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Great Year Round Golden Spa Glow

November 11th, 2008

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How to get perma-tan perfection

Keep your summer glow for longer with our body buffing tips.
When summer is drawing to a close, post-holiday blues aren’t the only downside for sunseekers. Once the sunshine starts fading, your healthy golden glow may be fast disappearing along with your carefree smile.

Those hours invested in slapping on the SPF and basking in the rays may have given you an enviable colour, but like your holiday, it doesn’t last forever.

“The length of time a tan will last is generally dependant on age and how you look after your skin,” says Caroline Young, director of training at St Tropez.

“On normal skin a natural tan will last Read more…

Beauty Tip, Spa Treatments, Tanning

Beach Vacation – Spa treatments to look Great

September 28th, 2008

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This article is brought to you by Spavelous.com.

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Prepare to Look Good on the Beach

Every year women want to have that perfect body for their holiday – toned, bronzed and sleek – and there are some easy, indulgent ways to reach your goal.

Firstly, treat yourself to a facial. Facials use everything from oils, creams, gels and serums to electric currents, oxygen jets and massage to give you brighter, cleaner, healthier skin.
There are different types of facials but pretty much all of them will Read more…

Beach Spas, Spas, Tanning

Skin Care to Protect your Skin

August 11th, 2008

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Proper skin care

Monica Kiel of Appleton is doing all she can to protect her skin.
She wears a moisturizer with an SPF, has yearly skin checks by a dermatologist and monitors any moles that appear on the skin.

All this came from learning the hard way how easily the skin can be damaged.
As a teenager, Kiel, 33, was caught up in “looking good.”

“The media has bombarded us with information in regards to youth,” said Dr. Michele Holder, a dermatologist with Affinity Medical Group. “Our society is very youth oriented.”
Therefore, anything to reverse the process “appeals to individuals who want the confidence that the aging process can take away,” Holder said.

Proper care and prevention can keep skin healthy and youthful looking. Steps such as basic facial care, using moisturizer, sun protection, avoiding smoking and alcohol and being aware of skin changes are some ways to keep skin healthy.
When it comes to basic facial care, maintain a routine year-round, said Dr. Carrie Blanc, a family physician with ThedaCare and one of the medical directors of Refine MD, a medical spa in Menasha.

A different moisturizer may be needed each season, said Blanc, noting the skin changes determine what to use.

“That doesn’t mean in the summertime, when its oilier, you give up your moisturizer,” she said, noting there are oil-free moisturizers available.

Wearing a moisturizer with an SPF is important, even for quick jaunts out, Blanc said.
“Ideally, you should be sun-screened every day,” she said, noting that the face is the most crucial area because the skin is thinner.
But don’t be tricked into thinking a moisturizer with an SPF is enough, Holder said.
“You’re not applying your moisturizer as heavily as you are applying a sunscreen,” she said.

For prolonged periods in the sun, use a sunscreen with an SPF of 30 or higher, ideally with both UVA and UVB protection, and always re-apply.
“If in the water, be reapplying that sunscreen every couple hours,” Blanc said. “There is nothing that is water-proof. Many are water resistant.”
Avoid the sun during peak hours between 11 a.m. and 4 p.m. Tanning beds should be avoided, Holder said.

“There is no safe tanning bed,” she said. “Tanning beds will damage the skin over time just as natural tanning will damage the skin.”
Instead, consider artificial tanning products or misting tans.
“Those are safe for the skin,” she said.

However, always use an additional sunscreen product, said Holder, adding that artificial tanning products offer no benefit in regards to sun protection.
Should sun damage occur, see a doctor. Dermatologists advocate a monthly self-skin exam to look for changes in moles such as growth, boarder change, coloring changes, surface changes and diameter changes.

“New moles that develop after the age of 35 should be paid attention to,” Holder said.
Those looking to reduce the effects of skin damage and aging have turned to treatments such as chemical peels, laser peels, broadband light, micro-derm abrasion and others.

“We’ve come a long way in that we have technology now in medical spas that can give skin back a more youthful appearance,” Blanc said.
She said people of all ages are seeking medical spa treatments.
“It’s become mainstream,” Blanc said. “People want to look healthy. It’s not that they want to look 20; they just want to look healthy.”
Kiel said it may be difficult to think about skin care, but it is important.

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Summertime Body – Takes Plenty of Spa Time

July 12th, 2008

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The plan: primping, prepping, plucking

A summer body takes some work, and men are getting into it, too

Ready? Deep breath now.
One, two, three.
Riiipppppppppp.
YEOW!

Oh, the excruciating sounds of summer.
While some people flop down on beach towels looking like hairy, pasty-skinned winter beasts, many won’t step foot on the stand until they’ve made an appointment at a local salon to get plucked, waxed, scrubbed, soaked and sprayed.

Baring it on the beach often means stepping up the beauty routine.
When the season of skin gets underway, Devon Tucker, owner of Covet Spa in Hockessin, said she sees an uptick in grooming services, such as manicures, pedicures, spray tanning, body exfoliation and facials.

“Every quarter there is something you must do,” said Tucker. “Getting ready for summer is not different than getting ready for any other season.”
And it’s no longer just gals doing head-to-toe primping.

“Men are getting into everything,” said Katie Soyka, a make-up artist and skin care specialist at Bad Hair Day in Rehoboth Beach and Lewes. “Not just gay men, but straight men, too. They are caring about themselves, too.”

Young men are an important and growing sector of the health and beauty care industry, representing a potential market in 2008 of $2.8 billion, according to a report by Packaged Facts at Market Research.com.
Chris DiStefano, 42, of Wilmington, started getting spa treatments after some convincing from a former girlfriend.
So far, the 42-year-old, who has a house in Dewey Beach, has had facials, pedicures and a chest wax.

“I think more men should [go to the spa],” said DiStefano, who has pedicures to soften his soccer-hardened feet and finds facials soothing. “The only problem is it gets expensive.”

Services at some salons can cost anywhere from $15 for a basic pedicure to $135 for a full facial.

But that’s only part of the daily, weekly and monthly regimen to think about before you tie on a bikini, pull up the board shorts and slide into flip-flops.

To Brazilian or to bikini?

Hamlet never had to wrestle with a question so intimate and a survey of local salons reveals an array of euphemisms and opinions when it comes to intimate hair removal.

So what is the difference between a bikini wax and a Brazilian wax?
“Ummm, it’s almost like a bikini is a double scoop ice cream cone and a Brazilian is with the jimmies and the frosting,” said a coy Soyka of Bad Hair
Day.

Monika Hibbard, esthetician at Wilmington’s Michael Christopher’s Hair Salon and Day Spa, and owner of the latter half of the title, is a little more direct.
“A Brazilian is not a hair left from stem to stern. Not one hair left on your genitalia,” she said.

That includes the back part too, by the way.
“People come in with all sorts of craziness,” Hibbard said.
But, it’s not any “craziness” Hibbard has to deal with. The day spa does not do Brazilians because “we don’t think it’s necessary,” she said “It’s not a good thing to do because, for one thing, it’s mucus membrane down there and could give you folliculitis.” (That just means a sprouting of those nasty red and white-
headed pimples. Yuck.)

Soyka and Tucker said Brazilian waxes are still popular at their salons, but, because so many people have different ideas, estheticians handling the wax are always careful to talk about what a client thinks they want.

“It’s a delicate thing, but it’s handled professionally,” said Soyka.
Christine Givens, 23, of Elkton, Md., said she gets waxed, but when pressed for details, she retorts, “I can’t tell you all that!” The mother of two does admit she doesn’t always get the opportunity to do the regular maintenance she requires.
Men who opt for the service — a recent US Weekly article included this too-much-information-tidbit from Sean “Diddy” Combs: “I wax my privates” — usually request a bikini, rather than the Brazilian. A basic bikini wax is often enough to cover any embarrassing pop-outs.

Fashion magazines have said that the Brazilian is going out of style. Having a simple but groomed “down there” hair is good enough, said Hibbard.
Bikini waxes start at $25 at Michael Christopher’s and run to $35 at Covet Spa for a basic bikini and cost $45 for a partial brazilian. At Bad Hair Day, a bikini wax is $30 and $65 for a Brazilian.

Hair removal isn’t limited

“We also have a few male clients who do their backs,” said Hibbard of Michael Christopher’s.

So how to do they deal with the pain that sometimes feels like hundreds of Band-Aids are being removed from your body at one time?

“We have a bar next door, and [some men] have a drink before their appointment so they’re feeling good and happy as clams,” Hibbard said. “Men can’t handle pain.”

Shane Plumley, 35, a bartender at Baxter’s Restaurant and Lounge next to Michael Christopher’s, said he doesn’t always know if guys are finding courage in a glass pre-appointment but he adds “I’d definitely have to have lots of vodka before I get waxed.”

For those unable or unwilling to imbibe before the Big Rip, taking ibuprofen half an hour before the appointment helps reduce pain and inflammation.
DiStefano said he wished he knew about downing a shot of liquor or popping ibuprofen before he had his one and only chest wax.

“I went in hardcore,” said the teacher, who vows never to have the service again. “It looked great but I felt numb.”

Leave the roasting for the grill

Slathering up with sunscreen is a no-brainer. Healthy skin is always in style.
“If you’re properly protected, you can gradually build your tan,” said Hibbard, of Michael Christopher. “I believe in sun, it promotes Vitamin D. I think people are lacking in that ’cause they are so crazy about diets.”

But Tucker said spray tanning is a popular option at Covet, which starts with a 30-minute exfoliation to prepare the skin for the airbrush. An organic spray tan system with a number of specific shades is used and it lasts seven to 10 days. It costs $48 per 30-minute session, with packages available.

Self-tanners and bronzers are also a good idea, but not all bottles are created alike.

Meredith Coons, 23, of Hockessin, said she prefers the Estee Lauder Sunless SuperTan ($22.50 for a 1.7 ounce bottle) or, for a cheaper brand, any of the
Jergens Natural Glow products (from $5.59 to $7.99).

“I used to tan, but my mom screamed at me for doing that. It’s so bad for you,” said Coons. Finding a good self-tanner is about trial and error, she said, something a family member discovered when trying an over-the-counter self-tanner.
“I made my sister do it, and she turned orange. It was right before prom,” said Coons. “Luckily it was on her back, and I was able to wipe off most of it.”
Soyka, of Bad Hair Day, said she doesn’t recommend tanning salons.

“What’s going on in tanning salons is also skin cancer,” said Soyka, a big believer in gorgeous, floppy sun hats.

She scoffs at the notion that pre-tanning helps prepare skin for constant exposure to the sun. “What are you preparing, to burn more? Tanning is just burning your skin brown instead of red.”

New birthday suit

Like salt left crusted on the side of the road, the skin also has a lot of winter residue left, namely a crust of dead skin.

Tucker, of Covet Spa, said the build-up is why many people break out during the change of seasons, and it’s also why the skin feels drier. For the summer, she recommends switching to a cleanser that has more astringent to cut through sweat and perspiration and using a lighter moisturizer with sunscreen.
Hibbard recommends a good facial for men to help prevent ingrown hairs along the beardline.

And a good sloughing never hurts.
“Do a body scrub,” said Tucker. Basic body scrubs at Covet run from $50 for a 30-minute treatment to $135 for a 90-minute treatment and include an application of after-bath cream. Some include a hydrating mask and coconut milk spray and after-bath that, she said, “mimics the lining on the inside of your mouth and encourages skin regeneration.”

Hibbard said keeping a sugar or salt scrub or loofah or exfoliating glove in the shower and gently using it two to three times a week can slough off dead skin and keep skin glowing. Exfoliating can also prevent ingrown hairs, especially in that sensitive bikini area where the elastic band of underwear can put pressure on the skin.

Foot fetish

Walking in the sand does not equal a pedicure. Soaking and sloughing off dead skin will reveal a bright new nail bed.
Indeed, pedicures “bring your feet back to life,” said Soyka, especially for removing that nasty white stuff from your heels.

Katie Davis, 27, of Wilmington, said she prefers bright colors when getting her pre-shore pedicure, while her friend Tasana Pattaratara, 31, of Wilmington, prefers natural color on her toes. Tucker said bright, primary colors such as reds, blues and green are in style this summer.

Sokya also sees more men than ever getting their toenails trimmed. They’ll usually forgo the color though “some like a clear gloss or something without the sheen,” she said.

Plumley, the Baxter’s bartender, said he always gets a manicure and pedicure before going on vacation to Provincetown, Mass. He likes to have his nails done, especially when he is wearing sandals.
Polish is always part of the service. “I think this year I’m going to get a midnight blue,” Plumley said.

But some men will only go so far when it comes to primping and preening.
Andrew Austria, 30, of Wilmington, said he would consider getting a manicure or pedicure, but he hasn’t yet made the jump.

“Apparently a lot of guys want to do it, and I’ve had friends who’ve done it and liked it,” he said . “But it’s not a top priority [for me].”

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Lodi CA Planet Beach – hydro-massage, skin care and tanning

June 7th, 2008

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This article is brought to you by Spavelous.com. http://www.spavelous.com

Out of this world spa

Lodi’s Planet Beach offers latest in hydro-massage, skin care and tanning

As summer approaches, sun seekers will inevitably head for sandy beaches to play and get a tan. But those looking for golden skin don’t need to drive all the way to the ocean. There’s a beach right here in Lodi.

Planet Beach, a vibrant and colorful spa offering massage therapy, hydrotherapy and tanning, opened just two weeks ago at 363 S. Lower Sacramento Road in the Raley’s Shopping Center.

Philip and Kirsten Loechler were looking to make a change and discovered the Planet Beach franchise (dubbed a “contempo spa”) through a friend.

“I was interested in opening my own business, and I had a friend who had a Planet Beach franchise,” Kirsten Loechler said. “She said it was a lot of fun.”

Kirsten Loechler presented the information to her husband, and they researched it. Philip Loechler had been looking for a change of career.

“She brought this up, and I said, ‘Sure,’” Philip Loechler said. “Everything just fell into place.” One of the main draws to Philip Loechler was the young open-minded attitude of Planet Beach. They began the footwork to open the spa, and exactly one year later, on May 7, they opened their doors for business.

Among the services offered by Planet Beach are an oxygen bar with several “flavors,” a hydro-massage bed, a Cyber-Relax massage chair, facials, guided meditation, UV therapy and Mystic tanning.

Kirsten Loechler explains different treatments offered at the business in the Raley’s shopping center. Here she shows the hydration station, a pod-like device designed to moisturize a client’s skin before the tanning process takes place.

The main focus, according to the Loechlers, is healthy skin. To that end, they carry a full line of skin care products, and soon they will stock a line of nutritional products as well.

Philip and Kirsten Loechler and their five employees have all been trained through Planet Beach University and have 1,150 units. Each is a certified skin consultant from the National Tanning Training Institute, and they’ve all had 40 hours of marketing and equipment training.

“We know almost everything about skin,” said Rhonda Dias, the assistant consultant at Planet Beach.

A hydration station, a pod-like device that looks as if it would transport people into space, is designed to moisturize a client’s skin before the tanning process takes place.

“Moisturized skin tans better,” Kirsten Loechler said.

Tips for healthy skin

1. Keep moisturized: Typical moisturizer sits on the top of the skin, but by using Planet Beach’s Hydration Station, five layers of skin can be moisturized.

2. Exfoliate: Use an exfoliater at least twice a week to remove dead skin.

3. Cleanse your skin: Use any product with a ph-balanced formula to keep your skin clean.

Source: Kirsten Loechler

After the hydration, clients looking to tan have the option of various UV tanning beds or the UV-free Mystic tan. The Mystic tan uses Magnatec technology. Unlike traditional sprayed on tans, the Mystic tan draws the color to the body like a magnet in just moments. In four to six hours, clients will have an even tan that lasts up to seven days.

When the Loechlers began promoting their business, they offered memberships through Twin Arbors Athletic Club. Since they opened, they have joined the Lodi Chamber of Commerce and are continually involving themselves in community events such as the Street Faire.

Memberships are still encouraged by the staff, mainly because they give unlimited access to all the services offered by Planet Beach, with the exception of the UV tanning booths. For a limited time they will sell memberships for $59 a month, though individual sessions can be purchased.

“In an hour, people (that come in) will be fully rejuvenated,” Philip Loechler said.

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