Extreme Green – Super Anti-Aging, Decaffeinated – 18 Tea Bags Per Box,
- Anti-Aging Formula
- Highest Antioxidant Green Tea
- Super High in Green Tea Extract (EGCG)
- We add Green TEa Extract with 95% Polyphenols
- Half the caffeine of decaffeinated greeen tea
Product Description
We blend a caffeine free green tea with a decffeinated green tea, both rich in antioxidants, with an extra dose of Green Tea Extract that is 95% polyphenols and 50% EGCG. This formula is so full of health giving nutrients from green tea that we call it our Anit-Aging tea. The health benefits of green tea has been clinically proven. We offer the best green tea formulation for maximum effect. Low in tannic acid, which means it doesn't get bitter. Makes a great iced tea.
SUPER SLIM POMEGRANATE
- *Beware of low priced fake product*
Product Description
Super Slim is a revolutionary weight loss product made popular worldwide. Package includes 30 capsules. The authentic capsules are are packaged with green foil on one side and silver on the other.
Triple Cream Dry Skin Eczema – 3.5 oz.
- It is a premium therapy for children's eczema care and severe dry skin.
- Fragrance free.
- Relieve : severe dryness associated with hand eczema, atopic eczema and psoriasis, cracked fingertips and heels, and dry, brittle nails.
Product Description
Triple Cream 3.5 oz tube Premium therapy for for children's eczema care and dry skin Triple Cream is the premium formula to help heal sever dry skin and soothe dryness associated with eczema. Triple Cream delivers a superior blend of healing, soothing ingredients chosen specifically to deliver fast, lasting relief to your child. Some healing ointments can be greasy and staining. Other baby eczema care creams can contain heavy fragrance and other ingredients that can potentially make eczema worse. Triple Cream is formulated to be the healing, problem solving moisturizer for your baby and other members of the family (even you!) that deserve the first class, elegant treatment for distressing, problem dry skin.
Nivea for Men Face Care Revitalizing Eye Cream Q10, .5-Ounce Bottles
- (Packaging may vary)
Product Description
Coenzyme Q10 & SPF 6. For tired eyes, fragrance-free. Eye care with Q10. Reduces: Dark circles; Puffiness; Fine lines. Advanced Eye Care: Life's active pace takes its toll on your eyes. Dark circles, puffiness and fine lines begin to appear. Nivea for Men Revitalizing Eye Creme Q10 provides the skin around the eyes with relief from the signs of tiredness. The superior caring treatment is instantly absorbed and leaves the skin around your eyes feeling smooth and revitalized. The Power of Coenzyme Q10 and SPF Care: Containing Coenzyme Q10, a natural component of the skin, the Revitalizing Eye Creme Q10 formula revitalizes tired eyes. It reduces the signs of tiredness - dark circles, under-eye puffiness and fine lines. The combination of an effective moisturizing system and SPF 6 protects the skin against environmental aggressors and light induced skin aging. Fragrance-free. Non-greasy, easily absorbed. Suitable for contact lens wearers. Ophthalmologist tested. Nivea for Men: Advanced men's face care - Improves the condition of your skin. Made in Germany.
Proactiv Solution Super Size Renewing Cleanser 6 Oz
- Factory Sealed 6 Oz Bottle
- Unique oil-free formula
- Prescription-grade benzoyl peroxide
Product Description
What is it: An unique, oil-free cleanser to help keep the skin clear of acne blemishes and prevent new ones from forming. Who is it for: Designed for mild to moderate acne-prone skin. Teens to adults. Men and women. Why is it different: This unique oil-free formula contains smooth, tiny grains to gently exfoliate dead skin cells and other impurities, plus prescription-grade benzoyl peroxide to penetrate pores and attack bacteria and existing acne blemishes. Also helps prevent new blemishes from forming. How do I use it: Use morning and night. Apply a small, dime-size amount to dampened skin and massage gently. Rinse thoroughly with warm water. Pat dry. Follow with toner. If going outside, use a sunscreen. Avoid eye area.
Beautyblender 2 + Blendercleanser Combo, The Ultimate MakeUp Sponge Applicator + Cleanser
- A great starter kit. This combo pack Includes; 2 beautyblenders, 1 blendercleanser, beautyblender portibility pouch, 1 sample of blendercleanser, instruction cards.
- Double your fun! Use 1 damp use the other 1 dry. Take one with you and keep the other safe at home.
- Washable, re-useable, recyclable. Can be used with all types of makeup. Use damp or dry. We prefer damp. Very versatile applicator.
- If you have problem skin Beautyblender works to cover blemishes. Use the pointed end and the stipple and twist technique for a perfect finish.
Beauty Explored – What is Beauty? Why Do People Have Such Varying Views?
There are many definitions of beauty for they mean different things to different people. If you have a leaning towards the visual arts, your view of 'beauty' might be a sunset, a mountain, a woman's face, a vintage car, a sleek yacht or an old man's face. Looking with different eyes, beauty might be found in the abstract equations of pure mathematics, the crystal structure of D.N.A. or the bizarre world of elementary particles.
The Nobel Prize winning physicist Richard Fynman said many truths in his time on a variety of subjects, and not all to do with physics. Once in an in depth interview for the B.B.C. in 1965 he was asked about beauty. His answer was to recount the arguments he had with a close artist friend about the beauty of a flower. The artist would enter a discourse on the aesthetics of a flower, its texture, the composition the flower made with its surrounding etc.
Fynman retorted that this was really only a very superficial view of the flower and one that science could improve on. He maintained that there was a 'hidden' beauty born of knowledge present within the flower. Expounding this idea, he went on to describe how the cells the flower was made of had beauty in their different shapes and structures; and there was even beauty in the myriad chemical reactions going on that kept the flower functioning.
Feyman's interview started people questioning their values on beauty, as well as fostering a deep interest in science in the young(myself included).
We now know that what may be termed 'beautiful' could be an object that is patterned or textured, an image of symmetry or asymmetry, or a celebration of perfection or imperfection. Beauty seems to be so wide in its definitions it cannot be pinned down. It is just so subjective ; and is, as they say, 'in the mind of the beholder'.
One answer as to what beauty might be lies in the workings of the human mind itself. Our concept of beauty appears to be a construct of imagination. It seems evident that the mind invents, alters and contrasts what it perceives, to make sense of it. In other words, the mind attempts a construct of reality; and since we are all individuals, each produces a slightly different picture.
Makeup – Have You Ever Wondered About Its History?
Cosmetics as a whole have been around for thousands of years. In the past some really strange items were used to enhance beauty, even a few have been down right lethal. What do you know about the history of makeup?
Origins of makeup
The use of natural materials, such as minerals and vegetable dyes pre-dates civilization as we know it. Such items where used in rituals and as adornments.
It was in Ancient Egypt that manufacturing cosmetics and scents on a large scale was first perfected. They say the greatest Egyptian Queen Cleopatra is credited to compiling what has to be the earliest books of beauty hints.
Many of their preparations were used for religious and symbolic reasons. The Egyptians love for their paints can be seen today in the exquisite work of the jars found in the tombs, many with their contents still intact. Beauty was important to both men and women. A high-born lady of the time most important feature were her eyes. With the use of Kohl to emphasize the eyebrows and it was used to give their eyes their distinctive winged look. Not unlike the cat's eye look of today which is now created with the use of liquid eyeliner.
Moving on in our makeup history lesson.
Next we have the aristocratic women of ancient Greece who apart from enhancing the color of their lips with vegetable dyes, used very few cosmetics. The real users of cosmetics such as white face powder and Kohl was restricted to the courtesans, as a sign of their profession.
Roman women on the other hand couldn't use enough makeup. Some were known to be so enthusiastic about hair dyes and bleaches that partial or even total baldness often happened. The wearing of exotic wigs and using smelly conditioners to save the hair was often used to try to hide the facts of going bald.
After the fall of the Roman Empire makeup fell out of favor until around the 11th century when the Knights returned from the Crusades. The Knights reintroduced makeup, fashion and other toilet preparations that the women they left behind in the Palestine were using.
You know there had to be resistance but it didn't come from the women of that time period, no it came from the all mightily Church itself. Then around the 15th century and the time of the Renaissance that our natural love for all things of beauty were allowed a free reign.
Renaissance Makeup or lack of.
In the Renaissance time, makeup was an almost ghostly white complexion that was ideal for both men and women. It was thought of as a way to distinguish the upper class from the peasants and laborers in the fields. One of the biggest examples from the time period was Queen Elizabeth I of England. It was her use of cosmetics that popularize facial cosmetics among the women. The queen had a naturally fair complexion that was reinforced the fashion of whiter than white skin. With the use of egg whites, ground alabaster and clay, masks and that now infamous white lead, all these were used to aid in the illusion of super white skin.
In the 17th century makeup really had a major influence from the fact that theater became popular. That parts once played by young boys could now be played by young ladies. Young ladies playing the part of young ladies, who would of thought?
Moving on down in makeup's history time.
It was the 18th century that beauty and pain started walking hand in hand. All types of beauty aids of exceptional discomfort and as well as absurdity came about. Rouge was still popular as ever for men and women. This was the time that lipstick in pencil form was introduced and hair? Well hair took off in all types of strangeness. Hair styles were so complex and it took days sometimes even weeks to create. It was set and left as long as they could before redoing it. There was also time of bugs in hair, even mice were reported.
It was towards the end of the century public opinion turn against excesses of the earlier decades.
The Regency period of England saw a return to the more natural look were herbal preparations, many home-made came into favor. Face powder and rouge was still popular but the women of this time had to be more discreet about using it. Powdered wigs and complex hair styles also fell out of favor. The desirability for cleanliness as a health and beauty need was now widely recognized. Respectable Victorian ladies were even more demure with their uses of cosmetics. Barest a trace of rouge of the lips and cheeks was considered ok but they usually had to apply it in secret. Maybe this was the time it because fashionable for ladies to visit restrooms in groups like we do today.
Home-made skincare preparations and beauty hints with recipes were found in the women's magazines and journals of the day. Rich society women would visit Salons under disguises in fear of being found out that they were enhancing their looks.
Thank goodness for the popular actresses of the day because towards the end of the century, they helped pave the way towards a more liberal attitude using of cosmetics as beauty aids.
This takes us up to modern times before World War One.
Now you may have a better understanding of were our love for beauty, cosmetics, hair care, skincare comes from. Thanks to earliest man for trying to please their gods, to the ancient Egyptians, Romans, and good old Queen Elizabeth the First. All who have taught us what not to use and what to use for beauty. Kohl was made popular by ancient Egyptians and is still as big today. Some of your home-made recipes may of come from the turn of the century. Beauty and the use of cosmetics will always be a sign of our times.
Beauty will always be a part of what is going on in the world as a whole and what we see on the movie screen. Hope you enjoy your little lesson is the history of makeup.
















