Flip your hair upside down and direct your hair dryer down starting from your roots. When it’s about 70% dry, stand up straight and use your hands to rough dry. Touch up with a curling iron or flat iron where needed. Next, let’s talk about some of the specific products on the ...
Once you’ve both calmed down, it’s time to communicate in a helpful way to move forward. “We’ve learned to use therapy-speak and ’I‘ statements to describe how we’re feeling to keep minor things from escalating, especially when we’re navigating things that go wrong,” says Gro...
“it was something to be endured, not enjoyed,” she tells self. after college, she put down roots in norway—specifically, tromsø, a city located above the arctic circle—to study how the polar night, a period where the sun sets in november and doesn’t rise again until the end of...
” Flea admitted decades later to Guitar World.“It was like we took what was great about us and just gave a lot more depth to the instruments and structure. The album really captured a space and a time that was exciting and fun.”...
last album, worked to give 'Innuendo' a contextual sadness. But other than the contemplative U.K. No. 1 "These Are the Days of Our Lives" (which was written by Roger Taylor), you really don't hear it in the music. Instead, this is a bold return to Queen's hard-rocking roots. ...
last album, worked to give 'Innuendo' a contextual sadness. But other than the contemplative U.K. No. 1 "These Are the Days of Our Lives" (which was written by Roger Taylor), you really don't hear it in the music. Instead, this is a bold return to Queen's hard-rocking roots. ...
last album, worked to give 'Innuendo' a contextual sadness. But other than the contemplative U.K. No. 1 "These Are the Days of Our Lives" (which was written by Roger Taylor), you really don't hear it in the music. Instead, this is a bold return to Queen's hard-rocking roots. ...
last album, worked to give 'Innuendo' a contextual sadness. But other than the contemplative U.K. No. 1 "These Are the Days of Our Lives" (which was written by Roger Taylor), you really don't hear it in the music. Instead, this is a bold return to Queen's hard-rocking roots. ...
last album, worked to give 'Innuendo' a contextual sadness. But other than the contemplative U.K. No. 1 "These Are the Days of Our Lives" (which was written by Roger Taylor), you really don't hear it in the music. Instead, this is a bold return to Queen's hard-rocking roots. ...
Althea Johnson opened the doors of her Toronto shop just nine days before the pandemic, only to close them immediately thanks to the first COVID-induced lockdown. Instead of giving up, Althea dug in, embracing her digital roots and engaging with customer