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Herbal Essences

Leighton Meester hair Herbal Essences

Last year, Leighton Meester was number one on my list of the haircuts, styles n’ colours that made me want to run (not walk) to my hairdresser.

And I am sure it is no coincidence at all that the man responsible for her ‘do is also my favourite celebrity hairstylist, Charles Baker Strahan. (He’ll be familiar to some of you, if you remember his awesome side-braid and side-bun tips.) Charles also tends to Whitney Port and Lauren Conrad, plus he’s the official stylist for Herbal Essences (for which Leighton is also a spokesperson).

And I cannot help but gush about him because every time we speak, he gives me some insider hair intel that Blows. My. Mind. Trust me, after years of gleaning hair tips from hair experts, learning something new doesn’t happen often.

Today’s revelation has to do with colour, so if you belong to the 75 percent of women who dye (and especially if you’re a brunette), this post will improve your life—I promise. Keep reading »

Joy Jean Patou

This is a picture from my trip to Procter & Gamble’s headquarters in Cincinnati a few weeks ago. It’s a mural in one of their hallways—bet you didn’t know they make Joy by Jean Patou, did you? (At one time, it was the priciest perfume in the world, thanks to the 10,000 jasmine flowers and 28 dozen roses that are required to create just 30 mL.)

But that’s just the tip of the iceberg, really. Not only does P&G make actual perfumes, but, like many other brands (including L’Oréal), they put an INCREDIBLE amount of brainpower into figuring out what every other beauty product you use should smell like.

Why beauty brands put a shiz-tonne of thought into how their products smell

I guess it’s pretty obvious when you think about it: the way a product smells can determine how likely you are to initially buy it, actually use it (and therefore see or not see results) and then whether you’ll purchase again. Here’s an excerpt from a story I did on aromatherapy a few years back for ELLE Canada:

[M]any beauty brands are now giving scent a starring role in their formulations—even if they’re not marketed as aromatherapy products.

Herbal Essences HydraliciousStacy Hertenstein, a beauty care perfumer for Procter & Gamble, works with a palette of more than 2,000 scents to create an “enhanced experience” for users of Herbal Essences hair care. “Fragrance can help define the personality of the product, because the centre of the brain that processes smell is also involved with memory and emotion,” she says. “A light product may need an upbeat fragrance—think citrus, green and fruity notes—while a more luxurious one requires something more sensual, such as a gourmand blend of chocolate and vanilla.”

At Biotherm, having the right scent even makes it easier to achieve better skin. “We know that efficacy is linked to using the product every day,” says Marie-Caroline Renault, the company’s director of face care development. “If you don’t like the fragrance, you’re going to abandon the product, but if it’s good, you’ll apply it morning and evening—which means you’ll see better results.”

Scent also influences the perception of how well products work. “We’ve demonstrated that a product for oily skin with the scent of honey will seem less effective than the same one with a citrus scent,” says Renault.

A real-life example: Biotherm Aquasource Skin Perfection Moisturizer

All of this is SO true. I’ve just filed a story that involved some major product testing, and one of the products was this:

Biotherm Aquasource Skin Perfection Moisturizer

It’s called Biotherm Aquasource Skin Perfection, and normally I wouldn’t have switched up my usual routine to use this brand. (Nothing against Biotherm, but I’m a hippie chick at heart.) But! I really, really love it, partially because I think it works (more on that later), but also because of the watery, marine-note scent. And who knows, maybe the scent is what’s making me THINK it works.

Pantene Colour Preserve ConditionerOh, and your shampoo has “notes”

Speaking of notes—just like fine fragrances have top, middle and bottom notes, so do your other beauty products! For example, in the new Pantene I raved about the other day, there are top notes of blackberry and plum, mid notes of orchid, tuberose, gardenia and violet, and the “dry down” is musk. Neat, huh?

Chances are your shampoo or moisturizer borrows its scent from a mainstream fragrance, too. Fun fact: Herbal Essences Long-Term Relationship was inspired by Britney Spears Fantasy! (I’m not sure if that makes you want to use it now or not…)

So let’s discuss…

How important is it to you that your beauty products smell great?

Or do you wish they wouldn’t put fragrances in them at all?

Is there anything you use solely because you can’t get enough of the scent?

P.S. I’m leaving you with one last shot—from P&G’s corporate archives, again in Cincy. Just in case you thought of them as just a mass-market, drugstore type of beauty company, here’s some other stuff they make besides Jean Patou. (Anna Sui! Lacoste! Escada!)

fragrances at P&G headquarters Cincinnati archives

Leighton Meester Charles Baker Strahan hair Herbal Essences

If you’ve been reading for a while, you know how much I adore Charles Baker Strahan, celebrity hairstylist for Herbal Essences and go-to hair guy for Leighton Meester.

Well, now he’s helped Herbal Essences score a MAJOR coup in signing on Leighton as the new face (hair?) for the brand.

Apparently Charles—who lives in the same building as she does!—got her on to using the products, and then one thing led to another… and now she’s edged out the much-hyped Blake Lively for a beauty deal.

(Sorry Blake, but thanks to Charles, Leighton really does have the better hair now. And I hear that hair companies prefer brunettes anyway, since darker hair tends to reflect more shine.)

No details yet on ad campaigns, etc.—but she will be the rep for all of North America, which is exciting. Herbal Essences, will you PLEASE bring her to Toronto for an appearance?