Tuesday, October 28, 2008

Makeover Moment

"I WANT TO LOOK . . . PROFESSIONAL!" That's what all said by a women. We wanted to look perfect.

When you're dying to ace an interview, you've got to work your look. Hair and makeup astist give one an eminently hireable image. Here are those which we should be remembered always.

A sculpted cut is key for that I've-got-my-act-together aura, so hair artist may downsized your hair to a chic bob. "The angled layers follow her jawline, framing her face." This snip os so low maintenance, she won't have to sacrifice chunks of her psychecks (or her mornings) to keep it in shape.

Styling is a no-brainer when you've got a well-defined 'do. For shine and hold, the hair artist rubbed grooming cream between his hands before draging them from roots to ends. (Applying goop directly on hair makes it too greasy.) As he did a blowout, he aimred the nozzle downward to keep hair flyaway-free.

What's worst than chewing gum during a chat with a prospective boss? Wearing make up that's more prominent than your resume. The artist shaded lids with a vnilla pensil, the blended black liner along the lash lines. Don't extend liner out too far 9 unless you're going for a gig as Cat Woman).

Since an interview is all about what comes out of your lips, you want them to be polished but not distracting. He used a lavander lipstick, then dabbed some on cheeks. The creamy texture delivers a subtle blush; the idea is to avoid looking like you just graduated from clown school.

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