Tuesday 23 February 2010

SCHWARZKOPF LAUNCHES PALETTE INTENSIVE CREAM COLOUR - SALON COLOUR HAIR WITHOUT THE PRICE TAG!

Hair experts Schwarzkopf launches a new range of permanent home colour - Palette Intensive Cream Colour.

The formula, based on the professional in-salon range (without the salon price tag at £3.49), includes macademia oil to nourish and optimum pigment content to give hair a rich colour full of intense shine.

Models, pictured below, at the London launch, demonstrated the full colour range of palette shades, reds, browns and blondes, below..



Palette is available in 12 shades -

200 Light Natural Blonde
400 Natural Blonde
500 Dark Blonde
600 Light Brown
650 Chestnut Brown
678 Ruby Red
750 Chocolate Brown
800 Dark Brown
850 Mocha Brown
872 Dark Bordeaux
878 Mahogany
900 Black


WATCH THESE VIDEOS IN WHICH TOP HAIRDRESSER ANITA COX-MCMILLAN GIVES YOU ADVICE ON HOW TO GREAT HAIR COLOUR

Choosing a new hair colour

Tips to prepare your hair for colour

Pick the best colour for you


Schwarzkopf’s Palette provides an enticing colour choice from glossy blondes and deep chocolate browns, to warm reds and lustrous blacks. And with it’s safe and easy to use application process, Palette is perfect for transforming tresses from dull to dazzling without the hassle of time-consuming and costly salon visits.

For those who are a little apprehensive about home-hair colouring, Palette have also launched a fantastic website http://www.haircolourtrips.co.uk/ with the help of twice British Colourist of the Year and stylist-to-the-stars Anita Cox-McMillan.

Schwarzkopf Palette is available nationwide RRP: £3.49 and with a full money back guarantee. For stockists, please call Schwarzkopf on 0800 328 9214.

LIVERPUDDLIAN CRIMPER ANDREW COLLINGE CELEBRATES 100 YEARS OF FAMILY HAIRDRESSING


Andrew Collinge (pictured above), twice winner of The Hairdresser of the Year Award (1993 and 1997) recently celebrated 100 years of hairdressing.

The celebration hosted by Alberto Culver, featured a look at iconic hair styles, from the bob, the Jessica Rabbit to the big hair look of Bridget Bardot.





The event also marked the relaunch of the Andrew Collinge luxury hair care range, with new formulas and packaging. The range delivers salon quality shampoos and conditioners with a RRP price of £4.99 - buy at Superdrug, Tesco, Asda, Sainsbury's and independent



Back to www.elixirnews.com

SHISEIDO LAUNCHES FIRST SERUM TO TRIGGER NEW SKIN CELL GROWTH

Shiseido, the Japanese luxury skincare company, has scored a first in skin care technology with the launch of a new anti-ageing serum that stimulated the skin to produce younger cells.




Bio-Performance Super Corrective Serum, with a relatively cheap price tag of £82, for a top of the range cosmeceutical with proven scientific trials, launches in the UK on Saturday (27th February).

Already top stores such as Harrods are holding client lists waiting to be the first to try this innovative technology.

Bio-Performance Super Corrective Serum contains two ingredients, together called Bio-Regenerist, which have been shown to promote the production of the skin's fibroblasts by up to 27%.

Fibroblasts are cells in the epidermis (skin layers) which are responsible for producing the key constituents of firm and young skin including collagen, elastin and hyaluronic acid.

Shiseido is so confident that this new product works that it has not hesitated in declaring that it works right from day one - in trials on 222 women 100% said their skin felt more resilient - while 92% said they felt their wrinkles has been smoothed.

Shiseido's approach in the development of this new serum was to look at recent developments in regenerative cosmetic medicine, in particular the use of epidermal growth factors (EGF) which cosmetic doctors extract from a patient's blood serum and reinject into the face to encourage skin cell proliferation.

The serum's two key ingredients, in the Bio-Regenerist complex are extracts from
safflower and yeast, which stimulate an increase in EGF protein, which in turn signals the fibroblast cells to renew and proliferate.




As a result these younger cells are able to produce more collagen, elastin and hyaluronic acid - targetting wrinkles sagging, dullness and lack of radiance.

This new product is aimed at women (and men) aged 30+ when the skin first starts to deteriorate.

Shiseido Bio Performance also contains Rose Apple Leaf Extract an antioxidant to help the fibroblasts fight oxidative damage including sun; Super bio-Hyaluronic Acid N – a humectant and Super Plant Bio Exfoliant to natural resurfacing

On sale from 27 February it costs £82 for 30ml. For stockist information call 0207 313 4774.





Results before and after one week of use



Results before and after three weeks of use

Monday 15 February 2010

DISCOVER THE ALPES-MARTIMES OFF PISTE THIS SUMMER



















Nice, at least the famous beach in front of the famous Promenade des Anglais isn’t what it used to be. True the city is still as captivating as ever, with its bustling flower and food markets and overflowing restaurants, the opera house and the five-star Hotel Negresco.

So down on the beach sipping a delicious kir royale as the sun goes down over the bluest of Mediterrean Seas is the perfect way to end a day of sightseeing. At the popular Beau Rivage restaurant I order my drink and while I wait close my eyes listening to the mesmerising sound of the waves lapping back and forth on the beach. Suddenly my golden moment is shattered as an Easyjet blasts overhead as it lands at the new seaside runway at nearby Nice Airport. It seems only 15 minutes later, yet another Easyjet …passes and another….

But the locals don’t seem bothered – proof if any were needed that even the fabulously weathy Cote d’Azur residents are prepared to see low cost airlines sweeping across their fabulous bay if it brings in paying punters like myself.

It also clearly does not detract from that other enjoyable Niçoise pastime – people watching! My fellow diners are gawping at the rear silhouette of a glamorous “young” woman, model size 4, dripping in huge diamonds and wearing red six inch stilettos with huge diamonté Chanel logos on the heels. She is walking somewhat precariously with the support of her elderly male companion to a nearby table. When she turns to sit down even her cosmetically enhanced face - her hands were veiny and blue - could not hide the fact that she was probably in her 70s.

So Nice and the glamorous Riveria still attracts the well-heeled but what do the locals do at the height of the summer season, when their beaches are packed, the sun swelters and and the unmistakable oily whiff of Ambre Solaire wafts through the air?











Beautiful mountains and forests behind the Cote d'Azur






The answer is that they escape to a peaceful sanctuary of wild and rugged gorges, Alpine pastures and mountains – all within an hour’s drive – where the temperature is 10 degrees or more lower.

Once the snow has melted late in Spring, the Alpes-Maritimes becomes a wonderful playground for anyone seeking a healthier physical and financial alternative to the Cote d’Azur. The area has some of Europe’s highest canyons and national parks thriving with wildlife including wolves, lynx and golden eagles.





























Taking the D6202 which skirts the River Va along an unremarkable industrialised valley, passing the perfume town of Grasse, before the road rises through the spectacular Gorges du Cians (pictured) - where it is possible to walk through the rocky river beds during the summer season if its dry. Parts of the old medieval road are also walkable.

The favourite resort of the locals, particularly in August where they decend en mass is the small ski-resort of Valberg. At 1700 metres it becomes virtually snow-bound from October until early Spring but in the summer it is a perfect outdoor activity centre.



















The Adventure Discovery Park, a short walk from the village centre, has an abundance of activities for all fitness levels, including children. There is an assault course in the nearby forest where you abseil through the trees, get the ski lift up and return down a winding chute in a sled. There is also trout fishing, horseback riding and golfing. Even watching from the safety of a nearby café is quite entertaining as unsuspecting tourists scream as they gather speed at the end of the abseil and crash into a padded wall at the end.

But my favourite is walking. Though, I must confess, one of the most bizarre I have encountered is the Le Sentier Planétaire in which scaled down model of the Earth’s solar system has been set in one of the most beautiful landscapes on earth. Our guide Cedric Robion, who also doubles as ski instructor also has difficulty explaining the concept.















































Walking through shaded forest and sunlight glades we pass giant sculptures representing the seven planets, earth and the sun. The trek which can last anything from 1.5 to five hours starts opposite the tourist office in the centre of the town. Despite my own scepticism the walk takes you through some beautiful countryside with sunlite glades and meadows covered in the most beautiful Alpine plants (pictured).





Is is worth getting a guide as ours points out a whole wealth of flora and fauna we could otherwise have missed including wild orchid, rare birds and landmarks in the nearby Parc National du Mercantour, a giant national park which joins another in nearby Italy and is home to wolves, 50 pairs of golden eagles, griffins and vultures and the lynx which was reintroduced to the area.

Not to be missed is a round of golf at the nearby Valberg Golf Club, which at around 2,000 metres plus, is a bracing experience even at the height of summer. But the views of the mountains are breathtaking. Designed by mountain golf course architect Oliverie Dongradio, the 9-hole par 34 course is also home to some interesting local wildlife…A strange eerie whistle, perfected by the local inhabitants brings the creatures – a species of ground squirrel, called Marmots, out of their burrows and they play, even doing somersaults in the favourite habitat…the bunkers.





The variety of flowers and herbs which grow in this region are renowned for the medicinal properties and at La Ribière (pictured below), two kilometres north of Guillaumes, a local couple make a modest living distilling plants, gathered from the nearby Alpes.




















Seventy-two year-old Pierre Parré and his wife Monique, 64, gather the plants, including wild lavender and thyme, locally and distill them traditionally in a copper vat. The villagers hit the vat from the Germans during the War. Behind their home, there is a hillside garden with examples of the many plants used and Monique, who by the way is as agile as a goat on the slopes, loves nothing more than to chat about her garden to passing visitors.


Perhaps this is because visitors are few in the winter months as their home as it is cut off by snow between October and early Spring. There is a small shop where you can purchase many inexpensive items.












As an alternative to expensive Cannes and a few miles towards St Tropez is the quieter and less flashy Mandelieu La Napoule, where they are great restaurants, beaches and even a castle – Chateau Napoule. The original site was a medieval fortress but in the 1920s it was restored by wealthy Americans, Henry and Marie Clews, as a meeting place for artists. As well as the collection of sculptures and the gardens, dining in the ramparts restaurant is worth the experience, if only for the view.
The Chateau terrace


















Mandelieu has all the marine activities you would expect. At the popular Pierre et Vacances family apartment hotel, you can sail from the nearby river into the bay and swim or snorkel.

What better way to see the sunset that to take the gentle inclining path up to the highest local spot, Mont San Peyre – at the top where you get a panorama of the coast including the whole length of Cannes.

And with all the money you have saved by visiting the places the locals go to, dine at one of the only restaurants in the area to have two Michel stars. L’Oasis Restaurant’s chef is Parisien Stéphane Rimbault so expect high gastronomy.



And you won’t be disappointed the service and food are both first class and if you are lucky enough to dine al fresco it’s a magical end to your visit to the South of France.















Fact File:

Flights


Easyjet to Nice book online at http://www.easyjet.co.uk/

Valberg

Valberg Tourist Office: T: 00 33 (0)4 93 23 24 25 Email ot@valberg.com http://www.valberg.com/
Valberg Golf Club: Open between May and August http://www.valberggolfclub.com/
Valberg Mountain guides http://www.oeroc.fr/
Stay at a traditional chalet: Chalet La Croix Saint-Jean, 4 bedrooms with bathrooms 38 rue Saint Jean, Valberg. Run by ski teacher Christophe Menei and his wife Lucie. T: 00 33 (0)4 93 05 45 52 Email lacroix-valberg@orange.fr
Résidence Les Ancolies, apartments – 6 persons.

Guillaume

The medicinal plants of La Ribieré - Contact: 04.93.05.50.28

Mandelieu-La Napoule

Résidence Pierre & Vacances, Les Rives de Cannes – Boulevard de la Mer T: 00 33 (0)4 92 97 72 00
Chateau de la Napoule -Open seven days a week from February to November and weekends the rest of the year. Restaurant reservations 04 93 49 95 05.

L’Oasis Restaurant, Rue Jean Honoré, T: 0033 (0)4 93 49 95 52 Email: oasis@relaischateaux.com Book online at http://www.oasis-raimbault.com/

Club de plongée La Cigale, Port de Napoule : Tél. : 04 93 90 98 66 - Mobile : 06 29 09 87 92 - e-mail : info@lacigale-plongee.com http://www.lacigale-plongee.com/

Easy Nautic – motor boat tours of the nearby bay and islands where you can swim – hire costs around $375 for a morning. T00 33 (0)4 92 97 72 25
Club Plongée La Cigale, Port La Napoule – hire of wetsuits, snorkels, fins and motorboats etc.
White water rafting http://www.eau-evasion.com/

Nice
Grand Hotel Aston, 12 Avenue Félix Faure, Nice T: 00 33 (0)4 92 17 53 00 http://www.hotel-aston.com/
The Beau Rivage Hotel Restaurant, Nice Beach