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Repechage Skin Care Comes to Leesburg FL Day Spa

May 5th, 2009

Spa introduces new product line

J Scott Berry wants to bring a little bit of New York City to Leesburg.

Berry, owner of J Scotts Day Spa in Downtown Leesburg, is introducing a new makeup line by Repechage, a New York City-based company.

The spa has already been offering the 29-year-old company’s acne product for a year now with great success he said.

But the makeup is something entirely different the spa is now offering. It’s a mineral, organic blend, Berry said.

“It’s now topping every professional product on the market,” he said.

Up until now the problem with mineral and organic blend makeup products is they don’t give women the coverage they desire, Berry said.

“Women want makeup to give them coverage and makeup that’s easy to use,” Berry said. “Most mineral makeups out there don’t do that.”

Repechage concocted a liquid mineral makeup that gives coverage, doesn’t clog pours and is good for the skin, he said. The new makeup line also does not accentuate the fine lines that come with aging, as most mineral makeups do, he said.

J Scotts Day Spa is holding a huge promotion during May to celebrate Mothers Day and the spa’s four-year anniversary, Berry said.

Spa estheticians will give complementary makeup applications all month. Women who buy a four-layer facial — which includes three layers of seaweed, two massages and fourth layer mineral mask — will also receive a free complementary makeup application.

“We’re running all kinds of specials on facials,” Berry said. “It’s really my salute to women’s month.

For more information about J Scott’s Day Spa call 787-7722.

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Repechage Spa Locations

Day Spa, Facials, Florida Day Spa, Skin Care, Spa Treatments , ,

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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Day Spa, Florida Day Spa, Miami Fl Spas, Spa , ,

Sleek Med Spa – Mall Liposuction

March 23rd, 2009

BOCA RATON — Wouldn’t it be nice to head to the mall, grab a latte, browse the shoe racks – and lose 10 pounds?

Sleek Med Spa in the Town Center at Boca Raton is offering “Smartlipo” liposuction procedures at its store in the mall near Saks, the first time that this procedure has been done at any mall in Palm Beach County.

Sleek Med performs Botox injections and other medical procedures in its mall location, but this is the first one that has required any sort of anesthesia, Rudnick said.

Several of Sleek Med Spa’s other mall locations in the Northeast have experimented successfully with offering liposuction; the Natick Mall in Massachusetts does 10 to 15 of the procedures a week, Rudnick said.

“It’s a novel idea that they have started,” said Dr. Jeffrey LaGrasso, a Jupiter board-certified plastic surgeon who will be doing the liposuctions for Sleek Med Spa. “What we’re offering is what you can get at a plastic surgeon’s office at the convenience of a mall.”

Others are not so sure.

“The convenience that this is in a mall is one thing, but convenience and safety are two separate issues,” said Dr. Stephan Baker, a spokesman for the American Society of Plastic Surgeons. “It’s not like buying a Gucci bag. You can’t just say, ‘This looks cute. I’ll have some of that.’ ”

LaGrasso counters that this is no impulse buy. You can walk in and make an appointment, but interested consumers must first talk with a treatment consultant and the doctor to make sure they are good candidates for the procedure.

Still, Baker cautions, shoppers might want to think carefully: “You can’t return this if you don’t like it.”

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Affordable Florida Spas offer $50 spa treatments – One week only

March 20th, 2009

 

Find a Massage Therapist  Spa Locator

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Recession blues are so not pretty, and increasingly, consumers have been cutting back on life’s little luxuries. That definitely includes spa visits and appointments for facials, massages, and manicures.

Well, here’s a treat for frugal fashionistas and budgeting beauties who want to stack paper and still look fabulous.

From April 13 to 19. Over 750 spas nationwide will be offering up to three spa services, normally $100 or more, for a discounted price of $50. And you need to book an appointment ASAP if you want to get in on this sweet deal! Trust me – speaking from personal experience, these spots get filled up fast.

All kinds of establishments will be offering the discounted deals — day spas, med spas, and fancy-pants resorts. This year’s list of participating venues ranges from West Palm Beach and Boca, Hollywood and Fort Lauderdale, to Miami Beach, Coral Gables, and downtown. Here are the local offerings, so all you need to do is pick up the phone and dial!

Beach beauties, check out:
Luca Spa (110 Washington Ave., Miami Beach, 305-534-7546)
Laser Cosmetica (400 Arthur Godfrey Rd., 888-341-9674)

 

 

The Standard (40 Island Ave., Miami Beach; 305-673-1717)

 

Uhma Spa (726 6th St., Miam Beach; 305-695-0996)

 

 

 

Downtown:

The Spa at the Sports Club/LA (in the Four Seasons Tower, 1441 Brickell Ave.)

 

 mySpa at the InterContinental (100 Chopin Plaza, 305-372-4444)

 

 

BodySense Holistic Spa and Wellness Center (2292 Coral Way, 305-854-3100)

 

Skin Therapie Spa (31 Almeria Ave., Coral Gables; 305-448-0555)

Up north in Aventura, there’s the Sleek MedSpa (19501 Biscayne Blvd., Aventura; 877-629-SLEEK)

If you’re new to the practice of pampering yourself, visit the website for tips on what to expect, how much to tip, and whether or not you should strip buck naked before entering the steam room or not.

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Spa Opening Ft Walton Beach FL

February 5th, 2009

spavelous-spa-businessSpa reopened under new name in Fort Walton Beach. Tonya Ekstrom is excited to see her extended family again.

“I’ve known some of these women for 20 years,” Ekstrom said. “I am ready to see their faces back here.”

Ekstrom had been a member and then general manager of American Woman Fitness Spa on Racetrack Road since 1989. Now she’s the owner of a new spa in the same location.

A New Day Fitness Spa opened Wednesday after American Woman closed unexpectedly Nov. 19. Members said they showed up at the gym and found a note on the door that read, “Spa closed.”

Ekstrom, her mother Deborah Hansford and friend Rachel Hoffman decided to go into business together and honor the contracts members had with American Woman.

Po Young was a member of American Woman, which had been in businesses for at least 25 years.

“I’m excited,” Young said. “It’s cleaner, fresher, something different.”

Young said she likes the atmosphere because it is a ladies-only facility and she’s come to be friends with Ekstrom and many other members.

“It is a family. It is a social place. There are different crowds and different shifts during the day,” said Young, who added that she works out mid-day when the gym is quiet.

The building has been upgraded, with fresh paint and new ceiling tiles and flooring. Ekstrom said the swimming pool is even getting a saltwater filtration system that is healthier for her clients.

A New Day has a Turkish steam bath, Swedish sauna, hydrotherapy whirlpool and fitness equipment built for women. Classes such as belly dancing are free for spa members.

“We’re not nearly done,” Ekstrom said of the improvements. “We’re just beginning.”

The spa is open from 6 a.m. to 8:30 p.m. Monday through Thursday, from 6 a.m. to 8 p.m. Friday and from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday. Ekstrom said one- and two-year contracts are available, as well as month-to-month plans.

“The camaraderie is a huge thing here,” Ekstrom said. “It’s nice to be back here.”

SPA HOURS
A New Day Fitness Spa is open from 6 a.m. to 8:30 p.m. Monday through Thursday, from 6 a.m. to 8 p.m. Friday and from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday. Ekstrom said one- and two-year contracts are available, as well as month-to-month plans.

Florida Day Spa, Spa Closing, Spa Openings

Aloe-Spa Now Available in Miami Ft Lauderdale

February 2nd, 2009

spaImagine reaping the benefits of pure aloe while enjoying the therapeutic qualities of a massage or facial. Once available only in Spain and Argentina, Aloe-Spa Salute Per Aloe has recently expanded their business to mobile services available to hotels, condos and luxury residences from Ft. Lauderdale down to South Beach Miami. A few of their services and starting price points include: 

  • Massages – 40 minutes for $120
  • Facials – 50 min $130
  • Body treatments – 30 min for $150

Aloe is touted as one of the most healing and soothing plants aptly suited for both health and beauty regimens. Other natural ingredients used in Aloe-Spa’s unique services include: organic brown sugar, marine salt, green coffee, honey, green tea extract, mate extract, açai extract, Andean volcanic clay, and pure caviar. Sounds deliciously restful.

Affordable Spa, Florida Day Spa

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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Florida Day Spa, Med Spa, Medical Spa, Miami Fl Spas

Serenity Nail Spa Miami Florida

December 21st, 2008

Serenity offers respite from everyday pressures

Helping you put your best foot forward

Jimene “Jimmy” Rinehart knows a good manicure when she sees it. After all, the former wedding consultant has had to maintain beautifully groomed nails for years and has done so across several different states.

So when her friends David Fan and Kim Phan decided to open a nail spa in the St. Andrews Plaza on U.S. 41 in East Naples, it was natural for Rinehart, the retired owner of three bridal stores, to share some business advice.

“We had long talks about how to have a good business in American society and what makes a place nice,” she said. “We discussed how to provide really good service and personal attention so ladies who want to look nice will keep coming in. The good thing is, they listened.”

Now, Rinehart devotes time to her pet project each day, helping the recently opened Serenity Nails staff – all members of the Phan family – deal with mounds of bureaucratic paperwork, ordering inventory and generally acting as a go-between to help bridge any language barrier.

“To open a new business in this economic climate you have to work hard and be extra special to get people to come in,” says Rinehart. “Serenity is open seven days a week, so it’s a brutal schedule. But the difference is, they take their time and they really take care with their customers.”

She says a lot of places rush through their work and don’t care if what they do isn’t perfect.

“At Serenity, the technicians actually work at what they do, especially for the older customers who may have cracked skin or pockets of infection,” she says.

Rinehart said she was amazed at how beautiful and spotlessly clean the new shop is.

“I’ve been in a lot of nail spas. The Phans do an outstanding job. A lot of places just don’t,” said Rinehart.

On the list of services offered in addition to spa pedicures and manicures that include a hand and arm massage, are facials and waxing, neck and shoulder massages, acrylic or gel nails and a nearly hour-long deluxe pedicure that Rinehart describes as “like being in heaven.”

“I get a kick, as an outsider, seeing people come in looking really stressed,” she says. “You watch them settle in to the massage chairs and before long their eyes start to close. You can literally see them unwind.

According to Rinehart, quite a few men come in for manicures, too.

“People tend to think this is just for women, but many men really enjoy it. For those who can’t get past the shyness, it’s their loss,” she says.

At $35 for a manicure and pedicure, Serenity Nails’ pricing is competitive as well.

Fan – who changed the spelling of his last name for ease of pronunciation when he became a U.S. citizen – is Phan’s brother and lives in Arcadia, where he owns another nail spa.

The rest of their large family, scattered from Florida to California., are all in the nail and spa business, after the entire family was brought to the U.S. by an American government official, a few years after the Vietnam war.

“I met Kim at another shop where she did my nails a few years ago,” Rinehart recalls. “I got to know her and met her daughter and sisters. They’re just a really nice, loving family.”

Serenity Nails

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Florida Day Spa, Nail Spa

Rough Times – Spa Smooth Skin and Stress Relief a must

October 21st, 2008

Facial_Stress_Relief.png

Looking good despite the bad times

Consumers may be slashing clothing budgets and obsessing over grocery bills, but they’re still going to the spa to smooth away worry wrinkles.

With food prices up more than 6 percent and people turning to new measures like carpooling to save money, facials and massages wouldn’t seem to be top priorities. But as economic troubles mount, so do spa visits.

“We haven’t noticed the economy a bit,” said Sam Sheppard, media director for Hippocrates Health Institute, a health spa in West Palm Beach.

“Our business is booming.”

It’s a national trend. According to a recent nationwide survey spas are Read more…

Day Spa, Florida Day Spa, Florida Spa Resort, Spa Business