Archive

Archive for the ‘Green Spa’ Category

Elaia spa open at the Hyatt at Olive 8

April 17th, 2009

Elaia spa has opened in the Hyatt at Olive 8, Seattle’s soon-to-be LEED-certified hotel — the first hotel in the city to receive Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design certification from the U.S. Green Building Council.

A member of the Green Spa Network, a nonprofit trade organization that promotes sustainable and eco-friendly practices in the spa industry, the 15,000-square-foot spa is committed to energy and water conservation, recycling, waste reduction, and the use of natural and organic products in their services.

Elaia (Greek for olive) features 12 treatment rooms with exquisite lighting that creates a warm, honeyed glow. Each room can accommodate multiple treatments, so there’s no need for guests to shuffle from room to room for their next service. (A good thing, since the spa’s hallway looks right onto the hotel’s parking circle.)

Elaia’s Market Fresh offerings are seasonally changing services that use fresh ingredients sourced from Washington state growers. Current Market Fresh treatments include a lavender mint scrub and a white lavender clay wrap ($120 each). Look forward to a cherry mint scrub and wrap in May.

Other treatments include the Elaia Signature massage, which uses certified organic olive oil from Oregon in a massage that blends Swedish and Thai techniques (60 minutes, $110). During the 75-minute Oxygen Glow facial ($175), vitamin-infused oxygen breathes new life into tired skin.

Careful attention to detail, such as customizable music, is apparent throughout the spa, though I did notice a kink or two to work out; I was assured by the spa manager that the incongruous bottle of Ajax I spied near the nail salon will be replaced by a non-chlorinated, environmentally friendly option.

Elaia’s guests also have access to the hotel’s whirlpool and 65-foot lap pool, which are purified through a saltwater system that eliminates the need for chlorine. You can hear music even underwater, and the pool is surrounded by huge windows that look out onto blossoming trees, reinforcing the feel of an oasis in the middle of the city.

Full Article and Credits

Day Spa, Destination Spa, Eco Friendly Spa Treatments, Green Spa, Green Travel, Resort Spa, Spa, Spa Music, Spa Openings, Spa Resort , , , , ,

Green Spas – How to find a Spa

February 25th, 2009

green-spa-network

Maybe your nose is twitching for a facial with organic avocado or the skin is crying out for an invigorating cane sugar rub. How do you find a green spa to fulfill these desires?

The Green Spa Network is a good place to start. The network launched in 2007 with six founding spa members and has already grown to include nearly 60 spas across the nation. The network prides itself on spearheading the green spa movement, which is all about utilizing low-impact facilities and sustainable products for traditional spa treatments.

The GSN consistently challenges spa owners to deepen their commitment to green practices by undergoing a “green audit” to make sure member spas are using principles of low energy, reduced waste, recycling programs, stocking natural products and incorporating community outreach education programs.

Last fall, the GSN sponsored the Green Spa Congress in Atlanta with the aim of developing standards for environmentally minded spas and health/wellness centers. The Green Spa Network Sustainability Assessment Tool (GSN-SAT) was designed with the help of 24 members of the network. It offers guidelines and benchmarks against which spas can measure their green progress, in the absence of any formal certification for green spas.

The Atlanta meeting covered everything from spa marketing and architecture to equipment and skin care products; an expert discussed the lack of transparency in beauty products used in the U.S. and the emerging openness about product ingredients worldwide.

Another national green spa listing service is the Spa Index, which has a section devoted to eco-friendly and green spas.

As you sort through the listings, be sure to take note of whether the spas are day spas or destination spas. Some destination spas strive to create a more holistic, green experience, and focus on things like beauty treatments based on indigenous customs. They operate in buildings that are built to maintain green standards.

Green day spas offer green services like organic waxing and chemical-free facials while also selling lines of beauty products that meet the highest green standards.

Full Article & Credits

Day Spa, Green Spa, Organic Spa Products, Spa Product, waxing ,

Bardessono Luxury Inn & Spa to open in Napa Valley

February 9th, 2009

Destination design firm WATG provided complete architectural design services for Bardessono, a 62-room boutique luxury inn and spa opening this week on a 4.9-acre site in Yountville, California, in the heart of Napa Valley.
Bardessono Hotel Entry at Grand Opening

The inn includes a spa with four treatment rooms, a 75-foot-long rooftop infinity pool, a fine-dining restaurant, and meeting space. The design reflects a blending of the Valley’s agrarian character, the high refinement associated with its wines, and the indoor/outdoor character of local living.

Bardessono Hotel Pool

The project uses solar and geothermal energy, sophisticated energy management systems, sustainable building materials, and organic landscape management practices. The project is pursuing a LEED Platinum certification from the US Green Building Council.

Bardessono Hotel Green Wall

Some of the unique elements of the inn include a lobby without a front desk – guests are greeted in the foyer by the staff; every room has its own courtyard that allows for absolute guest privacy; and spa treatments will be available in every guestroom.

Bardessono Hotel Unit with photovoltaic roofs

“Guests will be able to take their showers outdoors, underneath the stars,” said Susan Frieson, WATG associate and lead architect on the project. “That’s just one of many experiences at Bardessono that will connect people with their environment.”

Some of the sustainable design features of the property include:

• Eighty-two 300-foot-deep geothermal wells to heat and cool guestrooms and to provide hot water.

• 940 solar panels on the buildings’ flat roofs, hidden from view by parapets that produce 200 KW of power.

• Rammed-earth sculptural walls and 100-year-old olive trees.

• Paving stones and sand for the entrance road, to allow water to seep into the soil, and valet parking, which will allow guests to walk – rather than drive – throughout the property.

• Automatically-controlled exterior Venetian blinds to let the sun and heat in early in the day and out later in the day.

• Dual-pane glass, designed to take advantage of natural light while controlling glare and heat gain.

• Fluorescent bulbs and light-emitting diodes. Everything electric in the rooms is on motion-detectors that shut them off when a guest leaves. When they return and put their key in the door, the current go back on.

• Dual-flush toilets and low-flow fixtures that save water.

• Filtered water, which takes the place of bottled water.

• Drought-resistant landscaping and underground emitters for outdoor watering.

• Re-use and treatment of gray and black water for irrigation through Yountville’s water system.

The project is managed by MTM Luxury Lodging and was developed by Phil Sherburne, who also developed Willows Lodge in the Seattle area and Inn of the Spanish Garden in Santa Barbara, CA.

Full Article and Credits

California Spas, Green Spa, Resort Spa, Spa Openings, Spa Resort

Scottsdale AZ Romantic Green Luxury Spa Resort

February 3rd, 2009

Just in time for Valentine’s Day, the Royal Palms Resort and Spa in Phoenix has been named one of the 100 Best Luxury hotels in the world according to the 2009 Travelers’ Choice by TripAdvisor. With 117 custom-appointed guest rooms, swimming pool, an award-winning restaurant and intimate courtyards hidden within lush, 100 percent green gardens and grounds, the Royal Palms is the definition of a sumptuous environment of great comfort and ease. 

To help guests get comfortable, the Royal Palms offers luxurious and private in-suite spa experiences in the Alvadora Spa Terraces. These accommodations, designed by world-renowned spa designer Sylvia Sepielli, feature some of the resort’s most stunning views of Camelback Mountain rising above tiered gardens, trickling fountains, crackling fire pits and a reflecting pool. Inside, guests will find mosaic tiles, leather furnishings and four-poster daybed with built-in therapy bed and draped in white linen, two plasma televisions, a Bose stereo, a European soaking tub and a fireplace. Spanish guitar serenades herald the setting sun.

We focused on creating a spa lifestyle rather than a hotel room,” Sepielli said.

Guests selecting the Alvadora Spa Terraces receive a personalized tour of the suite, 10 percent of retail purchases in the spa and daily greetings including a daily intention card, a stone of the day and a suggested yoga pose to help balance the energy in one of the body’s seven chakras. Upon arrival, these pampered guests are met with a surprise welcome smoothie. Five special indulgences are offered (for additional fees) only to Alvadora Spa Terrace guests including: Hair Ritual (hydrating and rejuvenating hair), the Journey Manicure (an intensive chakra-based treatment), the Journey Pedicure (an aromatherapeutic foot ritual), Thai Massage (a relaxing yet energetic therapeutic massage) and the Savasana (an treatment that energizes the solar plexus, sacral heart, root and crown chakras).

Of course, comfort is only one aspect of the luxury equation. Ease is the other. Unfortunately, romance can make some people very uncomfortable, especially around Valentine’s Day or weddings. Fortunately, the Royal Palms has a Director of Romance making it easy for guests to get the romance right.

My role as Director of Romance goes way beyond ordering flowers and making dinner reservations; it’s more that of a personal romance coach, especially for the ‘romantically challenged.’ It’s designing the complete, personalized, over-the-top experience that I look forward to, and I have the perfect stage for doing so at Royal Palms,” said Robert H. Vickrey upon being named Director of Romance in September 2008. Vickrey had spent more than a year as the Maitre D’ at the Royal Palms’ ultra-romantic restaurant, T. Cook’s before becoming Director of Romance.

The Royal Palms Resort lends itself to romance, from single nights away from home to destination weddings. Guests can take romantic strolls along the stone-paved walkways through 100 percent organic gardens filled with poppies, calendula, snapdragons, purple cornflowers, black-eyed Susans and none of the gravel found in most landscaping around the Valley. Regal Spanish colonial architecture incorporating state of the art materials and unique details from the namesake row of palm trees, 250-year-old fountain and laja negra dating back to 1692 at the entry to the ceramic tile “Lady of Spain” mural from the Delos Cooke’s original home, offer the ideal romantic setting for photos, meals and weddings.

The resort and landscaping are so enchanting, we don’t have to embellish the property at all and are able to focus on fulfilling the couple’s special requests,” explained Jocelyn Kraus, director of catering.

The culinary program and signature T. Cook’s restaurant, under the direction of Executive Chef Lee Hillson has earned praise from just about everyone from America’s Top Restaurants to Zagats. In January 2009, T. Cook’s four-course Inauguration menu offers guests the opportunity get the taste of John McCain’s defeat out of their mouths with dishes inspired by, and in some cases served at, past Presidential Inauguration Dinners. The Inaugural Dinner menu is offered nightly throughout the month of January 2009 for $50 per person, plus tax and gratuity. Incidentally, guests who can correctly match the Presidents to their favorite dishes during January qualify for a one-night stay in the Royal Palms’ Presidential Suite. The winner will be drawn by Chef Hillson on February 2, 2009.

The Royal Palms Resort and Spa is a AAA four Diamond resort and one of 32 independent, upscale, luxury hotels, resorts and golf clubs managed by Destination Hotels & Resorts in the United States. A member of the Historic Hotels of America, the Royal Palms was built in 1929 as the winter home of New York industrialist and financier Delos William Cooke and his wife, Florence. After serving as the private residence of several of the Valley’s most prominent citizens, the property opened its doors to guests as the Royal Palms Inn in 1948. The property underwent a multi-million dollar renovation lasting 12 months in 1997. The Royal Palms Resort and Spa is located at 5200 E. Camelback Road in Phoenix.

Arizona Spas, Golf Spas, Green Spa, Luxury Spas, Resort Spa, Spa Resort

Green Spa Treatment Natural Graces Day Spa in Oceanside CA

January 6th, 2009

Anxious about looking grumpy and stressed this holiday season, I was happy to discover Natural Graces Day Spa in Oceanside. This balm of green-inspired healing modalities offered a December Detox program to cheer your holidays.

Just walking into this spa is this side of heaven, a sight you will want to experience yourself. I was surprised to find a registered nurse at the helm; a doctor of chiropractic and a staff of therapists assist Gloria Clarke, RN.

Their focus is expanded health treatment and pain relief that assists in natural beautification. Detoxification therapy is like relaxing while someone cleans your house, but this house is your body.

The Acutron quickly became my favorite therapy and uses a micro-current to stimulate circulation and eliminate toxins. Gloria confirms my notion that it offers a combination of removing puffiness while adding definition. She asks about certain areas of my skin that look damaged, stressed or uneven. Gloria is a storehouse of healing information; to listen and ask for medical explanations alone would be worth the cost of the visit.

To set up the facelift effect, Gloria applies a relaxing and natural pumpkin mask after a face and neck massage. With the micro-current, she applies color and light to the skin, using the colors of the spectrum for different conditions.

Pain reduction is often another result of Acutron therapy. The treatment felt like a sprinkle of carbonation on my face. I could feel the cotton swabs about my cheeks, chin line and brows, and imagine an artist sculpting my face. Gloria informs me that further treatments will provide even more stable results.

Gloria handed me a mirror to see the improvement, and I couldn’t believe how smooth my face looks! The color is even, and my one droopy lid is lifted. She encourages me to touch my skin and feel its softness, made possible by the added minerals and exfoliation of dead cells.

 

Read Full Article and Credits

Oceanside CA Spas

Spas in Ocean Side California

Top California Spas

CA Day Spas, California Spas, Day Spa, Green Spa, Green Travel

Green Spa – Going Green

December 3rd, 2008

Weaving through the serene meditation garden upon arrival at Sonoma Valley, California’s Osmosis Day Spa Sanctuary, it’s hard to tell the landscape, carefully sculpted and designed to promote balance and connection between individuals and their environment, was once a musty junkyard. Or that the open, eco-friendly design was partially constructed of driftwood harvested from the sea. It’s not immediately obvious, but as underlying social tectonics increasingly shift in the direction of individual and environmental balance, spas like Osmosis are looking for new ways to express long-held values of harmony and wellness.

If you ask Joan Southon, this award-winning retreat’s general manager, the spa-goer profile is coming full circle. A few years ago there were as many guests gabbing on cell phones in spa lobbies as those looking for a quieter kind of communion, but spa consumer behavior and attitudes are changing, Southon notes, harkening back to an ethos treasured by spa creators from the beginning.

Wellness, when it comes to the spa, has always been about more than the human body—it’s about connecting to a healthier wider world. “It’s still a great girlfriend getaway, but as the world is changing, the guests are once again seeking a transformational experience,” Southon says.

A unique position
Spas are uniquely positioned to pave the way for customers seeking responsible, eco-friendly venues. They do require considerable water and energy resources in consumption and waste, but unfortunately, there’s no switch in the boiler room you can just flip into the “green” position. In the seemingly infinite universe of product and renovation possibilities, how do you start making your way to green?

The Green Spa Network (GSN) is trying to raise awareness that becoming a greener business is a complex process without a final destination. There is no fixed end point or medal awarded for achieving environmental friendliness. It’s less about a final result and more about a value system, expressing a philosophy that infuses all of the spa’s operations.

“There’s always something more you can do,” says Tara Grodjesk, a founding board member of GSN. “There’s a spectrum of green, you never stop becoming more and more sustainable.” The network has set up guidelines for transformation so no spa has to reinvent the wheel, particularly as it’s easy to get mired in confusion about the authenticity of organic labeling or the effectiveness of energy-saving synthetic fabrics. But whether you’re re-examining your product ingredients or converting to a solar-powered facility, there is always a place to start.

Some spas, including Osmosis, have initiated in-house green teams to jump start the process. Osmosis developed an employee handbook outlining a green code of conduct that promotes small, easy-to-make changes that can have a big impact, from encouraging guests to recycle and reduce water usage, to turning off lights in areas that aren’t being used.

But it’s not a set of rules being enforced on people escaping the daily grind, Southon says. Instead, they’re inviting guests to participate in their own holistic pursuit of wellness by helping them give back to the environment. “The whole concept of healthy people, healthy planet—we all know that we have to make changes,” she reflects. “And our customers believe this, too.”

Baby steps
One greening initiative where spas wield incredible green leverage is in selecting products and equipment. Nikki Severson, manager of Sundara Inn and Spa in Wisconsin Dells, Wisconsin, sifts through product samples on a weekly basis. “When we’re sampling any product from a company, we’re also sampling the company itself,” she explains. “We’re finding out what their green philosophy is and how the product was produced.”

Knowing your vendors and their ethics is key to expressing your own wellness values, says Grodjesk. But sitting down with a mystifying matrix of ingredients can sometimes turn out to be more problematic than useful. Terms like “natural” and “organic” are hazy at best, so the Green Spa Network recommends avoiding products that contain any synthetic fragrances, artificial colors and dyes, and formaldehyde-derived ingredients.

But don’t stop at the product itself, Severson adds. A sincere approach to environmental wellness such as Sundara’s goes beyond the product and considers the presentation—what’s involved in the packaging? Is it excessive? Recyclable? Does it force the consumer to just throw it away, or is it easy for buyers to reuse or compost?

Awareness of a product’s history has implications that range beyond the fields and streams it came from. Production today is all too often plagued by the unmediated and hard to monitor fragmentation of labor, and operators such as Severson shrewdly question whether a company’s manufacturing methods are attuned to broader wellness ideals. Osmosis, too, is making concerns about labor conditions and social responsibility a spotlight issue by revamping its gift shop with a new fair trade focus. So, after a weekend of psychic and physical balance, Osmosis shoppers can continue to breathe easy knowing the souvenirs they purchase are in sync with values of social wellness and accountability.

Keep questioning
Little changes make big differences, but it’s not all cut and dried when it comes to prioritizing issues that capture your spa’s spirit of wellness. Some issues trump others, and prioritizing isn’t always a clear process. Recently, Osmosis’ green team investigated new spa bed linen options. They eliminated bamboo fiber, a natural product that eats up fuel because it has to be shipped across the globe from China.

After considering organic and regular cotton, they settled on a polyester-based microfiber sheet that is remarkably energy-efficient in the laundry room. This material typically lasts 300 wash cycles, according to Robert Mishkin, a representative of microfiber sheet manufacturer Comphy Inc. While cotton is a more natural fiber than the formaldehyde-based polyester used in microfiber, Mishkin advocates evaluating every product’s total environmental impact. Some natural products require excessive amounts of land and energy resources to produce and maintain, and to encapsulate a wellness attitude that is truly holistic, you must consider every angle of how the item’s life affects the planet. Microfiber is a good option from this point of view, Mishkin says.

Nevertheless, Grodjesk is skeptical of synthetic products that are petroleum-based, and she questions whether microfiber shrinks an environmental footprint or deepens it. It’s quandries such as this that often leave spa managers scratching their heads, wondeirng whether a product that throws artificial ingredients into the wellness mix actually compromises balance, or if organically grown fibers gulp up more than their share of energy when transported.

Similarly, the hospitality industry often uses harsh chemicals to wash linens and clothing, but today alternatives exist that are easier on the ecosystem. For in-house laundry, study the chemicals in your cleaning products, and if you’re sending your laundry out, make sure you know about your service’s practices. And for paper-based products such as coffee filters and paper towels, try to adopt eco-friendly options such as gold-cone filters and reusable hand towels.

Complex alterations
Some spas are taking their transformational endeavors even further than sheets and filters, making wellness a tenet that pervades the space of the facility itself. From shifting to low-energy LED or compact fluorescent lights to charging through innovative systemic and design transitions, there are plenty of ways to alter the space itself and enhance a spa’s vibe of well-being. Already existing buildings can be renovated with earth-friendlier flooring and fresh coats of paint that use sustainable materials.

At Osmosis, the green team is embarking on what it hopes could be a revolutionary trend in how spas use water and manage waste. Concern with water is nothing new here, and the spa has already installed a Japanese filtration system that eliminates the need to truck bottled water across long distances. Now, plans are in the works to switch to a complex water-recycling process that would utilize the vast stores of grey water—water that usually just runs down the sink—that tend to go to waste in industries as water-based as spas.

Osmosis’ goal is to convert water otherwise wasted into a resource that is reused in landscaping. In other words, the same water that cleanses the skin of clients inside the spa goes on to nourish the meditation gardens where patrons seek peace and balance outside the spa. And this, Southon believes, enriches spa patrons as much as it does the environment by creating a meaningful realization of holistic wellness.

Green for you and me
Growing a relationship between your bodies and the world that wraps around them—whether it’s through water in the garden, cotton in the fields, or the unknown hands that craft souvenirs—has never been more in the spotlight than it is today.

“We have a lot of fun with it,” Southon says. “Where we’re at today shouldn’t feel like an obligation to the universe, it should be something that we embrace with a really open heart and an adventurous spirit.” Rather than becoming smothered in restrictions, some spas are making headway and embracing the quest for wellness as a long-awaited opportunity.

Full Article and Credits

CA Day Spas, California Spas, Green Spa

Tucson AZ Spa All Natural Products

November 3rd, 2008

Natural_Beauty.png

Local spa pampering the planet

A Tucson AZ spa prides itself on operating with 100% all natural products in order to be easier on the earth. Raquel says, “Most of the spas that you go to have a lot of skincare lines that are called greenwashing.” That means products only contain 2% natural ingredients.

It’s just another day in the office for Raquel Rzepecki. Her office? Lakali Natural Skincare Spa in Tucson, which got its start from a dark moment in her life. “I lost my mother to cancer, so I decided that I needed to be doing things for people. So I dedicated my spa to doing Read more…

Arizona Spas, Day Spa, Green Spa

Summer 2008 New Nail Colors and Products

August 3rd, 2008

Bright_Nail_Polish.jpg

 

This article is brought to you by Spavelous.com.

 http://www.spavelous.com

 

 

Colors that POP

Bright nail polish sparkles this summer

Bright, playful colors are what summer 2008 is all about. This assortment of bright polishes is by Essie.

From the moment Queen Nefertiti applied her first coat of ruby red polish, nails became more than an afterthought. They became a fashion statement. Colors and trends may have changed over the centuries, but pampering yourself and having healthy, beautiful nails are always in style.

Color trends
For summer 2008, bright, playful colors are what it’s all about.

“Colors should be fun,” said Donna Chanson of Paul Conza Day Spa and Hair Salon in Worcester. Hot pink is back with a bang, popping up in fashion magazines and on runways.

“OPI’s new colors, Elephantastic Pink or That’s Hot Pink, are great hues if you want to try out this trend,” said Angie Le, a nail technician at St. Cyr Salon and Spa in Worcester. “Celebrities like Rihanna are doing brights to make their nails stand out.”

Rihanna sported the bold look at this year’s Grammy Awards, when she rocked a bright tangerine nail color against her sapphire blue Zac Posen dress. Corals, pinks and cherries are prominent in all the summer polish collections.

If bright fingernail polish is a little too flashy, Michelle Cousineau of Top Shop Salon and Day Spa suggests trying brights on your toes. Eye-popping colors are a perfect complement to strappy sandals, breezy dresses and short shorts.

Black was a super hot color for winter and early spring for the more subdued fashionista, but now that it’s summer, switch to a navy blue. “Yoga-ta-get This Blue from OPI is perfect,” said Le. “It’s navy, with a little sparkle for the summer.” Or, “try a deep purple,” said Jennifer Rosa, a nail technician and massage therapist at Tu Moda Spa for Beauty and Wellness, a spa in Worcester, MA.

Ready to try a shimmering metallic? Gold, in particular, will look stunning against that new summer tan.

Nail 911
Of course, even with those fabulous shades on your fingers and toes, you’re bound to run into some problems. Whether it’s chipped nails, nail biting or just not having enough time to take care of your nails, experts can come to the rescue.

“Nails are like onions, they have layers,” said Chanson. “Peeling nails are often due to a poor filing job. You must remember to file nails in the same direction — and be careful. Also, after you finish polishing nails, coat the tip to seal the nail, since water is another culprit for weak, peeling nails.”

Le recommends the Essie Nail Strengthener System to improve nail quality. “If you want a simpler treatment, opt for tree oil, which will make nails stronger and will treat fungus,” she said.

As much as everyone would deny it, nail biting is an issue for adults as well as children, for men and women. “Nail biting is a big issue with a lot of women who come in to see me,” said Le. “Always try and get manicures. If your nails look good, you’ll be less prone to bite them.”

Cousineau adds that nailbiters usually have thick cuticles, so they should get their cuticles pushed back by a nail technician or during an at-home manicure.

She also suggests putting on a coat of clear top coat polish every few days after a manicure or pedicure to keep the color. “Never use old nail polish — anything over a year. It chips easily,” she said.

Classic looks
If you’re looking for a timeless look, the classic French manicure or pedicure is always the way to go. Even the super trendy Heidi Montag of “The Hills” sported a French manicure for the 2008 MTV Movie awards.

“I get the French manicure every time,” said one of Cousineau’s customer’s. “It’s just easy and goes with everything.”

If your natural nails need a boost, consider trying gels or acrylics.

Both cost about $30 and up, depending on where you go for the application. In addition, both need upkeep. “If you do opt for either treatment, it’s important to always let your nails breathe,” said Rosa. “Make sure to take them off and have your nails exposed for a few months every once in a while.”

Focus on feet
Don’t forget your feet. And a little foot indulgence never hurt anyone. “Making time for yourself is important,” says Chanson. “When you pamper yourself, you are happy, and that happiness rubs off on others. It’s good for your spirit and soul.”

But it’s not all about luxury for feet either. “I would say that dryness is a problem I’ve suffered with for years,” says Lindsey Shaw of Leominster. “Dry heels, in particular.” To remedy this common issue, it’s important to moisturize. “I would recommend one of two solutions,” said Rosa. “You can exfoliate to slough away dead skin cells and then moisturize. Or, if you can, get a foot masque, either at home or with a pedicure at a salon. The masque will both exfoliate the skin and moisturize it all at once, leaving the feet soft.”

Nails go green
The green movement is red hot this summer. Many companies are creating Earth-friendly lotions and scrubs. Eco-minded companies, such as Collective Wellbeing, an organic skin care line, have created a way to give back through their CollectiveCare initiative. The program gives customers the power to direct where a portion of proceeds from their purchases will go by allowing them to nominate and vote for nonprofits on its Web site. Also, make sure your nail products are animal friendly. “Aveda is a great green line,” said Rosa. “They use all natural ingredients and don’t test on any animals.”

Full Article

 

Beauty Tip, Day Spa, Green Spa, Massachusetts Spas, Nail Treatments