay!).  I'm back to my natural skin but it faded without spotting or streaking or turning a weird color.  The whole look is very natural with the brown sugar based products they're using.  Ah, here's the reason why:

Will I get that fake "orange" color?


No, we use the highest quality tanning solution that will give you that “kissed by the sun” look and will develop into a natural-looking tan. We use a brown-sugar based-solution so the results are 100% golden brown. 

 

DHA and the FDA

Tanning solution's active ingredient, DHA is FDA approved for topical use . It the main ingredient in almost all over the counter self-tanning creams and sprays.  It has also been approved for ingestion and inhalation. Unlike in the 1970’s when DHA was first introduced to society, you will not turn orange, or streak. Extreme improvements to the solution have been made over the past several years. The color is golden brown, because it is derived from sugar, and no longer derived from carrots.   

Oh, and they customize the smell for you which is a fun yummy little perk! 

I love this place!!

Check out their PRESS

LAVISH TAN

1636 Abbot Kinney Blvd.

Venice, Ca 90291


Monday-Saturday- 10 am – 8 pm

24-hour voicemail appointment service

(310)384-0010

LavishTan4u@gmail.com


(First Time Client’s $49)

Coupon Shown Below 


Airbrush Tanning Sessions


Single Airbrush Session

Choose any shade from light to ultra dark 

$59


Package of 3 

(save 10%)

$49 each


Package of 5 

(save 20%)

$45 each


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PRODUCT OBSESSION – SK-II Cellumination Essence

April 26, 2010

From the moment I laid eyes on SK II CELLUMINATION ESSENCE I knew I had to know more asap.  Ok, so I'm a sucker for a great bottle design, name and tag line and SK-II Cellumination Essence has it all goin' on in spades.  The theory behind the essence is all about brightening and conditioning cells to boost the transmission of light within the skins surface (hence the gorgeous iridescent bottle) so that skin will look more luminous, radiant and even-toned. "The glow from within"  they call it.

SK-II talks of skin's  "aura-lucency" – the total diffuse of light within the skin surface.  As we age, fluctuations in the skin that cause uneven skin tone can affect the reflection of light transmission, resulting in duller looking skin.  Conditioning and redefining the skin surface can help boost the total transmission of dissuse light (aura-lucency) and can lead to skin that appears noticeably more radiant and glowing.

SK-II contains AURA BRIGHT COMPLEX, a juicy cocktail containing Centella asiatica extract, Nicotinamide W and concentrated Pitera (an exclusive ingredient to SK-II).  This complex refines the skin's surface, boosting it's glow through hydration, leaving it looking plumped and radiant while decreasing discoloration and unevenness.

I am sooooo excited to go nuts with this serum!  I love serums as they are super light and feel so great going on.  It says that after 8 weeks of using the serum, studies report that respondents skin is brighter and more even-toned.  Me likes!!

Available at www.sk-ii.com

SK-II Cellumination Essence (Hydrating Serum) hydrates and refines the surface to boost skin’s natural, healthy-looking glow and to help diminish the appearance of discoloration for a more even tone.

  • It conditions and refines for a skin surface with more even texture and transparency that boosts light transmission within the surface. More light transmission creates a healthy looking natural glow and makes the look of discolorations such as age spots have a less obvious contrast to natural skin color.
  • It contains concentrated SK-II Pitera that helps lead to improvement in overall skin appearance.
  • It permeates quickly into the skin and gives a light and smooth feeling when applied.

W96
 50 ML – $220

NY Times today: “A Little Too Ready for Her Close-Up?” Plastic Surgery will ruin your acting career!

April 25, 2010

By LAURA M. HOLSON

IT took years for Hollywood to create the perfect woman. Now it wants the old one back.

In small but significant numbers, filmmakers and casting executives are beginning to re-examine Hollywood’s attitude toward breast implants, Botox, collagen-injected lips and all manner of plastic surgery.

Television executives at Fox Broadcasting, for example, say they have begun recruiting more natural looking actors from Australia and Britain because the amply endowed, freakishly young-looking crowd that shows up for auditions in Los Angeles suffers from too much sameness.

“I think everyone either looks like a drag queen or a stripper,” said Marcia Shulman, who oversees casting for Fox’s scripted shows.

Independent casting directors like Mindy Marin, who worked on the Jason Reitman film “Up in the Air,” are urging talent agents to discourage clients from having surgery, particularly older celebrities who, she contends, are losing jobs because their skin is either too taut or swollen with filler. Said Ms. Marin: “What I want to see is real.”

Even extras get the once-over. Sande Alessi, who helped cast the “Pirates of the Caribbean” movies, said she offers to photograph actresses in their bathing suits, telling them they can keep the photo for their audition books.

Professional courtesy? Not exactly. Moviemakers prefer actresses with natural breasts for costume dramas and period films. So much so that when the Walt Disney Company recently advertised for extras for the new “Pirates” film, the casting call specified that only women with real breasts need apply. By taking a photograph, Ms. Alessi said, “we don’t have to ask, we will know.”

The move toward “less is more” is being propelled by a series of colliding social and technological trends, more than a dozen film and television professionals said.

Cosmetic enhancements remain popular, with 10 million surgical and nonsurgical procedures performed in the United States in 2009, according to the American Society for Aesthetic Plastic Surgery. At the same time, the spread of high-definition television — as well as a curious public’s trained eye — has made it easier to spot a celebrity’s badly stitched hairline or botched eyelid lift.

Men, of course, are not immune to the youthful lure of a surgeon’s scalpel. But it is women, to the surprise of no one, who are being scrutinized most closely.

Botox is the enemy in a post-“Avatar,” 3-D infatuated Hollywood, where the ability to crumple a mouth into a frown is as vital as remembering one’s lines. More startling is how young plastic surgery devotees have become. In January, the actress Heidi Montag was on the cover of People magazine touting the 10 cosmetic procedures she received in one day. She is 23.

“The era of ‘I look great because I did this to myself’ has passed,” said Shawn Levy, the director and producer of “Date Night” and the “Night at the Museum” movies. “It is viewed as ridiculous. Ten years ago, actresses had the feeling that they had to get plastic surgery to get the part. Now I think it works against them. To walk into a casting session looking false hurts one’s chances.”

Few in Hollywood are willing to admit to a chin reduction or mini eyebrow lift. (Remember when Jennifer Grey admitted to a nose job, a move some say hurt her career?) Celebrities instead are more open to discussing a former drug problem or sex addiction, because there is less concern a confession of that sort will harm their careers. But with so many types of cosmetic rejiggering, results are often painfully obvious and difficult to correct.

Ms. Shulman of Fox met with an agent recently to discuss hiring an actress who clearly had work done. “What did she do to her face?” Ms. Shulman said she asked the agent. “He said, ‘Nothing.’ I shrugged. I’m just not going to argue. I said, ‘She’s not for me then.’ ”

Head shots, too, are no longer reliable. Ms. Marin said she sometimes checks AwfulPlasticSurgery.com, a celebrity Web site that chronicles the surgically enhanced, to confirm suspicions about who has done what. When Ms. Alessi was casting “The Curious Case of Benjamin Button” in 2007, she received hundreds of head shots. Some of the actresses who arrived for auditions, though, looked nothing like their photographs.

“They would have these huge puffy lips and frozen foreheads,” she said. “You said to yours
elf, ‘Oh, I can’t use you.’ I don’t mind if they do a tiny bit of something, but it can’t be obvious.”

An actor can even lose a role if a director suspects surgery, whether it was performed or not. John Papsidera, a casting director for the “Batman” movies, said he and a director (he declined to say which one) recently debated whether to hire an actress in her early 20s to play a teenager falling in love. The actress was talented and naturally pretty. But what stopped the director was his suspicion that, at such a young age, she already had breast implants.

“We looked at film where she was topless and it was like, ‘Maybe,’ ” Mr. Papsidera said. It wasn’t a period film, so authenticity was not an issue. Instead, the possibility of implants became “a point of reference,” he said. “It was more of, ‘Where is that person coming from as an actor?’ ” She did not get the part.

To outsiders, such conversations can seem almost cruel. Youthful perfection is prized in Hollywood despite the seeming canonization of older actresses likeMeryl StreepHelen Mirren and Betty White. But a talented 35-plus actress who has had particularly good surgery can still find work. At that age the backlash is not against plastic surgery or Botox itself — everyone seems to be doing it, right? — but its poor execution.

“Behind the scenes, you have so many conversations,” said Mr. Levy, the director, referring to his discussions with studio executives about leading ladies. “Why did she do that to herself? She was beautiful. She was great. But now we can’t cast her.”

Rarely, though, do studio executives share their concerns with actors, he added, citing politeness as a reason.

Perhaps they should discuss it. After all, the executives and producers who criticize others for having too much plastic surgery often feel the same pressure to look young and attractive. Their judgments about others, then, are not only subjective, but deeply personal. (Several studio executives did not return calls or declined to comment on their views on cosmetic procedures.)

Carrie Audino, a casting director on “Mad Men,” said: “I do think there are times when you sit in a casting session and listen to what someone thinks is beautiful or handsome, and there is this very skewed outlook based on their own insecurities. Because they have issues, they have an issue with someone else.”

Still, there is something to suggest that the new attitude is beginning to take hold. Last week Sharon Osbourne told Matt Lauer on the “Today” show that she was going to have her breast implants removed this summer and give them to her husband as paperweights. Lisa Kudrow, in a recent interview with New York magazine, seemed happy to own up to the fact that the face viewers saw on an episode of “Cougar Town” was hers, age lines and all.

“Look, time marches on,” she said. “You still want to look good, but there’s a line between looking like yourself and looking like a character from a Batman movie.”

Of course, there are still times when having cosmetic surgery can pay off. The buzzworthiness of a reality television star seems to soar depending on her cup size or clipped waist. (Think of Jwoww from “Jersey Shore.”)

Last November Ms. Montag, who starred in “The Hills” on MTV, underwent 10 cosmetic procedures including liposuction, buttock and breast augmentation and Botox. Her reward? A torrent of media attention kicked off by a flattering January cover story in People magazine, including before and after photos.

Critics made fun of her, and her own mother was shocked. “She was looking at me almost like I was a zoo animal,” Ms. Montag told People of her first visit home.

But she said in an interview that she is convinced she made the right move. She wants to be a movie actress, and some parts have begun to come in. She recently starred in a video directed by Ron Howard, and she said she was hired for a cameo in an Adam Sandler movie.

Both parts poke fun at women who’ve had too much plastic surgery.