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    Blog Posts by Allure Daily Beauty Reporter

    • How to Use Body Language to Your Advantage

      Elizabeth Siegel, Allure magazine

      There's been a lot of emphasize on body language this week. (A certain smirking, shrugging duo may be to blame for that.) We know that body language can impact how confident and powerful someone appears, but the way you sit or stand doesn't just influence how others perceive you-it actually changes the way you feel about yourself.

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      Assuming a dominant or submissive pose for as little as two minutes "leads to hormonal changes that configure your brain to basically be either assertive, confident and comfortable, or really stress reactive and feeling sort of shut down," says Amy Cuddy, a researcher at Harvard Business School. In a recent study, she asked subjects to strike a dominant or submissive pose for two minutes. Those who had assumed a dominant position experienced a 20 percent increase in testosterone levels and 24 percent decrease in levels of the stress hormone cortisol. As for those in

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    • Are You a Pathological Groomer?

      Kate Sullivan, Allure magazine

      The next edition of American Psychiatric Association's Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders will include a description of pathological grooming habits-nail-biting, hair-pulling, and scab-picking-under the broader category of obsessive compulsive disorder (OCD). "Grooming" is a bit of a misnomer, but hopefully, this broadening of OCD will lead to more people being diagnosed and seeking help for these behaviors, which are more common in women than men.

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      Between 80 and 90 percent of trichotillomania (hair-pulling) sufferers are women, and they typically tug when they feel stressed. When I interviewed Olivia Munn for Allure's Face page back in December 2010, she confessed that she pulled out her eyelashes when she had anxiety, especially when she was on G4's Attack of the Show, but also more recently. "Last year, I went for a tryout for a movie and I pulled out every single lash," said Munn. "And

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    • 6 Ways to Make Waves

      Jolene Edgar, Allure magazine

      Think a curling iron is just for curling your hair? How quaint. The newest models have more bells and whistles than a Brazilian carnival. Here's how to tell which ones you need.

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    • How to Pull Off Extreme Hair Color

      Courtesy of FOXCourtesy of FOXRenee Trilivas, Allure magazine

      Britney Spears recently debuted a rainbow of dip-dyed tips. While we're used to seeing teal and pink streaks on the red carpet and the runways, the X Factor judge's technicolor hair reminds us a little too much of the Crayolas we cherished in kindergarten. Here, some tips for pulling off extreme highlights without going (or looking) color-crazy.

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      Stick to one shade.
      Instead of opting to taste the rainbow, try adding only one color. A few streaks of teal, lavender, or baby pink framing the face or peeking out from the underside of the head look cool-not kooky.

      Try temporary.
      If you're not sure you want to commit to a dye job, test out the look for a couple of hours with clip-in extensions, hair mascara, or spray-in color.

      See more: Top 21 Drugstore Beauty Bargains

      Don't dismiss black and white.
      Take a page out of Daphne Guinness's book and add dramatic black streaks through platinum blonde hair, or break up brown

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    • Are You Loyal to Your Hairstylist?

      Renee Trilivas, Allure magazine

      I'm what some people might call a stylist slut. I bounce around from hairstylist to hairstylist, usually never going back for a second blowout or cut. Being in the beauty industry, I practically test out different hair salons on a weekly basis. But when I recently read about a British woman who has stuck with the same stylist for almost 40 years, it made me question my unfaithful ways.

      See more: The 6 Most Flattering Haircuts for Round Faces

      Susan Parker-Jones of Shrewsbury is in a serious committed relationship-with Jo Sparks, her stylist since 1975. It was love at first snip when Parker-Jones first had her blonde hair cut by Sparks, and since then, the stylist has given her most loyal customer some 200 different cuts. "'The first time Jo cut my hair, from that moment I knew that she knew what she was doing," Parker-Jones told The Daily Mail. When Sparks moved to Kettering, a town 400 miles away, instead of ditching her, Parker-Jones simply followed

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    • Talking Makeup with Bobbi Brown

      Courtesy of Bobbi BrownCourtesy of Bobbi BrownElizabeth Siegel, Allure magazine

      I recently got to go to the party for Bobbi Brown's Pretty Powerful. The makeup artist extraordinaire's seventh book (out next month) is filled with inspirational stories and some pretty jaw-dropping makeovers. "The book asks women to talk about how they feel about themselves, and share that with each other," said Brown (that's her, above, with Alexa Ray Joel, who performed at the party). "It's based on the idea that women are pretty without makeup, and powerful when they have makeup." We stole Brown away from the festivities for a few minutes to chat.

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      How did you choose Katie Holmes as your new brand ambassador?
      We met through mutual friends and had tea together, and it just happened organically. I didn't go out and look for a celebrity, or for Katie. But I met her and thought, Oh my god, wouldn't it be great if...? I like that her beauty is very simple. She can run to the park with her daughter

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    • How to Get Straight-Across Brows

      Alexandra Owens, Allure magazine

      The field of science is catching on to what the fashion world has known for quite some time now: The ideal brow has gone from thin and arched (circa 1990) to straight and full (circa practically every runway show at recent Fashion Weeks).

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      But hey, it's nice to have some empirical evidence, courtesy of a new study published in Clinical Plastic Surgery. "I blame Pamela Anderson for the thin brow everyone had in the '90s," says Kristie Streicher, a brow groomer at Streicher Beauty Bar at Warren Tricomi in Los Angeles and New York City. Yes, they were striking in their own right. But full brows without an arch make a stronger, and arguably cooler, kind of androgynous statement. "You need a naturally full, long brow to pull off the look," says Streicher, adding that straight-across brows are especially flattering to almond-shaped eyes. (They won't work as well on round or deep-set eyes.)

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    • Erin Andrews Shares Her Game Day Beauty Tricks

      Courtesy of Getty ImagesCourtesy of Getty ImagesCatherine Q. O'Neill, Allure magazine

      With the exception of the Dallas Cowboy cheerleaders, Fox Sports broadcaster Erin Andrews might be the hottest woman to ever stand on the sidelines of a football game. We asked for her game day beauty tricks.


      How do you stay so fresh and polished on the field? I feel like I never see you sweat.

      Oh, then you're not looking hard enough because I'm a sweater. That's one of the reasons I'm stoked about teaming up with Degree for Women and this new antiperspirant they have with clinical protection. I do sweat and I do get nervous. There are times when I'll even have a sweat-stache on air.

      See more: The 6 Most Flattering Haircuts for Round Faces

      Do you ever do anything unconventional with your deodorant?
      Oh yeah, I've used it on my chest, hands, and my feet with ballroom dancing. This is very attractive-I was sweating so much on Dancing with the Stars that my feet were sliding out of my shoes. So we had to dirty them up a little

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    • Top Skin Care Consumers: Korean Men

      Courtesy of Getty ImagesCourtesy of Getty ImagesAlexandra Owens, Allure magazine

      As it turns out, even Johnny Depp and Pete Wentz were behind the curve when it comes to mens' beauty. Over the past decade, South Korean men have been leading the pack straight to the makeup counter, spending $495.5 million on skincare last year alone, CBS reports. That's nearly 21 percent of global sales, making South Korea the largest market for mens' skincare in the world, despite its relatively small population. A love of moisturizer isn't something you might expect from a notoriously conservative country.


      See more: The 6 Most Flattering Haircuts for Round Faces

      But in 2002, when some Korean celebs became known for their dandified ads selling male cosmetics, attitudes started to change-they were dubbed kkonminam, or the "flower men" (Singer Lee Jun-ki, above, is a popular example. Think Brat Pack, but with flawless skin), and everyone wanted to be like them. Now, a made-up appearance has become "a marker of social success" according to

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    • A Quick Fix for Perfume Overload

      Elizabeth Siegel, Allure magazine

      One perk of my job: testing fragrances. One downside of my job: testing fragrances. You know exactly what I'm talking about. A perfume smells amazing in the bottle but disappointingly gross on your skin. Or it smells incredible on your skin, so you get a little trigger-happy-and turn into a stink bomb. You can scrub with soap and water all you like, but the scent lingers.

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      That's why I was excited to pick up this tip from Glen Anderson, executive director of innovation at Avon. The best way to neutralize perfume isn't scrubbing with soap or water or masking it with another scent, he says-it's with alcohol. "Dip a cotton ball in rubbing alcohol and dab it on wherever you have sprayed too much perfume," says Anderson. "It will quickly dilute the scent." Try it, and the whole subway car will thank you.

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