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“I love and believe in fashion trends; I don’t believe in skincare trends,” states celebrity facialist Joanna Czech. “Messing up your skin because everybody else is putting golden sparkles or whatever on their face doesn’t work for me. I believe in science.”
Over her decades-long career as an aesthetician with an incredible zeal for human physiology, Czech, who splits her time between Dallas and New York, has earned herself a big-deal reputation in the skincare world and among countless boldface names. Her customized facial approach combining state-of-the-art technologies like LED therapy, cryotherapy, ultrasound, microcurrent and radio frequency with her signature facial massage technique is trusted by the likes of Penélope Cruz, Cate Blanchett and Anna Wintour and has become a requisite treatment before events and awards shows, from the Met Gala to the Golden Globes, to help de-puff, smooth and lift and give skin an immaculate glow.
After experiencing a kiss of the limelight while gracing runways for the likes of Christian Dior, Helmut Lang and Marc Jacobs, model Hunter Schafer enamoured audiences in 2019 with her first-ever acting role portraying trans teenager Jules Vaughn on HBO’s
Euphoria. The highly stylized hit drama about youth culture has captured the zeitgeist of Gen Z onscreen.
From museum-worthy eyeliner looks to celestial washes of glitter, whimsical technicoloured makeup has been Schafer’s character’s calling card since episode one a maximalist approach that has effortlessly extended to Schafer’s own offstage presence. On red carpets, the 22-year-old, who is also trans, has stunned in an array of avant-garde beauty moments that range from splashes of iridescent pearls on her face and hands to vivid blocks of eyeshadow.
British textile and fashion designer Zandra Rhodes is celebrated for her artistic prints, electric hues and floating chiffon designs that span her career of over 50 years, and her name is etched in fashion history. The same could very well be said about her neon-pink bob and rainbow-hued makeup two longtime signatures that make her immediately recognizable and mirror the vibrancy of her fantastical collections.
“Pink is a very happy colour,” Rhodes says about her trademark hair shade over Zoom, her computer screen offering a glimpse inside her hot-pink London apartment. It’s located above the bright orange and (yes, you guessed it) pink Fashion and Textile Museum, which she founded in 2003. The vivid paintings, ceramics and furnishings that surround her are proof that her personal lifestyle is as glamorous and extroverted as her designs.
There are many things to love about about Canadian television broadcaster and
etalk co-anchor Tyrone Edwards, from his magnetic ability to ease celebrities into candid conversations to his drive for speaking out publicly on behalf of the Black community. But one thing you simply can’t miss are the incredible dreadlocks (commonly referred to as locs) that reach past his shoulders. It’s a natural hairstyle rarely seen on-air.
The Toronto-bred pop culture aficionado began locking his hair more than 10 years ago only a short time before landing his dream job on MuchMusic. For Edwards, locs are a protective hairstyle (one that keeps ends tucked away, encourages hair growth and doesn’t require chemicals to create) that he has long thought of as cool for his afro texture. But he admits that during his early television audition days, he hesitated going forward with his now signature look as well as his multiple tattoos. Why? For fear of adding to the systemic biases already stacke