Entries Tagged as 'Body Wrap'

Slender Smith’s Day Spa & Salon Destin FL

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Ginger Smith gets a wrap on global business

For this episode of Word on the Street, we present the tale of a young woman from Niceville who has found a unique niche in the realm of global biz.
And yes, Ginger Smith of Slender Smith’s Day Spa & Salon has truly gone global.
Smith graduated from Niceville High School in 1999. Her mother, Sally Smith, was Miss Vermont in 1978 and a professional model for almost 10 years. They’re partners in Slender Smith’s on Airport Road in Destin.
But what really has launched Ginger Smith is her connection with Suddenly Slender. This company was founded by Victoria Morton, who invented a mineral body wrap in 1969 and who markets it globally today from Clearwater.
Before we go any further: Not an herbal body wrap. No, this involves “inorganic food grade minerals” (iron, potassium and magnesium are examples) and distilled water. It also involves wrapping yourself in elastic bandages and sitting in a dry sauna.

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Morton told us last week that her company has sold nearly 12 million of these wraps. The Body Wrap is delivered throughout the United States, Canada, the Caribbean, South America, Europe and the Middle East.

Find a Suddenly Slender Spa

“It becomes a lifestyle for people,” Morton said.

She added that the best results are done through a series of wraps that eventually gives way to maintenance visits.

Ginger Smith received her basic license from Suddenly Slender in 1998. She started teaching and training with the company seven years ago. Three years ago, she said she started working on celebrity clients and last year she helped movie stars prepare for the Academy Awards show.

“Ginger is successful because she has always been passionate about helping people,” Morton said. “And from the very first day she was in training class, her focus was about taking the best qualities of every person and maximizing them. We have a saying, ‘We’ll change your body, change your mind, change your life,’ and Ginger is the real deal.”

Smith recently returned from Saudi Arabia, where she was providing her service to the royal family. Princess Fahda Bandar Al-Saud owns all the Suddenly Slender franchises in the Mideast and has invited Smith back in about six weeks.

“It was the best experience of my entire life,” Smith said. “I am hoping to bring the royal family here to vacation and eventually persuade them to purchase vacation homes in the future.”

Since her return, Smith has worked to prepare Jennifer Bennett from Niceville for her competition in the Mrs. America pageant in Daytona Beach this weekend. We’ll update you on that in the near future.

“I never thought that body wraps were going to be so popular,” Smith said in summing up her rise to becoming a global businesswoman. “I work hard and love what I do, and by the grace of God I’m here.”

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Body Coffee introduces New Hydrating Body Wrap

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This article is brought to you by Spavelous.com. http://www.spavelous.com

Welcome to the New Hydrating Body Wrap Treatment!

It is with great pleasure that we introduce the New Hydrating Body Wrap to our signature spa therapy collection. Experience true luxury with our sumptuous 3-step spa treatment as you restore inner balance while nourishing outer beauty.

The New Hydrating Body Wrap Treatment is sheer poetry for your spirit! It truly is an essential, self-indulgent reward for your body.

Step One

Espresso Citron Naturally Foaming Body Exfoliant

This gentle, naturally foaming exfoliant is made from finely milled organic espresso. Combined with vibrant citrus oils, the Espresso Citron Naturally Foaming Body Exfoliant smoothes and softens skin.

Step Two

Coffee Orchid Hydrating Body Serum

After your full body exfoliation, slip into a silky cocoon of moisturizing wild orchid extract and powerful antioxidants which envelop your body from head to toe. Like a radiant butterfly you will blossom with your natural defenses renewed and revitalized.

Step Three

Jasmine Java Nourishing Body Crème

Your luxurious experience culminates as your body is massaged and replenished with a decadent Crème of coffee, cocoa, and Shea butter infused with exotic jasmine and organic ylang-ylang. You emerge revived, refreshed, lucid and lyrical.

The New Hydrating Body Wrap Treatment is a perfect complement to any spa menu.

As a special promotion, we are offering spas 15% off all products through June 15th, 2008. Mention this email to receive your discount

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Fresh & fruit using eco-friendly exfoliation products at spas

 

After Laura Noss signed up to receive a weekly organic produce box from a farm near her home in Menlo Park, Calif., she decided that fruits and vegetables grown close to home taste better.

“It has opened my eyes to what is local and seasonal,” Ms. Noss said. “I now understand that what I put in my body and on my body matters.”

So she began looking for ways to go local beyond the palate. Last year, while she planned a getaway to Maui, she hunted for treatments that used indigenous ingredients at the Grand Wailea Resort Hotel and Spa. That is how she found herself being scrubbed with locally-sourced coconut and sugar, then dunked in just-harvested coconut milk — for $160 a treatment.

“It felt like it would be fresher than some of the other treatments,” said Ms. Noss, 38, the founder of Social Planets, a communications and marketing company. “I envisioned the woman going out to the tree and plucking my coconut.”

More than 28 percent of spas nationwide use local ingredients, according to a 2007 survey by the International Spa Association, a trade group for the industry. Last year, after seeing the trend take off, the association started tracking how many of the 3,000 spas in its membership use ingredients from local nature in treatments.

In an age of global warming and high gas prices, is it any wonder that more spa-goers are gravitating to blueberries, honey and even maple syrup, cultivated close by because they believe it leaves a lighter carbon footprint?

The local-food movement, popularized by writers like Michael Pollan and Barbara Kingsolver, has created an aura of authenticity around all things local. Forward-thinking spas have long included indigenous ingredients on their menus, but more spa owners have entered the game of late, now that customers will pay more for services they deem environmentally responsible.

Some spas use the local produce in unexpected ways. The Cliff House Resort and Spa in Ogunquit, Me., offers its guests a Maine blueberry body wrap for $110. You can also get a Maine Blueberry Pedicure.

That more businesses (spas included) are rushing to make greenbacks off the green-minded hasn’t escaped the notice of Jessica Jensen, a founder of Low Impact Living, an online resource that helps consumers live eco-friendly.

“There are two kinds of companies,” Ms. Jensen said, “ones that are genuinely dedicated to these issues and incorporate them into every aspect of their business, and then other companies trying to put a varnish on their business in the form of putting a few green techniques here and there.”

Some critics say that marketing — not any environmental impulse per se — is the reason local ingredients are touted at spas from the Napa Valley to the Maine Coast.

“Putting the label ‘organic’ or ‘local’ on a product allows a vendor to charge more, irregardless of supply and demand,” said James E. McWilliams, the author of “A Revolution in Eating: How the Quest for Food Shaped America.” “There is a psychological factor at work here as well. When a company can claim they are going local, it conveys a sense of virtue, that what they are doing is natural and pure, and that their behavior is alternative and even elite. These are values that a lot of consumers today crave.”

Heather Stephenson, 34, favors buying local wherever she travels, as well as in San Francisco, her base. “One of the best things you can do in terms of the planet is to seek out things that are sourced close to home,” said Ms. Stephenson, a founder of Ideal Bite, a Web site about ways to go green. Her body has been polished from regional grape seeds at Fairmont Sonoma Mission Inn and Spa in California, exfoliated with Javanese coffee in Bali, and massaged with volcanic rocks from Costa Rica.

Some green advocates question whether such destination-spa treatments, however carefully sourced, are eco-friendly at all. “Using local materials in a spa setting is a great idea,” said Ms. Jensen of Low Impact Living. “But it’s kind of silly when you think about the carbon emissions associated with people flying 3,000 miles to get to the spa, versus the supposed savings using local materials, wraps and lotion.”

Ms. Stephenson, who visits roughly five spas a year, doesn’t see a contradiction. “The fact is that people go on a vacation,” she said. “We can do that in a way that gives us a healthy experience for ourselves, but also wakes us up to experiencing the things that that culture provides, and gives us an appreciation for the natural world.”

Home-grown experiences are part of what destination spas sell. The spa at Stoweflake Mountain Resort in Stowe, Vt., offers a Vermont Maple Sugar Body Polish using local maple syrup. Tell a tale of a land or its people, and patrons will come — many spas hope.

Sometimes a marketable idea is discovered where it’s least expected. During construction at the Sundara Inn and Spa in Wisconsin Dells, Wis., the former owner, Kelli Trumble, lamented how she had sand in everything, said Tara Duarte, the director of operations at Sundara, including “every pair of shoes and boots and all over her car.”

“Yet, the sand was a pretty mix of reds and golds,” Ms. Duarte added, “and it had such an even consistency that she thought it was the sort of thing you’d find in body polishes.”

So Ms. Trumble put some sandstone into a baggie and had it analyzed at a lab. When it turned out to be sandstone of an ancient Cambrian variety, Sandstone Body Polishes soon appeared at the spa.

Designing signature services based around local ingredients sets spas apart from the competition, said Melinda Taschetta-Millane, the editor in chief of Skin Inc. magazine, a trade publication for spa professionals. “They find that if they use one of these indigenous ingredients, it helps their identity and gives their spa a distinctive mark.”

Competition is fierce with roughly 14,615 spas nationwide, up from 10,128 in 2004, according to the spa association.

As a result, spas are concocting increasingly offbeat (some might say outlandish) offerings, looking to nearby vineyards, deserts and rock formations for ingredients to slather, spritz and rub onto willing bodies.

ESSpa Kozmetika, a spa near downtown Pittsburgh, doles out hot chocolate, brownies and dark-chocolate samples in the waiting room to draw attention to its $140 Stimulating Hot Cocoa Facial and $140 Hot Chocolate Body Wrap. (What the spa doesn’t advertise is that although it gets its chocolate from a local ice cream shop, the cocoa beans are from Africa.)

Customers who choose the Rosemary and Grape Seed Foot Scrub at the spa at Auberge du Soleil in Napa Valley are greeted with a glass of 2002 Barlow merlot and tasting notes: “The balanced fruit with subtle earth and herbal notes in the merlot are wonderfully brought to life by the complementary aromatics of grape seeds and rosemary in the foot treatment.”

Spa-goers shouldn’t assume that locals have traditionally given themselves facials or wrapped their limbs in, say, a blueberry mash just because a treatment’s star ingredient is indigenous. “The Hawaiians didn’t really do a papaya scrub, although you do have papaya in Hawaii,” said Sylvia Sepielli, the owner of Sylvia Planning and Design, a spa design and consulting firm in Sedona, Ariz. In her opinion, spas that try to connect their treatments to “local healing culture” are misleading.

It is possible that discovering local ingredients at a spa will have an impact on a person’s behavior once they return home, Mr. McWilliams said.

“Maybe ‘green lite’ will turn into ‘green heavy,’ ” he said. “But the most environmentally-friendly thing we can do is reduce our consumer spending dramatically, and a spa is a dramatic luxury expense.”

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Silhouettes Day Spa - ENGLEWOOD FL Spa Now Open - Ionithermie

 

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Silhouettes Day Spa

REVIEW THIS SPA NOW

ENGLEWOOD, FL – Charity Cain believes there are certain luxuries women won’t give up — even during economic uncertainties.

“The thing about Americans and Europeans is that they want to look pretty and will spend money on making themselves look good,” Cain said, “especially women.”

The former office where she began her career in real estate has been transformed into her latest business, Silhouettes Day Spa, located at 2240 S. McCall Road.

The path to the front door leads to a tranquil escape away from Englewood.

Once inside, the interior has been converted to a sea of deep burgundy, mahogany furnishings and gold trimming. Soothing music and scents of essential oils fill the air.

Above a product showcase are bold letters that spell the word “inspire.”

“That’s exactly what we want to do,” she said, “to inspire people when they come in here.”

Cain’s personal struggle became her latest endeavor.

After her fourth child, she felt uncomfortable with her body.

“I tried everything. I’ve gone to Walgreens, I’ve gone to Wal-Mart. I’ve bought every pill,” she said.

But it wasn’t until she traveled overseas when Cain discovered “Ionithermie” and decided to bring it to Englewood.

Ionithermie is a treatment involving the application of electronic stimulation to areas of the body through a body mask of conductive clay. The cost is $149-$159 per session.

Other services offered at the spa include five different types of massages including of Swedish, prenatal and couples; various facials, body wraps, spray tans and waxing services.

After three treatments, Cain was convinced.

“My skin was firmer, my stomach was more toned and I lost my stretch marks,” she said.

So she purchased the products and opened the spa Feb. 25.

As businesses are closing because of the economic crunch, Cain said she has been “slammed” and she believes the reason is she has products that people want.

When Tiffany McMenamin first heard about the Ionithermie treatments, she was skeptical.

But when she noticed Cain’s results, she budgeted for months in advance to be able to afford six sessions, totaling $800.

McMenamin, who just had a baby, said she noticed her dark purple stretch marks reduce to a pale white and she said that she lost a total of 32 inches.

“Before, it looked like Freddy Kruger attacked my body,” she said.

But after her treatments were complete, she was so impressed with the results.

“People will be hooked on it,” McMenamin said.

Silhouettes day spa
2240 S. McCall Road
Englewood, FL

Hours: 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesdays to Saturdays; Mondays by appointment.

Ionitermie Video

Mud Moguls Ahava Dead Sea Products

 

 

This article is brought to you by Spavelous.com.

About 20 years ago, a SPA technician named Ziva Gilad spotted some mud-covered women on the shore of Israel’s Dead Sea. Every day she would watch the women, whom she jokingly called gingerbread cookies, douse their skin in the rich mud and let it wash away as they floated on top of the saltwater. One day, after noticing a woman bottle up some mud to take home, Gilad had an idea for a company, and in 1988 she helped start a skin-care line that makes its products using the black mud and gray-white salt from the Dead Sea.

The tiny company, Dead Sea Laboratories, grossed nearly $1 million in its first year, most of it from boutique sales within Israel. Not bad for a 30-person start-up, but Gilad and her partners, members of four kibbutzim near the shore, wanted more, especially after seeing American tourists take products home in their suitcases. They wanted to make a mark in the U.S., a must-win market for any luxury-cosmetics company. After several years of modest success, Ahava broke through in 2000. Its secret? The company found that thriving in the glamorous world of high-end beauty often depends on the not-so-glamorous business of marketing and distribution.

Dead Sea Laboratories first tried entering the U.S. market in 1992, after the company persuaded buyers at Bloomingdale’s and Saks Fifth Avenue to carry its products under the new brand name Ahava, which means love in Hebrew.

But it would take more marketing–and more money–to turn Ahava into a global brand. It got both in 2000, when an investment company called B. Gaon Holdings–owned by Israeli mogul Benjamin Gaon–noticed its potential and invested more than $10 million. “It needed someone from the investment world to give them a push,” says Michael Etedgi, the Israeli-born CEO of Ahava North America. Gaon lobbied Ahava’s U.S. distributor to get its products into more department stores and persuaded the company to try new product lines, including one for men, and to spend millions on magazine ads. “Big brands start in the U.S.,” says Etedgi. Ahava products are now sold in 33 countries, generating nearly $150 million a year in sales, and the company has three flagship stores in the U.K., Germany and Singapore.

Of course, marketing alone isn’t enough to compete against L’Oreal and Este Lauder. Ahava had to stand out. So Gilad and her partners try to re-create the purifying experience of bathing in the Dead Sea. Unlike the smooth, delicate creams of competitors, Ahava’s products–such as the creamy, pale brown “energizing body mud masks” ($18) and coarse, white “uplifting butter salts” ($22)–look and feel like the mud and salt they’re made from. “Each bottle is like a mini–Dead Sea experience,” Gilad says. “Other companies may have the money and the power, but we have the sea.” Ahava is the only cosmetics company with the right to mine the Dead Sea for its mud and salts. (Other companies can buy them from Ahava.)

There is a drawback, however, to stressing its Israeli provenance: “Any product that says MADE IN ISRAEL will have some impact on selling in countries like Saudi Arabia and Iran,” Etedgi says. That means Ahava may be missing out on the torrid growth of the luxury market in some parts of the Middle East.

In the U.S., the luxury-skin-care market is approaching saturation. The number of skin-care brands sold in department stores has more than doubled over the past 10 years. “Everyone is in the game,” says Karen Grant, a senior beauty analyst for the NPD Group. Ahava hopes that luxury consumers looking for natural products will respond to the company’s mineral-based product line. “It gives them an edge,” Grant says.

Ahava is still a small player in the cosmetics industry, but it has big plans. Disney’s investment arm agreed to acquire a 16.9% stake in the company from Gaon; Sex and the City’s Kristin Davis signed up as its first celebrity endorsement last fall; and next year in New York City, Ahava plans to build a demonstration pool of concentrated saltwater, in which consumers can slather on mud and float. It’s the next best thing to taking a dip in the Dead Sea yourself.

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Have you been able to take your business to the next level?

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You’re 12,000 feet in the air, with the plane door open and the wind whipping through the cabin. Within seconds, it’s time to exit the plane, and suddenly you find yourself soaring through the clouds, depending on a parachute for a safe landing. Once you hit the ground, you set up your laptop, tap into the drop zone’s Wi-Fi network and complete a few business transactions. Then you get ready to do it all over again.

 

For entrepreneur Peter Shankman, skydiving is all in a day’s work while traveling for business. He even packs his own parachute on every trip he takes.

 

Business trips are no longer just about the hotel you stay in and where you eat. They’re becoming a chance for hard-working entrepreneurs to take a break between the power lunches and million-dollar deals and enjoy the locales they visit. According to a National Household Travel Survey, Americans make more than 405 million long-distance business trips per year, which account for about 16 percent of all long-distance travel.

 

Whether traveling near or far, business travelers should take the opportunity to get to know more than just the hotel lobby. Here are 10 unique ideas–some practical and some on the wild side–to spice up your next business trip.

 

1. Join a running tour.

 

If running is your passion, don’t feel restricted to the treadmill in your hotel’s gym. Instead, opt for a race or an organized running tour.

 

2. Discover the city’s nightlife.

 

After dealing with lost luggage, several layovers or a stressful business meeting, the only thing on your mind might be letting loose for a few hours. Sites like AOL Local specialize in finding nightlife in a variety of cities. Type in your destination and the site will list upcoming events and specific search results for the city’s best bars and dance clubs.

 

3. Schedule an intense workout.

 

“The first thing I do on a business trip is ask ‘Where is the nearest gym?’” says Michael Wood, chief fitness officer for Koko Fitness, Inc.Wood, who travels about 30 percent of the time, says he always makes a point to visit the outdoor gym in Santa Monica, California, whenever business brings him to the West Coast. Sal Fichera, fitness consultant and founder of Forza Fitness, agrees that hotel gyms simply don’t cut it.

 

4. Take a leap.

 

Shankman carries his skydiving gear, commonly referred to in the industry as a “rig,” in his carryon every time he boards a plane. In the past two years, Shankman has already visited about 30 drop zones across the world while traveling for business. “My logic is that you’ve got to throw something fun into business trips, or they just become hotel room, meeting room, airport, back to back to back. And that sucks,” he says.

 

5.Attend a play or musical.

 

If you’re forced to travel for work during the holidays, why not get into the season by taking in a performance of The Nutcracker or a Christmas choral concert?

 

6. Find a local spa.

 

Spas often offer massage techniques related to the location. For example, Hawaii is known for the Lomi Lomi massage, a traditional Hawaiian massage passed down through generations. A massage or spa treatment can not only ease your jet lag, but might also teach you about the culture of the area you’re visiting. LiAnne Yu, strategic director and cultural anthropologist of research-based innovation consulting firm Cheskin, says making time for the spa is a necessary part of her business travel. Yu recommends consulting with your hotel’s concierge to find hole-in-the-wall spots in more exotic destinations. Some of her favorite spa experiences include a massage by a blind massage therapist in China and a head massage using almond oil in India. Map out your spa schedule ahead of time with the help of websites like Spavelous, where you can find a list of local spas by city or zip code.

 

7. Visit an art exhibition.

 

Peruse the local newspaper or its website for a calendar of events for local art exhibits. The Los Angeles Times includes this information in its Calendar Live website, where it features a search engine to help you find an exhibit in Southern California cities on any given day. If business brings you to Colorado, the Denver Art Dealers Association lists showings at local galleries. For trips abroad, look up your location on Artspan’s Calendar of Art Events page to find a nearby event.

 

8. Tour a historical home.

 

For history buffs, try to fit a tour of a historical site into your busy schedule. If you’re in Boston for a meeting, make a day trip to Plymouth, Massachusetts, to travel back in time at Plimouth Plantation, where actors recreate a small farming town built by English colonists. Near Rhode Island? Visit The Breakers in Newport, the former elite summer home to the Vanderbilt family. If you’re looking for a haunted tour, the 1692 witchcraft tours by Salem Historical Tours are sure to send a chill down your spine.

 

9. Sample the local flavor.

 

There are certain times of year that various locations become synonymous with a particular food. During the summer, the Sandhills of North Carolina are known for producing perfect peaches.

 

10. Cheer on the home team.

 

Business Spas

Opening Body Wrap Business

Question From TIA:

Do body wrapping? If so what kind of license is required?I am considering opening my own body wrap business? I am in Indiana. Anyone know?

Dear TIA,

The requirements for body wraps vary by state. In most states you are either required to be a licensed Cosmetologist or a license massage therapist. You need to check with these two state boards to see which applies in your states.

The state laws are changing in Indiana as of July 1st,2007. As Indiana has a new license for massage therapists.

As far as I can see, a Licensed Cosmetologist may apply a body wrap as long as it is the application of product on the body and not used to treat disease. Here is the Code.

Indiana is currently becoming a licensed massage state. According to the American Massage Therapy Association of Indiana, effective July 1st of this year.

I would conclude that you need to be either a licensed massage therapist (as defined by the new law) or a licensed cosmetologist to perform these procedures. To be 100% accurate, you should contact the state board of Cosmetology the phone number is (317) 234-3031. I could only find an address for the State board of massage Professional Licensing Agency.

Attn: State Board of Massage Therapy
402 W Washington St, Room W072
Indianapolis, Indiana 46204

I hope that this at least points you in the right direction.

Good Luck with your venture.

Spavelous