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Miami FL Childrens Day Spa

April 16th, 2009

le-petite-spaYasmine Klein gets over to Le Petite to refresh her mani-pedi and get her hair styled when she can.

”It’s always fun,” said Yasmine, who has been to Le Petite about five times since it opened in March, ”because it’s painting with all different colors for the nails.”

Forgive her syntax. Yasmine is 4 years old.

That makes her a typical customer at Le Petite Youth Spa, a candy-pink shrine to pint-size pampering, primping and preening.

The North Miami Beach spa targets girls ages 4 to 12. But kids as young as 2 are never turned away.

To fulfill the fairy-tale fantasy, there are frilly vanities for barrette-enhanced hairdos and sparkly makeup applications. Girls put on tiny bathrobes, admire themselves in full-length oval mirrors and climb atop massage tables. A pink shag runway allows clients to show off their spa day results, with camera-clicking parents substituting for paparazzi.

But owner Adriana Cohen says there’s more here than meets the eye.

”We opened a spa that’s not just about putting on nail polish,” said Cohen, 34. “It’s also about having nails that are nice and clean. That’s a nice little thing for girls to have. We’re trying to teach them how to be ladies.”

If feminist Betty Friedan were alive, Le Petite Youth Spa might give her a heart attack.

Learning to be ladies? Didn’t we move past that a few decades ago, along with pancake foundation and conical bras?

Diane Levin, a professor of education at Wheelock College in Boston and an expert on societal influences on children, thinks places like Le Petite are damaging to young girls.

‘When you’re talking about a 4-year-old going to a spa or getting spiffed up and everyone says, `you look so pretty,’ they learn that’s what you do to be successful,” said Levin, author of the book So Sexy So Soon: The New Sexualized Childhood and What Parents Can Do To Protect Their Kids (Ballantine Books, $25).

”They’re not going to develop to their fullest potential if they think the most important thing is how they look,” she said.

Plenty of spas tailor treatments for teens. Some venues, like the spa at the Ritz-Carlton South Beach, give manicures or pedicures to children as young as 6. Eclips Kid’s Salon and Spa in McLean, Va., serves tots as young as 3. But unlike Le Petite, it draws most of its revenue from haircuts, said owner Neena Kundi.

The International Spa Association doesn’t even keep numbers on spas for clients younger than 13.

Satisfied parents say Le Petite teaches positive lifelong habits. Girls learn to sit still for spa services. They are taught to cross their legs. They focus on hygiene.

And, after donning the spa’s tutus, slippers and butterfly wings, the children are instructed on how to walk: shoulders back, heads up.

”At school, they do what they see,” said Mercedes Schamy, who takes her 4-year-old daughter Guilianna to Le Petite weekly for nails and hair. “But here she learns how to be different, like not running [inside] a place like a little boy.”

What’s more, Schamy said, her daughter thrills to it.

“It’s like magic for the girls. More magic than Disney!”

At Le Petite, the young women who perform the spa treatments wear tutus and pink wigs. Cohen’s ”dolls,” as she calls them, are not licensed aestheticians.

Cohen said she teaches them what they need to know, which she admits isn’t much — the services are essentially for show.

Nail polish is applied, but cuticles are never cut. Hair is styled but never trimmed. Facials entail only creamy masks and cucumber slices for the eyes. Body massages are entirely superficial.

Cohen says the girls are never made to look like pageant queens. The spa takes a more wholesome approach, Cohen said, with light makeup applications and demure pink nail polish.

”It’s all make-believe,” she said.

The spa is foremost a birthday party destination. But enough parents asked for regular visits that Cohen now takes appointments or walk-ins two afternoons a week.

Prices start at $20 for any two services. An hour’s worth of all six treatments is $50. And a two-hour birthday party for 10 girls costs $550, cake not included.

A spa devotee herself, Cohen spent her childhood in Arequipa, Peru, where ”I was the little tomboy,” she said. “It wasn’t until I became a wife that I got very, very girly.”

She moved to Miami in 1991 and later opened a Belini furniture store in Coconut Grove. The idea for Le Petite came about when her twin girls, Natalie and Rachel, now 4, began pleading to join her for a day at the spa, she said.

Yasmine Klein’s mother, Sharon Klein, said she understands the allure for preschoolers firsthand. ”They get to emulate their moms,” Klein said.

Kerri Egozi took her three girls to Le Petite for the first time last week to mark the eldest’s birthday. She was delighted with the experience.

Still, she doesn’t want the girls getting used to the princess treatment.

”Once in a while, maybe once a year, I don’t see anything wrong with it,” said Egozi, whose daughters — 2, 4 and 6 — had their cheeks streaked with glitter and nails freshly painted.

”You have to keep it grounded. You can’t go and do this every time,” Egozi said.

Cohen argues that only good things can come from a moisturized face and combed hair.

”The more relaxed you are and clean you are,” she said, “the better you are inside.”

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Medical Spas and Specialty Clinics Florida

January 30th, 2009

 

medical-spas-Florida This Article Brought To You By Spavelous http://www.spavelous.com 

Medical spas are increasingly mainstream in Polk County, with two multi-specialty clinics becoming the latest to offer cosmetic procedures in new facilities that combine medicine and makeovers.

Nevenka Vuckovic, who does massage therapy and facial services in the new Bond Aesthetics unit of Bond Clinic Women’s Health Center, lists six types of massage and seven types of facials that are offered. And that doesn’t get into the cosmetic laser procedures Bond obstetricians do to fix spider veins and resurface faces marred by age spots, acne or rosacea.

“We’re trying to do a total women’s experience,” said Dr. Vincent Gatto, one of Bond’s obstetricians, although he quickly added that men can get massage, facials and other treatments, too.

Note to modest men: The aesthetics area has a different entrance and waiting room than obstetrics.

Watson Clinic’s list of upcoming services at its medical spa, scheduled to open in February, will include facials, microdermabrasions, chemical peels, permanent and airbrush makeup, light therapy and body wraps.

Jilian Motyl, a medical aesthetician, will manage the spa and the new building containing it. She said the spa and treatment rooms will combine a quiet, relaxing atmosphere with the latest medical technology. In addition to the spa, which will have a separate entrance, the building will house some Watson Clinic dermatologists and ear-nose-and-throat specialists who do facial plastic surgeries. That lets patients get a full range of services – from beauty creams to mini facelifts – at the same building.

“You really do have to have that,” said Dr. Raam Lakhani, ear-nose-and-throat/facial plastic surgery specialist at Watson Clinic. “Patients come to expect (both types of treatment) as part of their cosmetic care.”

The list of services for both clinics’ programs is longer than the ones listed above. Their entry into supplying those services has meant added competition for local dermatologists, some of whom have provided medical facial care here for years.

They too mix elective cosmetic procedures with more standard medical care. A few examples:

Parisian peels, Botox Cosmetic and other services are listed in Dr. David Murray’s Lakeland Dermatology ads, along with treatment for skin cancer, growths and other diseases of the skin.

Botox and fillers like Restylane, used for filling in smile lines and wrinkles, appear along with skin-cancer screenings in an ad for Dr. Marci L. Pepine’s Adult and Pediatric Dermatology of Central Florida.

Likewise, in Winter Haven and Sebring, Dr. Michael J. Rogers lists microdermabrasion and peels along with skin cancer care and surgery.

Some other facial plastic surgeons also provide some nonsurgical cosmetic procedures in addition to their standard surgeries.

Dr. Robert Merritt of Barranco Clinic said that clinic’s doctors do Botox regularly and some other injection procedures, but only a limited amount of microdermabrasions.

That procedure, popular in spas and medical practices, involves using light abrasion to remove dead outer layers of skin.

Dermatologists in Tampa have seen medical spas come and go, said Dr. Neil Fenske, who heads the University of South Florida College of Medicine’s dermatology and cutaneous surgery program.

But the expanded programs at Watson Clinic and Bond are long-planned efforts by established medical groups, reflecting their belief that the growing presence of these facial and laser treatments is more than a temporary fad.

Some procedures must be done by physicians, but others are done by aestheticians. Those non-medical employees fall under the Board of Cosmetology in the Department of Business and Professional Regulation. That’s separate from the Department of Health, which regulates doctors.

 

NEW FACILITIES

 

Bond Clinic Women’s Health Center/ Bond Aesthetics will have an open house from 4:30 to 6:30 p.m. Tuesday at 199 Ave. B N.W. in Winter Haven. .

Watson Clinic will have an open house from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Feb. 6, with a 10:30 a.m. ribbon-cutting, at its new building at 1755 N. Florida Ave., North Florida Avenue and Bella Vista Street.

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Sugarbubble Day Spa – Miami Shores Florida – Quality First – Free Waxing

June 8th, 2008

Sugarbubble Day Spa

165 NE 96th St., Miami Shores
305-751-3622

• The lowdown: It doesn’t get any more fabulously clean than this. Sugarbubble is owned by a registered nurse who obsessively oversees the hygiene in her spa to ensure clients don’t leave with something they never wanted.

Leni Benitez opened the tiny spa two years ago, and it has garnered a small cult following among those serious about the health of their nails and the quality of their facial skincare products.

Benitez installed special pumps to remove water from her pedicure sinks, uses hospital-grade sterilized tools and forbids her spa therapists to double-dip the wooden spatulas when applying hot wax. All this because she once got a nasty rash from a contaminated wax job. But that’s another story.

Manicures, microdermabrasion and masks all involve high-quality, organic products.

Benitez is equally committed to keeping prices low. ”This is designed for a customer like me,” she said.

• The neighborhood: In residential Miami Shores, Sugarbubble is right around the corner from Northeast Second Avenue on a bucolic block. Parking is a breeze, with metered parking directly in front and an open lot beside the spa.

• The vibe: Clean, intimate, homey. The tools are antiseptic, but the environment is not.

• The highlights: Milk & Honey Pedicure so sweet you might want to dip your finger in the brew, $40; Organic Facial with living ingredients in the goat’s milk yogurt, $90 and up; Sugarbubble Bombshell, a 90-minute luxe treatment tailored to your needs, including facials with deep extractions and microdermabrasion, foot massage, eyebrow shaping or waxing — you name it — $150.

• Special for readers of The Miami Herald: Mention this story and get a spa pedicure, $40 and up, and receive a free lip or chin waxing. Offer good through June 28.

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