Monday, September 2, 2013

BEAUTY MYTHS: Professionals weigh in on hair, skin and makeup advice


Women start learning beauty tips and tricks as soon as they’re old enough to observe their moms’ habits. By the time we hit adulthood, we’ve been bombarded with advice about how to look our best. And not all of it’s useful or even true.
  • Brushing your hair a lot makes it shiny
  • image
    ‘Brushing your hair a lot makes it shiny.' Marcia Brady’s 100 strokes a day is too much, but Fargo hairstylist Erin Hafliger says brushing does increase shine because it helps distribute the natural oils from the scalp down through the ends.


Women start learning beauty tips and tricks as soon as they’re old enough to observe their moms’ habits.
Then come the sleepovers, magazines, websites and blogs. All devoted to beauty.
“75 Timeless Beauty Tricks.” “Beauty Tips: Get Gorgeous in a Flash.” “10 Beauty Tricks That Make Guys Melt.”
By the time we hit adulthood, we’ve been bombarded with advice about how to look our best. And not all of it’s useful or even true.
Here, a group of local professionals weigh in on some of the more common notions about hair, skin and makeup.
‘Toothpaste zaps zits.’
Yes, toothpaste can dry out pimples, but it can also cause irritation from the alcohol, fragrance and flavor it contains.
Dr. Susan Mathison of Fargo’s Catalyst Medical Center says whitening toothpaste may also cause light spots in place of the breakout. If it can bleach your teeth, it can bleach your skin.
If you don’t have acne-specific products on hand, try calamine lotion or benzoyl peroxide cream instead.
‘You can match your foundation to your hand’
Women seek the perfect shade using their jawlines, necks, chests, inner wrists and hands. But Moorhead-based makeup artist Trista Jetvig Chapman says hands aren’t made for matching.
“They’re usually a shade or more darker than your face because they don’t get the exfoliation or sunscreen your face normally does,” she says.
Chapman, who owns Blushed Airbrush Makeup and Tanning, uses the neck as a swatch.
“Your neck is usually the closest color to your face, and then your makeup will blend instead of be too dark or cause a makeup line,” she says.
‘Brushing your hair a lot makes it shiny.’
Marcia Brady’s 100 strokes a day is too much, but Fargo hairstylist Erin Hafliger says brushing does increase shine because it helps distribute the natural oils from the scalp down through the ends.
‘Sleeping on your back prevents wrinkles.’
Though Mathison says she can usually tell which side people sleep on, sleeping on your back isn’t preventive.
“Sun protection, not smoking and a healthy diet play an even more important role,” she says.
‘Crossing your legs will give you spider or varicose veins.’
Brandi Rostad, a nurse and vascular technician with Fargo’s Hogue Vein Institute, says that’s a myth. They’re genetic.
“It would seem to make sense that you cut off blood flow while crossing your legs, which would lead to these unsightly veins,” she says. “However, there is no clinical research to back it up.”
‘Only people with fair skin need sunscreen.’
Anyone who gets the faintest hint of additional color from sun exposure is at risk of skin damage, Mathison says.
Make sure your sunscreen’s broad-spectrum, and boost your protection with hats, sunglasses and protective clothing.
‘Split ends can be fixed.’
Nope. But they can be prevented and their appearance diminished.
Hafliger says protein treatments containing keratin or argan oil can help strengthen the hair and mend mild breakage, but if the ends are split, they should be cut off.
‘Pumping the mascara wand makes for easier application.’
Chapman sees it all the time — women pumping their mascara wands to get more product on them.
What they’re actually doing is pumping more air into the tube, causing faster dry-out.
Instead, swirl the wand around as you pull it out to collect more mascara toward the end.
‘Trimming your hair makes it grow faster.’
Hafliger says setting regular trims doesn’t make your hair grow faster, but it does keep it healthier while it’s growing.
“The best place to apply perfume is on the pulse points.”
Chapman says she was always told to put fragrance on pulse points because the heat from them refreshes the fragrance.
“I always put mine on my neck behind my ears and where my arm bends and feel like it lasts much longer than just spritzing all over my body,” she says.
‘Shaving your legs makes the hair grow back thicker.’
Wrong. Mathison says it only seems thicker because when it grows back, you feel the sharp, blunt, thick ends from the previous shave.
“Sharing makeup with your friends is like swapping germs.”
Yup. Chapman says bacteria can be easily transferred from brushes, lip glosses and especially mascara.
She uses disposable wands for eyes and lips and uses makeup and brush cleansers to kill bacteria and keep her products safe.
“My advice is to not share unless you learn to properly clean your tools and products,” she says.

15-year-old donates her hair to the Pantene Beautiful Lengths. . .$2600 raised


SHANNON de Sousa, of Launceston, wants people to think next time they cut their hair.
The 15-year-old donated 35 centimetres of her hair to the Pantene Beautiful Lengths Foundation this weekend, to make real wigs for cancer patients, while raising $2600 at the same time.
Now, she is encouraging others to do the same.
Shannon decided she would cut her luscious locks last year, after her then 19-year-old sister Sinead was diagnosed with thyroid cancer.
``She didn't have to lose her hair, she still had to go through radiation, but it just made me think of how other girls around Australia and the world have to lose their hair,'' the Scotch Oakburn grade 9 student said.
``The Cancer Council helped her so much. They gave her a scholarship for $1750 through a seize the day award and it really helped.
``She is great now, and in her third year of her arts law degree, in Hobart.
``So I wanted to give back to the Cancer Council.''
To raise the funds, Shannon set up her own charity website, distributed donation tins throughout the state, and talked to many individuals, schools and organisations about donation.
Donations even came from the US, Canada, Africa and England.
``At first my target was $300, but then I got over $300 so thought it could be $1000, and now I have $2600,'' Shannon said yesterday.
She chose the Pantene Beautiful Lengths Foundation to donate her hair too as it is then used to make wigs for cancer patients.
At least 20 centimetres of hair must be cut off for the wigs, and is done by putting it into a low ponytail and snipping above the hair band.
``I did start crying just realising that I was cutting it, and then how much I had raised,'' Shannon said.
``But they were tears of joy.
``We have a family friend who had cancer and her hair still hasn't grown back after so many years, I know mine will grow back, but their's never will.
``I really like it.''``It's a waste to just chuck it out.