Archive for the ‘Fashion Tips’ Category

Curly Hair Tamed

Published by admin on May 24, 2010

If you are of the 67% of females that have some curl to their hair, then surely you have struggled to keep it under control at some point and time. Too curly on the ends and flat on the top. Not to mention the frizz. This is how so many look when they try to wear their hair curly. This is why so many just go straight with it and flat iron to death.

Introducing DevaCurl Night at Cary O’Brien’s. Yes we have blogged this before and since it was a sell out the last time we thought we would do it again. This Wednesday 3-8pm call and come in for the DevaCurl Squeeze. We will teach you how to apply product, squeeze properly, and then pin the hair in the most awesome curls you have ever worn.

The DevaCurl concept and technique is not new but coming around again just in time to save everyones hair from flat iron torchure.

This time you will be taking home the DevaCurl Claw, a unique diffuser to tame that curly hair.

How to make a Runner

Published by admin on May 17, 2010

We could dig real deep on this one and have a team of experts discuss the physical and phycological properties that one would need to be a runner. But I think it is much simpler, just run. Allow me to explain.

Sunday we woke the house at 6am and were all in the car by 7. (30 minutes later that I wanted) No easy task as the house hold is 4 daughters, the wife, and me. Off to Forest Park we go.

Once there we park and try and find our group. What group? My daughter Isabel’s 4th grade “Girls On The Run” group. It is a sea of pink, green, and yellow. I estimated the crowd around 10,000. Probably 5,000 runners. This is our first experience with the organization that encourages self esteem and discipline centered around running. Did I mention it has been raining for days and the park grounds are completely soaked? No matter everyone just splashing around getting muddy and being very excited. For Isabel and her group this is the 3rd 5-k they will have run in 8 days. That is a huge accomplishment.  

These girls have all been staying after school on Tuesday, and Fridays for weeks to run, play games, and learn to respect each others strengths, and weaknesses. Isabel has loved it.

Mia and Sydney two of my other daughters also ran. Chloe (daughter) and Paris (my Niece) came along for support. Chloe is a runner herself but chose to sit this one out. She and Sydney both plan to run cross country this next year in high school. Chloe’s 3rd year.

So back to the question of “how to make a runner” and I said just run. You see I am a runner. Have been for years. Lots of races, medal, and even placed top in age group before. But what I am most proud of is that all four of my girls run. For fun, to stay in shape, to be part of a team, or any other reason, who cares just run.

So to all who read this I say “just run”. You never know who is watching and what impact it will have.

DevaCurl Great Summer Hair

Published by admin on May 14, 2010

What is DevaCurl? It’s several things. For one it is a new product line we offer at Cary O’Brien’s. It is designed for the guest with curly hair from slightly curly to very curly. It has a less aggressive shampoo, conditioners, and styling products that enhance the curl in the hair to become more natural and bouncy. For another (and my favorite) it is a service and technique to show the guest how to encourage the natural curl at the scalp.

When the proper support product (gel or cream) is used and the hair is softly squeezed into shape you can see the great curl take shape. Then the curls are held in place with small clips placed in a circle around the crown area. Now just allow the hair to dry naturally or use a Deva Diffuser and then remove the clips. Add some shine spray or drops and shake it out. Voila, you now have soft, natural, beachy, summer looking hair.

Try it for yourself at home or come to the Deva Night at Cary O’Brien’s on May 26th and let our team Deva you up. Call to reserve your spot.

Good Hair

Published by admin on October 23, 2009

Just came across this. This is great. Chris Rock’s movie “Good Hair” is calling attention to the care and detail that women give to looking and feeling better. I’m not sure if I would call it good hair or bad hair, I feel we all want to look and feel better about the hair we have. What a good salon and stylist should be doing is solving the hair challenges that we all face. Black, white, or other is irrelevant we must be shown how to manage what we have. Insist your stylist is professional and works in a professional salon. Read on.

Beautymaker_LOGOPEOPLE MAKING NEWS

   

GoodHair

Chris Rocks Best Yet?


Chris Rock’s ‘Good Hair’ gets tangled up in controversy
 

In Theaters Nationally - October 23

Reprinted from USA Today: By Maria Puente

 


Secrets, comedian Chris Rock declares slyly, are bad for the human spirit. That’s why he’s gleefully talking out of school in his new documentary, Good Hair, which has some people rolling in the aisles and others rolling their eyes.

In Good Hair, Rock sets out to explore the historically fraught concept of “good hair,” which for African Americans burdened by the twin legacies of slavery and racism has traditionally been defined as hair more like white people’s. Do black women, he wonders, spend countless hours and hundreds of dollars in hair salons to make their hair straighter and silkier because they want to lookwhite?

In following his search for answers, the movie manages to be at once funny, fascinating and heartbreaking. But it also has spurred unprecedented conversations among whites and blacks about - hair.

HER STORY: What did our reporter’s mom say when she went natural?
VIDEO: Watch the ‘Good Hair’ trailer

 

“The hair salon on Saturdays is right up there with church on Sundays as the most segregated place in America.”

“When it comes to hair, we’re still living in segregated America,” says Lori Tharps, 37, a Temple University journalism professor and co-author with Ayana Byrd, 35, a Glamour magazine editor, of Hair Story: Untangling the Roots of Black Hair in America. “The hair salon on Saturdays is right up there with church on Sundays as the most segregated place in America.”

White people don’t know much about black people’s hair, and blacks don’t want to talk about it, or at least not with whites, they say. Thus the secrecy about hair.

And that’s the way it always has been - until Good Hair, which opened in select cities two weeks ago and goes wide today. Now everybody is talking - on Oprah, on Tyra, on Today, in Essence magazine, in scores of workplaces and salons, in numerous Internet blogs and around countless virtual water coolers as Rock travels the country promoting and defending the movie.

“Secrets will rot the soul,” Rock says. “They’re good for no one. Unless you’re planning a surprise party or something.”

‘Old-school journalism’

Surprise, surprise - Rock, 44, has turned out to be a pretty good reporter, in addition to being a comedian/actor/awards-show host. Who knew the guy wanted to be Edward R. Murrow? He’s thinking of doing more documentaries.

 

“I miss old-school journalism,” he says. “Nobody plays anything down the middle anymore.”


GoodHair3
Credit: Roadside Attractions 

Rock says he was surprised by what he found out about hair. “I knew women wanted to be beautiful, but I didn’t know the lengths they would go to, the time they would spend - and not complain about it,” he says. “In fact, they appear to look forward to it.”

As the movie opens, Rock says in the voice-over that he decided to investigate the meaning of good hair after his little daughter asked him one day, “Daddy, why don’t I have good hair?” Now where did she get that idea?

So he visits hair salons, where women get their heads slathered with toxic goop (known as “creamy crack”) to “relax,” or straighten, their hair. He watches as they sit for hours getting their hair braided or a “weave” of hair extensions that can cost $1,000. He helps a scientist demonstrate what the relaxer chemicals can do to an aluminum can (it’s not pretty), observes a wacky hair show contest and travels to India to see where the hair in extensions comes from. (Indian women shave their heads and donate their hair in a religious ritual; the hair is later sold by Asian-owned companies.)

 

He interviews black men about their funny/painful experiences of sex with women with weaves.

He interviews black women (including actresses Nia Long, Raven-Symoné and Tracie Thoms) about their funny/painful hair stories. He interviews black men about their funny/painful experiences of sex with women with weaves. (Don’t touch the hair!) To make a satiric point that no one wants black people’s hair, he gathers some up and tries to peddle it on the streets of Los Angeles - and gets no takers. All this is framed by a hairstyling competition, a Las Vegas-style show for hair, held twice a year in Atlanta by the Bronner Bros., a leading black hair products company.

Pressure to conform

For many white people, Good Hair will be revelatory as well as entertaining. For many black people, it’s not news; what is new is that Rock is talking about it - in a movie aimed at the mainstream.

“Some people are saying: ‘You’re putting all of our business into the street. Why are you pulling the curtain back?’ ” says Chris-Tia Donaldson, 30, a Chicago lawyer and author of Thank God I’m Natural - The Ultimate Guide to Caring for and Maintaining Natural Hair, aimed at black women or mothers of black children who want to go natural. “The deeper issue continues to be glossed over, which is why do minority women in America feel so much pressure to conform to a mainstream standard of beauty that is hard to attain?”

Derek J, 27, an Atlanta stylist who is in the movie as the winner of the hairstyling competition, says some of his clients who have seen the movie or heard about it are upset. “They’re saying he’s attacking black women and their hair choices, but he’s not,” he says. “I tell them go see (the movie) because I’m in it!”

Jason Griggers, 40, another Atlanta stylist in the movie, who is white, hopes the movie will help break down walls between races.

“More dialogue is better than no dialogue,” he says. “When I started (going to Bronner Bros.), there was only a tiny handful of white people there, and now it’s much more integrated.”

 

Some reviewers say Good Hair is the best thing
Rock has ever done

Some reviewers say Good Hair is the best thing Rock has ever done; critics of the movie complain he failed to provide any context for women’s hair choices. For instance, there’s a movement among black women to let their hair go “natural,” but Rock doesn’t address that. Nor does he point out that women of all races and ethnicities have issues with their hair and try to change it.

“I feel like I’m living O.J. all over again,” says Tharps, sighing. “The mainstream media are saying it’s fantastic, it’s groundbreaking, it’s a wonderful picture into African-American culture. On the Internet, opinion ranges from it didn’t go far enough to pure anger and ‘I’m never watching Chris Rock again because he made black women a laughingstock.’ ”

Getting it out there

But even those who have issues with Good Hair aren’t condemning the film entirely, and they hesitate to dis Rock himself because, well, everybody loves Chris. He is applauded for at least raising the subject. “I love that there’s a film dedicated to hair; I just wish there had been more context,” says Byrd.

Alynda Wheat, a senior writer for Entertainment Weekly, wrote a column about where Rock went wrong (”Reason 2: $1,000 at the salon? Get real.”). She says Rock deserves credit for “introducing a conversation that’s so important, it reached the White House,” home to two black women, Michelle Obama and her mother, Marian Robinson, who wear straightened hair, and girls Malia and Sasha, who don’t.

But Wheat rejects the notion that hair choice these days is a political statement or a sign of racial insecurity. “I have absolutely no desire to be white, and no one I know sits down in a stylist’s chair because they want to be white,” she says. “If you’re going to educate people about something, it should be representative of a larger whole than just some actresses or one crazy shop where a weave costs $1,000.”

 

Goodhair2
“Now it’s much more integrated”: Stylist Jason Griggers says that now,
more white people go to the Bronner Bros. International Hair Show in Atlanta.
By Bob Mahoney, Roadside Attractions


Rock responds that the only thing he’s attacking is the alarming practice of putting toxic relaxer chemicals on toddlers’ hair. He says that the movie isn’t about what white women do with their hair and that he personally thinks all hair is good hair. He doesn’t believe he’s spilling the beans by talking about hair.

“Is it really a secret?” he asks. “These products are sold at any drugstore. You can walk by any beauty parlor and look through the window, and it’s all being done out in the open.”

But he has been on Oprah twice, the first time to promote the film, the second time to respond to critics of the film. Mikki Taylor, beauty and cover editor for Essence, which put Long and Good Hair on its November cover, gathered a roundtable of black women, including Long, to talk about hair and self-esteem. She says it’s a “good thing” that everybody is talking about the subject, but the old concept of “good hair” is antiquated and no longer relevant to most black women, especially young women.

 

“When will our hair cease to be political?”

“Good hair now is healthy hair,” she says. “When will our hair cease to be political? Every other group of women can do what they want with their hair, and it’s not seen as making a statement. We’re over that, and we wish everyone else would be over it, too.”

Someday, Byrd says, little black girls are going to be able to decide that whatever they want to do with their hair is the same as deciding what kind of earrings to put on or what dress to wear.

“The point is not to say hair is good or bad, it’s to say that once we work through the history behind our hair, we can get to a place where it can just be hair.”

 

BE_Exposed

CLICK ON THE COVER
and View on the Digital issue
Salon City’s NEW BE! magazine!

    


 

 

Day Break At Harvester C.C

Published by admin on October 1, 2009

Day Break at Harvester Christian Church is a womans retreat. We have been invited to participate for the last couple of years. It is a very nice event.

I think it is so important for ladies to take time for themselves to recharge and unwind. From my many years in the industry I have noticed that they rarely take the time to do so.

Our class is of course about salon ideas and how we can help ladies look and feel better. If we can solve some problems and save them some time even better.

We had three 45 minute classes to get our message out. We love to bring in our team members who are our rising stars to participate. We choose our models right on the spot from the audience and do a live conversation and then give them the make over in front of the attendees. As you can imagine cutting and speaking live is a bit more of a challenge than in the salon. Here’s what they did.

Lindsey has been with us for 1 1/2 years and is so technical at her approch to hair. It is a pleasure for me to watch her cut as every move is on task. That might sound insignificant, but it is very important. She did a great job. Gave her model a great new look and update.

Danielle has been with us just over a year. When she started to speak Talisa (my wife) and I just looked at each other and smiled. Talisa whispered “you can go now” indicating that Danielle had it covered and I was no longer needed. She spoke like a seasoned veteran. Having done stage work for over 15 years myself, she performed way beyond her years of training.

Stefanie is a seasoned veteran. With 12 years of experience she made the task look so easy. Although new to our team (6 months) she brings a great new approach to our salon. She gave wonderful time saving tips and styling ideas to her model.

I am so proud of our team. They gave up their time behind the chair in the salon where they are comfortable and make money, to give back to the community where we all live and prosper from.

My charge is to help each team member challenge themselves to do more than they thought they could and evolve into the salon professional that I know they are. Sometimes I know it and see it before they do. “That’s the best part of my job”

Day Break For The Ladies

Published by admin on September 11, 2009

Looking for something to do next week? Having trouble finding time to refill your own cup? Take a Day Break. Harvester Christian Church of St. Charles is hosting Day Break for the 10 year in a row.

Come take a break and stop in one of our three classes to watch what we do best, Make People Feel Better.

We are demonstrating live in 3 of the 4 classes. Salon Solutions to Help You Shine

Take a look at the home page and take time to take care of you. Cary



Daybreak Women’s Conference
September 25 & 26, 2009
Registration Deadline Sept. 11th!

Don’t miss our 10th annual Daybreak Women’s Conference!
This special event for women combines main sessions filled with laughter, tears, and an uplifting time of worship with your choice of 35 workshops to create the perfect weekend of renewal and refreshment.

 

  /files/Womens Files/Daybreak 2009/TammyTrent1.jpg

Featured Speaker Tammy Trent
Tammy Trent is a singer, songwriter, author, and speaker. Her life is real. Her music is real. Her words are real and her God is real. You see it in everything she does. Why? How? Because she knows what it’s like to have the wind knocked out of you and yet to feel the very breath of God bringing you back to life again. A weekend spent with Tammy is like being in one big living room, just hanging out with your friends. That is her gift to the world. Letting you in, making you feel comfortable, and then sharing her God, her faith, and her hope in one of the most authentic, tender, and humorous ways.
  

 

 

Worship Leader Jeff Moody
  Jeff Moody’s music flows freely from his heart with a passion and energy that is contagious. His travels as a worship leader for over 25 years have taught him that the key to worship is approaching God with an open heart. You will be blessed by Jeff’s enthusiasm and love of music!

/files/Womens Files/Daybreak 2009/jeff against wall cropped.JPG  

 

 

 

Click Here to Register for Daybreak 2009!
Online registration requires payment by credit or debit card. If you wish to pay by cash or check, please download a registration form, then mail your completed form along with payment to Harvester Christian Church,
Attn: Daybreak 2009, 2950 Kings Crossing, St. Charles, MO  63303.


For detailed conference information, please follow the links below:

About Daybreak

Daybreak Workshops

Conference Information

Girls Night Out

Hotel Listing

Promotional Materials

 

 

 

If you cannot find the answers you need here, please contact us via email at daybreak@harvestercc.org or by calling 636.928.7651 x1511. We will be happy to assist you!

We look forward to seeing you on September 25th and 26th!

Attention Women’s Ministry Leaders! For resources to help you promote Daybreak to your church or women’s group, click here.

 

 

© 2006 Harvester Christian Church. 2950 Kings Crossing St. Charles, MO 63303. - P: (636) 928-7651 - F: (636) 928-3524 - E: admin@harvestercc.org



Daybreak Women’s Conference
September 25 & 26, 2009
Registration Deadline Sept. 11th!

Don’t miss our 10th annual Daybreak Women’s Conference!
This special event for women combines main sessions filled with laughter, tears, and an uplifting time of worship with your choice of 35 workshops to create the perfect weekend of renewal and refreshment.

 

  /files/Womens Files/Daybreak 2009/TammyTrent1.jpg

Featured Speaker Tammy Trent
Tammy Trent is a singer, songwriter, author, and speaker. Her life is real. Her music is real. Her words are real and her God is real. You see it in everything she does. Why? How? Because she knows what it’s like to have the wind knocked out of you and yet to feel the very breath of God bringing you back to life again. A weekend spent with Tammy is like being in one big living room, just hanging out with your friends. That is her gift to the world. Letting you in, making you feel comfortable, and then sharing her God, her faith, and her hope in one of the most authentic, tender, and humorous ways.
  

 

 

Worship Leader Jeff Moody
  Jeff Moody’s music flows freely from his heart with a passion and energy that is contagious. His travels as a worship leader for over 25 years have taught him that the key to worship is approaching God with an open heart. You will be blessed by Jeff’s enthusiasm and love of music!

/files/Womens Files/Daybreak 2009/jeff against wall cropped.JPG  

 

 

 

Click Here to Register for Daybreak 2009!
Online registration requires payment by credit or debit card. If you wish to pay by cash or check, please download a registration form, then mail your completed form along with payment to Harvester Christian Church,
Attn: Daybreak 2009, 2950 Kings Crossing, St. Charles, MO  63303.


For detailed conference information, please follow the links below:

About Daybreak

Daybreak Workshops

Conference Information

Girls Night Out

Hotel Listing

Promotional Materials

 

 

 

If you cannot find the answers you need here, please contact us via email at daybreak@harvestercc.org or by calling 636.928.7651 x1511. We will be happy to assist you!

We look forward to seeing you on September 25th and 26th!

Attention Women’s Ministry Leaders! For resources to help you promote Daybreak to your church or women’s group, click here.

 

 

© 2006 Harvester Christian Church. 2950 Kings Crossing St. Charles, MO 63303. - P: (636) 928-7651 - F: (636) 928-3524 - E: admin@harvestercc.org

Ambassador Floor “Ladies Night”

Published by admin on May 13, 2009

Ambassador Floor of Chesterfield held it’s first of possably many “Women Only Night Out”. We were one of over 40 vendors showing our services and products. We had Holly skin scoping many ladies and giving skin tips to improve and repair their faces. Stefanie who is new to our team from Phoenix gave countless hair consultations on color, cut, and how to maintain and enhance what they have now. I think both ladies from our team did a great job as Stefanie has already had a call for an appointment.

Ambassador Floor did a very nice job providing us with the space and set up. If you have not been to this store you owe it to yourself to stop in and have a look. Flooring yes, but the decorations, and furniture is very nice and not what I tend to see in most places.

Lindenwood Fashion Show

Published by admin on May 4, 2009

Last night Lindenwood University put on it’s annual Design Department Fashion Show. For the third year in a row we were asked to present the hair on the run way models. I was very proud of out team. All of them did a very nice job on working the hair of the 24 models that were presented in the show. The hair for the evening was to be very simple, pony tails and twists with just a little flair. Trying to fashion a style that will hold up to several wardrobe changes is the most challenging. The models walk off stage and literally start stripping to get to the next outfit and be ready to walk back out on stage. As every piece is custom made, pulling, tugging and pinning is a little hard on the hair style. A few stray ends began to fly by the end but nothing came tumbling down.

Katie being one of the most senior of our team really did a great job. She really showed her maturity by doing very nice work and in very little time. Ashley styled the lead model and had the task of making her look like the show program it looked amazing. Corral jumped right in and tackled some really tough hair. Jennifer was able to whip some hair into shape and did a great job. Danielle took one model with very thin hair and made it look full and beautiful and it stayed up. (a challenge with skinny hair) Lindsey’s hair was spectacular. She showed no fear in handling some of the most challenging heads. Stefanie stepped up and finished and styled the directors hair Florence. Of course she had to look great.

What I am most proud of is the fact that this team that we took was the stylists and the jr. stylists. Some with less than a year on the floor of our salon and up to three years. It is chanllenging and takes them out of their comfort zone. Today they will all be better hairdressers for you by meeting and exceeding the challenges of last night.

Lindenwood does a very nice fashion show if you have never seen a runway show it is worth your time to see theirs and it’s so close to home. The brand new amphitheater is amazing and the event went off on time and had a very nice flow.

If you missed it you have a chance to see it again this Friday at 7:30pm at Lindenwood. We’ll see you there.

An Update From The Pretty People

Published by admin on March 12, 2009

This just came over. Thought everyone could use some fun reading. So step out of reality and enjoy.

SC_Sphere_small
SALON CITY MAGAZINE
Beauty News Bulletin
   

Natasha Henstridge
A Salon City Exclusive

Natasha Henstridge Net

Natasha Henstridge at her Salon City magazine shoot. ( Fashion Photography: John Russo for Brooks Institute )

Hollywood Beauty
in Salon City Magazine


“Natasha Henstridge is Hollywood’s prime example of a ‘model-turned-actress’ success story. Her role as Taylor Wethersby in “Eli Stone” captured the adoration of fans around the world. Even though ABC decided not to renew the popular series, Natasha gained visibility and continues to find her balance
in family and new film projects. Henstridge adds up to one beautiful (and blonde) star that’s taking charge of her career -
here at Salon City.”

Natasha Henstridge
Bright, Balanced and Beautiful.
Our cover story and now updated excerpts first appeared in Salon City magazine’s
most popular edition last year, “The Green Issue.”

By Lynn Morgan for Salon City

 
 
It seemed like a long-shot: not quite a comedy, not quite a drama, with metaphysical underpinnings, centering on a successful corporate attorney who may (not may not) be dying, but nevertheless experiences life-altering hallucinations, including a vision of 80’s pop sensation George Michael busting a move on his coffee table. And, oh yes: it’s also a musical. Sort of. But this was indeed the premise of the fanciful ABC series, “Eli Stone”, and its star, Natasha Henstridge enjoyed its unlikely success.
 
“I loved the combination of comedy and drama,” says Natasha, “and the comedy came  out of real life. I care a lot about the work I’m doing; I’m always ready creatively to take risks and experiment.”
 

Natsah Henstridge Bob
Natasha with Jonny Lee Miller in “Eli Stone” Photo: John D’Amico for ABC


“Eli Stone” has been a delightful experiment. It was an original and daring premise: network prime time TV usually shys away from the metaphysical, and musicals on television are notoriously hard to sell to audiences: Does anyone remember ‘Viva Laughlin”? Despite the long odds, “Eli Stone” found a loyal audience, garnered upbeat reviews and provoked lively discussions on - and off- line about science versus faith, visions versus delusions, destiny, karma and living a purposeful life.
“I made people think about their own lives, and made them want to do good in the world,” says Natasha proudly.

 

“I made people think about their own lives, and made them want to
do good in the world,”
says Natasha proudly.


 
Natasha Henstridge 3The tall, Canadian-born model turned actress left her home in  rural Alberta at age fourteen- “I felt like I was twenty five!”- after winning a Casablancas modeling agency “Look of the Year ” contest. With her parents’ reluctant blessing, she set out for New York, and Paris in search of a larger world. ”I felt different  as a kid,” she recalls. “I grew up in a small town, and I had a burning desire to get out.” Within a year, the gorgeous blonde was on the cover of French Cosmopolitan, and other international magazines. She landed commercials for fragrances and skincare, and worked with major fashion photographers like Mario Testino.
 
“I didn’t love the job, ‘ Natasha says of her modeling days. “I loved the travel, living out of a suitcase. That kind of bohemian, gypsy existence is great for creative development, but I wanted something else.” She gave up modeling at 21 to pursue acting, her original ambition. Her first film role was “Sil” a beautiful, predatory alien creature in “Species” . The film made over a hundred million dollars for MGM and made the young Natasha a sci-fi icon.
 
“I’m a bit of a cult figure in the sci fi realm, ” she confesses, laughing. “There are certain places you go, like hobby shops or comic book stores, that attract a lot of people who are into science fiction. I was in a hobby shop recently, and the guy working there started shaking when he saw me! To have someone react that way to me seems a little ridiculous, but sci fi fans are very dedicated.”
 
Freaking out fan boys was not the only part of the experience she wasn’t prepared for. “Species” brough the budding actress into close contact with some major Hollywood talents she wasn’t even familiar with. “I didn’t know who Ben Kingsley was when I got cast in “Species” she laughs, recalling her Oscar-wining co-star. “That’s the nice thing about youth, though: you’re so innocent, you don’t have the sense to be scared of what you’re about to do!”
 
“Species” was such a huge hit, it spawned two sequels. However, Natasha didn’t want to become typecast as a sci fi babe. She was considered for roles in both “Independence Day” and “Men in Black” but the parts went to other actresses. “I would love to work with Will Smith, though,” she says now. “It would be an absolute gift! He’s such an enormous talent.”
 
Natasha worked steadily - Hollywood can always find some use for a tall, beautiful blonde- but the perfect project eluded her. She toyed with action films, co-starring with Jean-Claude Van Damme in “Maximum Risk” , and played opposite Ben Affleck in “Bounce”. She got some of her best reviews for her comedy turn as Matthew Perry’s love interest in “The Whole Nine Yards” playing Cynthia Tudeck, the estranged wife of retired hitman, Bruce Willis.
 
There were adventures in television as well. A series called “She Spies” lasted two seasons, but lives on in syndication and sells well on DVD. Natasha also co-starred with two more award-winning stars, Geena Davis and Donald Sutherland, in the short-lived ABC series, “Commander in Chief”. It was a bittersweet experience for Natasha. “Geena is a lovely person, ”she reminisices about her co-star. “She’s very aware; very conscious of what’s going on in the world. And Donald Sutherland is amazing; we’re both Canadian and share the same wacky sense of humor. As an actor, he’s so fantastic to work with: I found myself watching his performance in our scenes together instead of acting with him.”
 
Despite respectable ratings and strong reviews, “Commander in Chief” lasted only one season. “It got re-scheduled a lot, ” Natasha says sadly. ‘It got moved around so much the audience couldn’t keep up.”
 


With her new visibility, Natasha Henstridge is taking charge of her career direction. While many actresses are lamenting the paucity of good parts for women in Hollywood, Natasha has inked her own development deals to produce her own projects instead of waiting in vain for the right part to magically materialize.
 
It’s all part of her larger strategy for staying sane in Hollywood, which is not always easy.
 

 

Natasha Henstridge Grey
Natasha Henstridge looks for balance in her life.

“It’s all about finding balance in your life,” she insists. “and it’s bloody hard to do. Finding the right balance between the material and the spiritual; the things that will really make you happy, as opposed to the things that you think are supposed to make you happy.”
 
Natasha finds that balance in family- she has two young sons- and in  simple,  pleasures, and the pure, restorative power of unspoiled  nature.   ”I am very adventurous. I love the outdoors. Whether it’s  camping, snowboarding or just rollerblading at the beach, I love to be outside, active and enjoying nature.”
 
All of that outdoor activity has other benefits as well. Natasha’s modeling career followed in the footsteps of the original supermodels like Claudia Scheiffer, Naomi Campbell and Christy Turlington whose outsized personalities and bodacious bodies dominated catwalks and covers before the advent of the waif look and heroine chic. Natasha is unapologetically curvaceous.
 

 

“I wear a size 8!” she laughs. “In Hollywood, that’s like a size 22!

“I wear a size 8!” she laughs. “In Hollywood, that’s like a size 22! Just try to find a pair of jeans with a thirty inch waist in this town! People are killing themselves trying to be a size 0 or even a double zero- whatever that means! You get judged and panned more for how you look and what you wear than for your work! It’s ridiculous. If you devote all your energy to worrying about your dress size, you won’t be able to focus on anything worthwhile.’
 
In the eyes of Natasha’s legions of besotted male fans, size 8 is apparently just about perfect.
 
“I’m lucky I love sports, ” she continues. ” If I wasn’t athletic, I’d probably be enormous. But I think about being healthy, being strong and feeling good, not about being super-skinny.”
 
When she’s not out hiking, rollerblading or shredding powder, Natasha loves to cook, and living in Los Angeles offers some healthy  benefits. “I love to cook. I love going to the big, outdoor farmers’ markets here! You can get the best, locally grown produce. It’s so fresh, so natural, and it tastes better, too.”
 
Natasha is dedicated to living a socially responsible, healthy and green life. “I’ve changed out all my lightbulbs for the energy efficient kind, ” she says. “I had a Range Rover, and I loved it! It was beautiful. It also broke down a lot, and I just couldn’t rationalize driving such a huge, gas guzzling car. I thought about getting a Prius, but I’ve got the kids, and all their stuff to carry; I got a Lexus hybrid instead. It’s energy efficent and it has plenty of room for the kids and the snowboards.”
 
She is happiest in simple surroundings, and believes in getting rid of as much extraneous clutter as possible. “There’s so much unnecessary packaging in everything we buy, ” she observes. “Junk mail should be illegal! The amount of paper and energy it wastes is horrifying.
 
“I’m as bad as anyone else, ” she continues. “Actors get a lot of free stuff, and on the surface, I love it, but mostly, it just becomes clutter. It takes up space in my life, and in my mind, and it’s just not necessary.”
 
Getting away from Hollywood, its endless materialism and obsession with the elusive size double zero helps Natasha Henstridge stay grounded.
 
“My favorite luxury is travel,” she says.”For me, lying on a beach for a few days is the perfect way to re-charge. I love to go everywhere, though. I like to go to Paris and stay with a friend who lives there. Visiting Europe keeps me in check. It’s a different mentality, a different way of living.”
 
It’s not that Natasha has turned her back completely on the  glamorous life. “Former models pay less attention to their hair and clothes and make-up than anyone else in the world!” she laughs. “I use Desert Essence hair and skin products. It’s vegan, wheat and gluten free; no sulphites. You can get it at any health food store, and it’s not very expensive. California is great for me; I love to wear jeans and flip-flops during the day and only dress up at night.
 

Natasha Henstridge Smile
Natasha Henstridge loves being a girl. Photo: John Russo / Brooks Institute


“I love being a girl; I love dressing up.”

“I love being a girl; I love dressing up, ” she continues. “I like to wear designers who understand a woman’s body. I love Zac Posen, Gucci and Versace - clothes that fit a voluptuous woman’s frame. I have Versace dresses that are ten years old that I still wear: they’re so beautifully made, such gorgeous fabrics and so perfectly fitted; they’re timeless and classic. I like Nanette Lepore: her clothes are very feminine and girly and work well for those of us with butts and boobs. Nicole Miller and Escada are good too for women with shapes. I can’t wear A-line dresses, flapper silhouettes, little spaghetti strap slip dresses; they just hang from my boobs and make me look like I’m carrying twins! And that’s how rumors get started!”

Natasha Henstridge has been taking a carefully measured journey towards stardom avoiding the all-too-common detours into rehab and public humiliation that have detailed other young women who have come to Hollywood. She is guided by something steadier, and won’t lose sight of what she considers important.

“I don’t want to lose the child-like excitement about lovely things and get jaded and have all those things become ordinary, expected and something taken for granted.”

 

ABC


~~~!~~~

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Some Times Good Happens

Published by admin on January 30, 2009

Introducing Stefanie Hayes. Who’s this you ask? Stefanie is the newest team member at Cary O’Brien’s Design & color Spa. She has just moved back into the area from Phoenix, AZ.

Stefanie was working for a friend of mine Kendall Ong in Phoenix and when she decided to move back into our area Kendall told her to contact us first, thanks Kendall.

What’s in if for you? Stefanie has 12 years of experience behind the chair and was the lead hair stylist for Mane Attraction Salon (Kendall’s). Her haircut and blowdry price was $85.00. During the interview she said I know I can build a strong guest base and am not afraid to start small and grow big. Here’s the big goodfor you the reader, Stefanie is starting as a Stylist level in or salon and her haircut and blowdry price is only $39.00. Wow, lots of experience and half the price is double the bargain.

We are very excited to have Stefanie’s talent and fresh ideas to join our team. Come in for a visit and give her a warm welcome. Cary