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Manassas VA Day Spa and Salon Ten Dollar Haircut

March 1st, 2009

Day spa offers $10 haircuts for a cause

Haircuts for first-time customers at Tranquility Day Spa and Salon will cost a mere $10 in March.

Usually haircuts at the spas at 15125 Washington St., Suite 304 in Haymarket and at 10360 Portsmouth Road in Manassas average $60.
Hair coloring for first-time customers will be $50.

All of the proceeds will go to Securing Emergency Resources through Volunteer Efforts, a local charity that serves the homeless.

Gloria Harding, co-owner of the spas, said the economy drove her to offer the deals.

“In light of the economic situation that we’re in here, I wanted to find a way that I could give back to the community and also help our business grow at the same time,” Harding said.

Harding chose to help SERVE because of what SERVE does.

“We have a personal relationship with SERVE. They have a wonderful program there and they help feed and clothe people who are here locally,” Harding said. “We’re a local business and we want to help people who are are in our neighborhood.”

The offer also gives people who can’t afford services the chance to visit the spas that have been recognized by Washingtonian and Northern Virginia magazines as two of the top spas in the area.

“There are a lot of people in the community who would love to come and have services at Tranquility, but maybe they can’t afford it,” Harding said. “People love to spend money on things that make them look and feel better and at the same time help a good cause. It’s a great combo.”

Harding has never tried anything like the $10 haircut offer before, so she doesn’t know how busy the spas will get.

“I’m stepping out on faith,” she said.

Harding also encouraged other companies in the area to remember local charities.

“I cannot say enough about how important that is. Some times I think local business owners get distracted with wanting to help lots of different organizations when really we’ve got to take care of our people right here at home first,” Harding said.

Walk-ins and appointments will be accepted.

Chemical Peels, Day Spa, Hair Care, Hair Spa Treatments, Salons, Spa, Spa Charities, Spa Deals, Spa Economy, Spa Event, Spa Events, Virginia Spas , , , , , ,

Top Regional Spas in and Around North Carolina

December 19th, 2008

REGIONAL
A Spa-Inn Asheville
128 Hillside St.
Asheville, NC
828-255-0051
www.ashevillespa.com
Services: massage, body treatments, sauna, reflexology,
aromatherapy

Ballantyne Resort
10000 Ballantyne Commons Parkway
Charlotte, NC
704-248-4000
www.ballantyneresort.com
Services: facials, facial enhancements, massage, exfoliation, body massage and wraps, nails, hair, makeup, hair removal

Chetola Resort
North Main St.
Blowing Rock, NC
800-243-8652
www.chetola.com
Services: massage, reflexology, facials

Grandover Resort
1000 Club Road
Greensboro, NC
336-294-1800
www.grandover.com
Services: massage, facials, body treatments, nails, waxing, hot tub, sauna, steam room, fitness center

Hot Springs Resort & Spa
315 Bridge St.
Hot Springs, NC
828-622-7676
www.nchotsprings.com
Services: massage, body treatments, mineral baths

Kingsmill Resort
1010 Kings Mill Road
Williamsburg, VA
800-832-5665
www.kingsmill.com
Services: massage, nails, hair, facials, body treatments,
fitness center

Nantahala Village Resort & Spa
9400 Hwy. 19 West
Bryson City, NC
828-488-2826
www.nvnc.com
Services: massage, facials, body treatments

Old Edwards Inn and Spa
445 Main St.
Highlands, NC
828-526-8008
www.oldedwardsinn.com
Services: sauna, fitness center, facials, body treatments, massage, baths, hair, nails

Sea Island Spa at the Cloister
Sea Island, GA
912-638-3611
www.seaisland.com
Services: holistic therapeutics, body wraps, skin care, nails, fitness center, massage, hair

Spa at Colonial Williamsburg Resort
307 S. England St.
Williamsburg, VA
777-220-7720
www.colonialwilliamsburgresort.com/spa
Services: massage, body scrubs, wraps, baths, skin care, aromatherapy

Spa Koru – Hatteras
40920 Hwy. 12
Avon, NC
252-995-3125
www.spakoru.com
Services: facials, massage, body wraps and scrubs

The Greenbrier
300 W. Main St.
White Sulphur Springs, WV
800-624-6070
www.greenbrier.com
Services: holistic treatments, massages, baths in indigenous spring water, sprays, reflexology, body scrubs and polishes, facials, nails

The Homestead Resort
1766 Homestead Drive
Hot Springs, VA
866-354-4653
www.thehomestead.com
Services: fitness and relaxation lounges, massage therapies, hydrotherapy, body wraps, facials, hair, nails

The Ocean Club
1701 Salter Path Road
Indian Beach, NC
888-237-2035
www.ocspanc.com
Services: facials, massage, body treatments, hydrotherapy, hair, nails

The Sanderling Resort & Spa
1461 Duck Road
800-701-4111
Duck, NC
www.thesanderling.com
Services: hair, nails, waxing, massage, facials, body treatments
The Spa at the Grove Park Inn Resort
290 Macon Ave.
Asheville, NC
800-438-5800
www.groveparkinn.com
Services: nails, skin care, hydro-bath treatments, massage treatments, body wraps

The Spa at Pinehurst
1 Carolina Vista Drive
910-235-8320
Pinehurst, NC
www.pinehurst.com
Services: nails, facials, massage, body and hydrotherapy treatments, whirlpool relaxation

Westglow Spa
224 Westglow Circle
Blowing Rock, NC
800-562-0807
www.westglow.com
Services: face and body treatments, salon services, heath and fitness therapies
Many spas offer gift certificates, day and weekend
packages. Call for details.

Pinehurst Offers Special Spring Package
Indulge your senses in pure bliss at the annual The Spa at Pinehurst Spring Renewal Weekend March 13-15, 2009. A two-night accommodation at The Holly Inn includes a welcoming reception with mini spa service, a gourmet gala dinner with wine tasting, life enriching and aromatherapy workshops, motivational seminars, morning group fitness sessions, receptions and luncheons, spa product samples and a $100 gift card. The entire package is only $499 per person.
Four featured guests are scheduled during the weekend: Mimi Donaldson, author, speaker and leader, has captivated audiences for over 20 years. Her most recent book, Bless Your Stress: It Means You’re Still Alive!, has generated exceptional reviews; Julie Luther, founder and president of PurEnergy Health and Wellness Services and teacher of “Nutrition 101” will hold her patented workout over the weekend; Illiana Kiernan, director of operations for Sothys USA, will provide tips during her “How to Spa at Home” session focusing on taking care of yourself without spending much time in front of a mirror; and Ashley Perryman, mineral specialist for La Bella Donna Minerals of New York, presents her unique approach to looking naturally flawless.

The Spa Renewal Weekend offers plenty of personal time to enjoy 40 spa services, resort venues, shopping and other activities. Call 800-487-4653 to reserve or go to www.pinehurst.com/spa_vacation_packages.asp.

North Carolina Spas, Resort Spa, Virginia Spas

Luxury for less Spa Deals and Spa Specials

December 9th, 2008

Spas create deals and discounts for slumping economy

With the economy slumping, facials and massages might not be a top priority for consumers on a budget.

But America’s top spas, gathered in New York recently for the annual meeting of the International Spa Association, are trying to make it as easy as possible for visitors to indulge without breaking into the piggy bank.

Heated black basalt stones and cool white marble stones are used in massage therapy at the Miraval Life in Balance Spa in Catalina, Arizona.

“You can still go and have a spa experience without spending a ton of money,” says Veronica Cole of the Ojai Valley Inn & Spa in Ojai, California. “Many spas, like ours, offer use of our facilities with one treatment, so you can come spend hours relaxing.”

In other words, if you can’t afford a weekend or overnight stay, consider booking one massage or scrub at a destination spa, which usually entitles you to use the pool, steam room and other facilities for the day.

The Ojai Valley Inn, located not far from Los Angeles, is a destination spa known for its blooming lavender gardens and an approach that draws on Native American spa traditions.

Cole said carving out an hour or two and hanging out at the spa can be relaxing enough to make you feel like you’re on a mini-vacation.

Jaime Huffman of the Grove Park Inn Resort & Spa in Asheville, NC, said more 50-minute massages have been made available recently instead of more expensive 80-minute massages. The Cliff House Resort & Spa in Ogunquit, Maine, offers a $99 spa sampler on Sundays.

Booking midweek is usually cheaper than weekend trips, and spa owners suggest asking about specials like a mother-daughter discount or a family discount. Many spas have them but don’t necessarily talk them up.

Spas are still growing despite the economy: 138 million people visited spas around the country last year, according to the most recent industry figures from the International Spa Association. And spa revenue in 2007 was $10 billion, the organization said, up from just over $9 billion the year before. Data for 2008 show that spas continue to grow, the association said.

Spa operators also suggest considering a spa vacation as an alternative to going to Europe or taking some other big trip. There’s rarely a need to drive once you’re at a destination spa, so you won’t be spending money on gas. And an all-inclusive booking means that lodging, food, pools, the locker room and other amenities and facilities like hot tubs and steam rooms are included in the cost.

“You can really retreat to a spa, and there are no unaccounted costs because you pay upfront,” said Lola Roeh, general manager of the Osthoff Resort, which is home to the Aspira Spa spas in Elkhart Lake, WI. “You can chose to add on costs, like additional treatments, but that’s up to you.”

Destination spas can be pricey — $500 for a weekend or more — but it’s possible to cut other costs if you decide to vacation at one. The Lodge at Woodloch, about two hours outside of New York in Hawley, Pa., is far enough away from the city that visitors can feel like they’re on a real vacation, but close enough to take a bus or train from Manhattan and save on gas. And you don’t have to stay a week or five days; many spas offer two-night stays that can still be relaxing.

Many other spas are outside of major metropolitan areas, like Kohler’s newest day spa in southwest suburban Burr Ridge. The company, known for its faucets, paired a showroom with the spa so clients can sit in whirlpools or fancy tubs and do shopping for remodeling, too.

Along with tips for spagoers on a budget, other themes emerged at the spa meeting. Here are five trends shaping today’s spa experience.

BUSY BEES: Many spas are catering to the stresses on busy workers. The Spa of Colonial Williamsburg spas in Williamsburg, Va., is offering a Wi-Fi massage geared toward the muscles you use when you’re at the computer. Mohonk Mountain House in New Paltz, N.Y., offers meditation to help calm nerves.

THE FIRST TIME: Ginn Hammock Beach Resort in Palm Coast, Fla., offers a clothed massage — for people who are afraid of going in the buff to a treatment. A survey of spagoers last year found 70 percent who hadn’t tried a massage were uncomfortable with being naked or partially naked. This massage eases people into the treatment — and hopefully allows them to feel more comfortable to go full Monty later on.

COUPLES TOO: Ginny Lopis of the Lodge at Woodloch says she’s seeing more and more couples booking spa getaways. At least half the guests these days are male, she says. “It’s really not just for ladies anymore,” she said. “We get husbands and boyfriends here who really enjoy it.” Other spas say they are seeing more couples, also.

GO GREEN: Spas are getting greener, from homeopathic treatments at the JW Marriott Spa Collection to an eco-friendly spa at Mohonk Mountain House that uses organic products made from locally grown ingredients. The Kohler spas are big on water conservation and use eco-friendly shower heads and toilets.

DISTINGUISH FROM THE MASSES: With more than 18,000 spas around the country, establishments are distinguishing themselves by offering unique treatments and products. The Four Seasons Hotels & Resorts spas offer a lava shell neck treatment, which uses shells, applied in the same way that heated stones are sometimes used in massage. The Lake Austin Spa Resort outside Austin, Texas, offers yoga and spa treatments for those with asthma and allergies.

Arizona Spas, California Spa, Green Spas, Spa Deals, Spa Economy, Spa Travel, Texas Resort Spas, Virginia Spas

Richmond Virginia Spas for Men

October 28th, 2008

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Barbershop morphs into ‘grooming lounge’ 

Spas for Men

What men want

Men in the Richmond area discover day spas are for them, too
Hey, guys: Remember the men’s  barbershops of yesteryear?

You’d walk in, nod at the barber and sit down with an outdated magazine that had a deer or a muscle car on its cover. Maybe you’d grab a Nehi soda from the drink machine while you waited. If you’re of a certain age, you might have heard the buzzing of clippers shaping a crew cut.

The waiting-room experience at Razors a men spa in Richmond’s Shockoe Slip is a little different. There, clients enjoy a complimentary glass of beer Read more…

Men Spa, Spas for Men, Virginia Spas

SpaVa Premier Day Spa Roanoke VA Grand Opening

September 15th, 2008

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This article is brought to you by Spavelous.com.

 http://www.spavelous.com

New day spa will open this month
A local day spa is expanding its reach, and its opening is near.

The owner of SpaVa Premier Day Spa plans to open its second location on Franklin Road in Roanoke on Sept. 20. It’s been 10 years since owner Robyn Goodpasture landed this pampering business on Braeburn Drive in Salem.

And since last October, work crews have been renovating a second spot for SpaVa in a former doctor’s office building on 2610 Franklin Road. Goodpasture told me earlier this year that she wanted to expand to Roanoke to draw a larger client base.
Her current spa business brings in more than $1 million in revenue each year.

Still, opening her enterprise inside this 12,000 square foot structure has taken a little longer than Goodpasture initially planned. She had hoped for an April opening, after investing more than $2 million in the new venture.

The services offered at the new SpaVa will be similar to those at the Salem location, including SpaFit and Rejuva skin care. It also will house an Aveda salon, the Center for Bariatric Medicine, a men’s suite and a smoothie bar.

And if you’re pressed for time, Goodpasture said the new day spa will offer walk-in manicures and pedicures.

On Sept. 20, there will be an open house from noon to 4 p.m., with demonstrations, food, tours and prizes.

Full Article & credits

Day Spa, Virginia Spas

Colonial Williamsburg – Spa Treatments by the Century

April 19th, 2008

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This article is brought to you by Spavelous.com.

http://www.spavelous.com

 

Virginia Day Spas Virginia Resort Spas Virginia Medical Spas

Colonial Williamsburg offers new-age spa treatments


Williamsburg, VA — The challenge was to take the essentially modern construct of a spa and integrate it into the fabric of one of the country’s premier historical destinations.

You can get a massage or facial at the Spa of Colonial Williamsburg. You can get a manicure or pedicure or sit in the whirlpool. But the spa’s signature treatments, modern interpretations of healing and relaxation practices of the last five centuries, take you into a time machine. Each incorporates therapies drawn from the prevailing attitudes toward health and wellness in a specific era.

The Colonial Williamsburg Foundation

The new outdoor pool at the Spa of Colonial Williamsburg nestles into a sloping hillside overlooking a golf course.

In sum the five experiences highlight wellness traditions not only across time but also across the ethnic groups that have left their imprint on Williamsburg.

The Cleansing Hot Stones Spa Experience draws on the 17th-century Powhatan Indian practice of using sweating to eliminate aches and pains. In the modern interpretation, the body is warmed by hot stones then wrapped in herb-infused, steaming linen to encourage the release of toxins. The experience concludes with a full-body, hot-stone massage using oil containing lavender, cypress, juniper and rosemary.

Doctors in the 18th century began to make connections between cleanliness and health, theorizing that dirt on the skin prevented the body from perspiring freely, considered to be an essential natural process. Herbs and botanicals were thought to be a cure for a variety of ailments, and these were added to cleansing baths. This ritual has been adapted for the modern-day patron in the Colonial Herbal Spa Experience, consisting of a foot bath, followed by an orange-ginger body scrub, herbal body wrap and massage.

The Root and Herbal Spa Experience draws on African-American practices that used root powders to heal and strengthen, combined with the 19th-century fascination with spring waters. They thought that when the water was ingested, applied topically or used for bathing, it would cure common diseases. This treatment includes exfoliation with an herbal powder of lavender buds, rose petals and essential oils, followed by a bath, infused with sage, lavender and sea salts, and a massage.

Inspiration for the 20th- century Williamsburg Water Cures Spa Experience came from the development of technologically advanced spa equipment combined with the history of bathing rituals. This treatment consists of a full-body, dry-brush exfoliation, followed by a Vichy shower “rain” massage and a traditional milk bath to seal in the skin’s moisture.

Among the newest services are laser treatments and micro-dermabrasion. The spa offers state-of-the-art, particle-free dermabrasion along with the application of pure oxygen to the skin as part of its 21st-century Skin Rejuvenation Spa Experience.

Housed in space formerly occupied by a folk art museum, the Spa of Colonial Williamsburg opened a year ago. All proceeds go to the Colonial Williamsburg Foundation, said Kate Mearns, spa director.


The red brick Georgian-Revival building is bordered by a deep green arbor that shades a brick walkway. The inside decor is a pleasing combination of Colonial and modern. The women’s locker room features candle chandeliers, pewter hooks and hardware, honey-colored wood lockers and frosted glass.


A wet lounge with rough stone walls includes a eucalyptus steam shower, whirlpool and cooling rainfall shower. A bucket of ice water holds rolled up, lavender-scented face cloths.


Clad in robe and sandals, I began in the 18th century and ended in the 21st. My treatment started with a foot bath and ended with a foot massage.


The foot bath was followed by a body scrub. Made of brown sugar, orange essence, ginger powder and coconut oil, the scrub was pleasantly exfoliating and didn’t sting the way some scrubs do because it contained no salt. My therapist, Laura, explained that oranges were prized in Colonial days because they were imported from Europe, and ginger was used in tea and medicines.


After the scrub, Laura wrapped my feet in hot towels, draped my body in towels, then placed hot cloths that had been soaking in an herbal solution atop the towels. She pulled up the sides of the thermal sheet I was lying on and wrapped me like a mummy. While the heat-infused cloths softened my skin, she massaged my scalp.


Laura left the room, and I showered and got back on the table for a massage. The lemon grass and ginger oil left my skin silky.


From the traditional territory of scrubs and massage, I headed to the high-tech world of ultrasonic dermabrasion and applied oxygen. My modern experience also began with a foot bath and lavender scrub, during which my therapist, Tina, explained the process of cleansing, exfoliating and then hydrating the skin.


Using an ultrasonic wand, Tina exfoliated my face, then worked hydrating products into my skin with the same tool. I actually saw some lightening of brown spots caused by sun damage, but Tina explained that it wouldn’t last without regular treatment.


The next step was a hydrating masque, and while it set, Tina massaged my neck, shoulders, arms and hands. Finally she applied pure oxygen and oxygenated products with the Oxy Oasis machine, whose insistent thump had a distinctly hospital overtone. Bursts of pure air alternated with the soft spray of botanical skin products.


The whole process was markedly gentler than traditional micro-dermabrasion and chemical peels, and there was no redness to my skin when I left.

With any service, patrons can use all the spa’s amenities, including an indoor pool, outdoor pool in season, whirlpool, steam room, showers and locker rooms.

Massage continues to be the most popular treatment, said Mearns. And while most clients are women, men have responded especially well to services that incorporate baths and water rituals. “The century treatments are gaining in popularity,” she said, “and as we continue to be more branded, we expect this trend to continue.”

A long-range goal, Mearns said, is for the spa, with its access to the vast records of the foundation, to become “the library for the American spa experience,” an authority on American therapies that spa owners and designers can consult.

The field is still evolving, said Sepielli, noting two areas that are becoming increasingly prominent: spirituality — which she described as “doing things that enrich your soul, mind and heart to maintain your health” — and healthy aging.

“People want to make sure their health keeps up with their lifestyle,” she said. “This is good news for the spa industry. We’re moving from the realm of luxury into wellness.”

The Spa of Colonial Williamsburg, 307 S. England St., Williamsburg. Century-inspired treatments, 1 1/2-2 hours, cost $165-$285. 1-800-688-6479,

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Colonial williamsburg, Destination Spa, Health Tips, Massage, New Age Spa, Spa, Spa Getaways, Spa Resorts, Spa Treatments, Virginia Spas