Variations on the Chinese garden stool

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The Chinese garden stool is a low stool (only about 20″ high) that typically is round on top, bulges out, and then tapers to the bottom. It is great as a home accessory, a side table, or even a place to sit. The one pictured above, from Oriental Furniture is a real example of chinoiserie, with a black lacquer finish and mother-of-pearl appliques.

Visit our photo album for modern takes on the Chinese garden stool, including stools by ceramicist Michael Jones, a tea house fountain from dharmacrafts.com, and a steel “Penta” (5-sided) end table from Room & Board.

Top Picks for ’06

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beauty.about.com has a brief article on Top Picks for ’06, about the 163 Best Beauty Buys feature from the April 2006 issue of InStyle.

The April 2006 issue of InStyle highlights picks from beauty professionals in the area of makeup, skin care, hair care, and body care. It also has a page that summarizes all products that you can clip and take to the store with you.

You may also find InStyle’s feature on Best Beauty Buys online. Many of the products featured are available through our sponsors – just look for “SPONSORS” in the sidebar at left and shop.

The Style Page Joins The Mineral Makeup Revolution

I was running low on loose powder (Clinique translucent, which has been my standby), so this seemed to be a good time to try out mineral makeup. I succumbed to buying the starter kit from the most aggressively marketed of all mineral makeup brands – i.d. Bare Escentuals, which is hawked via informercials, 30-second TV ads, shows on QVC, and retail outlets including Sephora, Ulta, and its own Bare Escentuals boutiques.


Bare Escentuals Get Started Kit

The starter kit I selected includes mineral foundation in Light and Fairly Light (which, as I discovered, didn’t mean “somewhat light” but in between Fair and Light), Mineral Veil finishing powder, Warmth all-over color, a face/blush brush, a fluffy kabuki brush, and a concealer brush. This kit also contains MD Formulations Facial Cleanser and a DVD showing makeup application, but as I have not used these products, I cannot comment on them.

I was skeptical about the claims, as the “before” and “after” pictures shown on TV looked fake – if anything, the “after” pictures showed how eye makeup can really brighten one’s appearance. But I found that the application helped tone down the ruddiness of my cheeks. The application of Swirl Tap Buff® (yes, it’s a registered trademark) is simpler than my routine of dotting on liquid foundation and blending, and then applying loose powder, and there is no obvious demarcation. The mineral makeup finish was matte, but not dry and flat. I used the Light mineral powder foundation as my base color and the Fairly Light mineral powder foundation as a concealer.

The foundations are formulated with titanium and zinc oxides (yes, the same stuff in the white ointment favored by lifeguards), occlusive agents that serve as physical barriers to sun exposure. While the products are rated as SPF 25, it’s unclear how much one should apply to get that level of sun protection.

As the mineral foundations give a nice matte finish, I don’t know if the Mineral Veil finishing powder really adds anything, although I do apply it. The principal ingredient in Mineral Veil is cornstarch, which does blot up oil; also, baby powder is often formulated with cornstarch, as it is soothing to the skin.


Cornstarch – the principal ingredient in Mineral Veil

The Warmth all-over color is the color of rust, which suggests that it contains iron oxides. I’d rather stick with my regular blush, which is Aveda’s Tesserae, which features 3 shades of different intensities that I can blend together.

Am I a convert to mineral makeup? I expect to continue to use liquid foundation, but I am pleased with the results of mineral makeup. Mineral powder foundation is a nice alternative to liquid foundation and great on those days I don’t want to fuss with blending liquid foundation into my skin (I’d rather spend the time on eye makeup application). As the weather gets warmer, I will probably be relying more and more on mineral makeup. All things considered, mineral makeup was a pleasant surprise to me.

Now tag this! Part 2

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Web pages aren’t the only pages that can be tagged. Here are a couple of clever ways of marking pages in printed publications that I’ve found:

move forward sticky notes from Compendium Inc. This collection features 75 bookmarks for each of this headings: fyi. to do. priority. bravo. Compendium, Inc. also features bookmark assortments for be creative (imagine. dream. plan. create.) and have fun (go. see. do. enjoy.). You can buy these bookmarks from Compendium, Inc.’s eStore or at your local Franklin Covey store (consult our Stationery page for links).

Compendium, Inc. was previously featured in the entry What’s New: Papergasm! on this blog.

punctuation pagemarks from bob’s your uncle offer a lot of possibilities for marking pages for reference: for example, you could tag an extended amount of text using the opening and closing quotation marks or tag a part of a text you don’t understand with the question mark tag.

Update to Beauty pages

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I’ve recently completed an update of the Beauty pages on The Style Page website. I’ve added links for 30 cosmetics brands, including prestige brands such as Giorgio Armani Beauty and Chantecaille and various niche brands, to our already exhaustive list on the Cosmetics page.

Here’s a nice letter I received via Email concerning the web site:

thanks to your website I was finally able to find a website for rumiko the makeup artist and RMK the company

I totally appreciate your online resources on ‘the style page’
I look forward to checking out the rest of your website and links.

Here’s a quote from “Candeecake”, in response to the question “any fashion/beauty magazines you read online regularly? do share!” posed on CozyCot, a beauty discussion forum based in Asia (scroll down to Candeecake, 07/07/2005)

I’ve this bookmark but haven’t browse all the sites listed inside yet. http://www.thestylepage.com/

I’ve added brands including Roger&Gallet and Claus Porto (both famous for their soaps), cult fragrance brand IUNX, Barcelona Bath and Body, and Skin Milk to the Fragrance page.

I’ve extended the use of linkrolls to the Beauty pages, and already the linkrolls are driving traffic to this blog. Remember, you can use tags to create your own RSS feeds for blog articles relevant to your particular interests, for example Beauty Cosmetics.

Please support our website by shopping Amazon.com, Bag Borrow or Steal, Beauty.com, drugstore.com, and Sephora.com.

Libraries and linkrolls

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a small sample from the The Penguin Classics Library

The Style Page has completed an update of our Bookstand pages.

On our Books page, we’ve added links for information about several important collections of literature: Penguin Classics (see above), Library of America, the Loeb Classical Library, and the Portable Harvard Classics, which is one person’s labor of love to put every book into plain text for loading onto PDAs. Plenty of books for a lifetime of reading!

I’ve also added a link to the Poetry Archive, which features online recordings of poets reading their own poetry. The Poetry Archive was featured in the New York Times article The Poet’s Voice Online.

Lastly, I’ve added linkrolls to the Books, Media, and Stationery web pages using the utility in del.icio.us. That means that each web page will direct you to topically relevant articles on this blog.

New services on The Style Page blog UPDATED

We’ve added buttons to enable readers to add content from our blog to news readers offered by Bloglines and My Yahoo! For those people who would like to receive updates by Email, we’ve added a form so that they may subscribe via Bloglet.

Check out what others say about us by clicking on the link Blogs that link here on the left sidebar.

Also, please patronize our partners – Amazon.com, Bag Borrow or Steal, Beauty.com, drugstore.com, Sephora.com, and Google Adsense – just scroll down the left sidebar to Sponsors. They help pay the bills for maintaining our website!

Google AdSense now offers vendors the opportunity to advertise directly on this blog.

UPDATE December 21, 2005:

The Style Page blog has joined BlogExplosion. Other bloggers who are also members of BlogExplosion can “rent” space on The Style Page blog to promote their own blog.

We also have inserted a stats counter for this blog – scroll down the left sidebar to view. Right now I see that we have a visitor from Ireland – welcome!

Lastly, welcome to our new subscribers through Bloglines and Bloglet!

NYTimes.com: ‘Style’ Gets New Elements UPDATE

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DWR Design Notes provides illustrations from the new edition of Strunk & White’s “Elements of Style”

ARTS   | October 19, 2005

'Style' Gets New Elements

By JEREMY EICHLER
The first illustrated edition of “Elements of Style” features artwork by Maira Kalman, and an accompanying song cycle by Nico Muhly.


(Free) registration required to read full article. Find other references through our Books page: these are listed “below the fold,” so you’ll have to scroll down the page.

A Literary Anniversary

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Just as I am reading Mark Twain’s Following The Equator, a memoir of his 1897 world tour, About Literature:Classic reminds me that November 30 is his birthday and provides some of his witty aphorisms.

The New York Times named Mark Twain: A Life, a recent biography by Ron Powers as among its 100 Notable Books of the Year.

Cozy pajamas

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I’m not a fan of J.Jill, but I love these Winter Wonderland Pajamas. These pajamas feature ribbon seam binding on the collar, elastic waist with ribbon drawstring, a faux button fly, and wide legs. The fabric is cotton with a little spandex, and best of all, is brushed both
inside and out, so it’s extra cozy for cold evenings and mornings.