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Archive for the ‘Cosmetology’ Category

Makeup an inexpensive way to feel better with aging

December 27th, 2008

 

The NPD Group, Inc., a leading market research company, recently released the report The Makeup In-depth Consumer Report that found as a woman ages, there is a critical shift in her makeup useage and buying habits. The key age group where the shift starts is 35-44 years old, when women begin to use color more on their face and lips, and less color on their eyes. By the time a woman is 35 years old, she has flipped her preferences from lip gloss to lipstick and from foundation to blush.

Concerns about aging play a key tole because as women approach 40, there is more attention placed on anti-aging. In the eye category, women start using less eye shadow and eye liner when they hit 45 . This may be attributable to concerns about eye wrinkling. Mascara useage remains high no matter the age; nearly nine in 10 women 18-54 use mascara.

“Consumers are increasingly independent in their product and brand choices. Less than one out of five makeup users say that they usually buy all from the same brand. But, if they believe a brand or product works for them, almost 60% say they will stick with that brand or product. That tells us that the consumer is not as fickle as we sometimes think. They will buy and even come back, but we have to earn the right to their dollar,” says Karen Grant, vice president and global beauty industry analyst.

By 35, women have a more involved daily regimen, and younger women wear fewer makeup products daily. “Additionally there is an opportunity to convert a significant number of women into heavier makeup useage. This speaks to the need to educate, excite and engage consumers into this category. During tough economic times, consumers want affordable items, but they still want and need things that make them feel good. On both fronts, makeup works. As the most economically priced beauty category, makeup is the arena women can come to play and invest in themselves for little more than the price of a good lunch,” says Grant.

Affordable Spa, Cosmecueticals, Cosmetology

Cheap Manicure Deals MN : Beauty Schools

August 6th, 2008

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This article is brought to you by Spavelous.com.

 http://www.spavelous.com

Dollars+Sense: Beauty of a deal

Seven-year-old Adrienne O’Shea, left, enjoyed her first pedicure with her mother Natalie O’Shea at Red Nails. “This is a treat,” said Natalie O’Shea, who only gets a pedicure a few times a year. The two were on a mother/daughter outing.

Life’s little luxuries — manicures, massages and facials — can seem costly when both a gallon of gas and a gallon of milk cost nearly $4. Don’t be glum. Get glam for less.

Great idea

There are quite a few beauty schools and cosmetlolgy academies in the Minneapolos area. Scot Lewis in Eden Prairie is one of my favorites to get inexpensive manicures.

At Red Nail salon in St. Paul, Erin Schumann spent $30 for a pedicure in a whirlpool massage chair. At full-service salons she’d spend nearly twice that, but Schumann can’t see spending the extra money.
“There’s not much difference between a full-service salon and what’s done here,” she said.

Spa visitors looking to nail a bargain on manicures, pedicures, facials and massages increasingly are looking to cosmetology schools or minority-owned businesses, often Asian, for such services. Red Nail, Daisy Nails, Hollywood Nails and Elegant Nails are among the salons offering basic mani-pedis for under $40. Customers at full-service salons pay more than twice that price. Elegant Nails and California Nails in downtown

Minneapolis offer both services for about $31.
When economic times tighten, personal luxuries such as spa treatments are often the first to go, said Robert Lindquist, general manager at reVamp salon in Minneapolis. At best, clients extend a week or two between services or at worst, drop them entirely. He said it’s still a little early to see how much spa business will be affected, but other salon owners are taking no chances. ReVamp is advertising its “Buy four services, get one free” package deal more heavily.

In April the Jon Charles salon in Uptown Minneapolis offered 30 percent off any service for new clients or any client who “lapsed” because of a downturn in the economy. The salon called it the “It’s the economy, stupid” discount. The salon still offers the deal, albeit at a 25 percent discount, to new and lapsed clients.

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Spa Academy opens in Los Angeles California - Grand Opening Spa Specials

July 13th, 2008

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New Marinello Spa Academy Location Opens in Los Angeles

Marinello Schools of Beauty is pleased to announce the opening of the new Spa Academy on North Fairfax Avenue in Los Angeles. The Academy is an extended campus of Marinello’s campus location on Wilshire Boulevard. Join us at our grand opening ribbon cutting on Wednesday, June 25th at 10 a.m. Refreshments will be provided. Our grand opening special entails 30 minute mini facials for only $8.00 (June 25th - 27th from 11 a.m. - 8 p.m. and June 28th from 9 a.m. - 5 p.m.). Services performed by supervised Marinello students only.

The first of its kind, the Spa Academy offers unique programs including Advanced Face and Body Treatments and Master Spa Therapist. Each program is designed to provide in-depth training for a career in the luxurious spa industry, including opportunities to work in day spas, club spas, mineral spas, destination spas, on cruise ships and more!

For over a century, Marinello has been educating students to enter into professional careers in the beauty industry. Marinello campuses are strategically located to provide future graduates with access to a highly concentrated job market. As a leader in cutting-edge styles, fashions and therapeutic beauty treatments, Southern California has a continuing demand for trained professionals to work in spas, exclusive resorts  spas as well as in the entertainment sector.

Marinello Schools have open enrollment and programs are offered on a continual basis. In addition to specialized programs at the Spa Academy, Marinello’s West Wilshire location provides training in Cosmetology, Esthetics (Skin Care), and Manicuring. Some programs can be completed in less than a year! Marinello is accredited by the National Accrediting Commission of Cosmetology Arts and Sciences (NACCAS).

Financial Aid is available to those who qualify and career placement assistance is available for graduates. The Spa Academy is located at 567 North Fairfax, Los Angeles, CA 90036.

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Building a spa, CA Day Spa, CA Spas, Ca Med Spa, Cosmetology, Employment Issue, Employment Promotions, Spa Business, Spa Training

Aveda Institute welcomes first cosmetology class

April 11th, 2008

Aveda Institute’s first cosmetology class begins hands-on learning.

Aveda Corp., the international beauty-products company with Aveda Spas and Salons Locations of thousands of hair salons, stores and spas, is bringing yet another of its marketing concepts to the Orlando area: a vocational-style school that teaches hair, skin and nail care.

The Aveda Institute, on the east side of Winter Park, is still undergoing renovations and isn’t accepting customers yet, but the first students already are four weeks into their studies. The school, Aveda’s third in Florida and 40th in the U.S., teaches cosmetology, which involves primarily hair styling and nail services, and “esthiology,” the study of skin care and hair removal. Eventually it will offer upscale haircuts for $12 — if you don’t mind a student chopping your locks.

Aveda Institute’s Florida headquarters is in St. Petersburg, where the business also offers massage-therapy courses. Tallahassee is home to the second Aveda Institute, and a fourth one is set to open soon in Fort Lauderdale.


” Orlando, to us, is going to be our largest market, we believe,” said Jim Petrillo, president of the Florida operation. “We look for a place where they [students] can travel and get inspiration — it’s a national travel city. . . . Orlando is a natural match for bringing in our advanced education as well as our [teacher-]instruction classes.”

The school, at Semoran Boulevard and Aloma Avenue, will include a retail store for Aveda products, 80 hair-cutting stations, 10 treatment rooms for facials and waxing, and classrooms that will be available for use by community groups on the school’s off days. It hopes to begin offering facials and haircuts by the end of June.

Central Florida already has a number of beauty schools, from Woody’s Hair Styling School near downtown Orlando to the Redken-affiliated Salon Professional Academy in The Villages ofLake County.

“I know that it will give people another choice. And competition, which some people will call it, is always good,” said Giulio Veglio, director and part-owner of the Paul Mitchell school in Casselberry. “It keeps everybody on their toes, and it keeps us being able to offer more and a better education and better quality. . . . I think it’s great that people are able to really shop around and see where they really belong.”

According to Petrillo, the Aveda school expects to attract about 85,000 salon customers annually. Aveda, a unit of New York-based Estee Lauder Cos., sees the school’s location as an advantage because it’s close to Full Sail University and not far from the University of Central Florida — and, like them, it attracts young, creative students.

“I decided to go into cosmetology — it’s something I’ve been passionate about my whole life,” said Sarah DeBelles, who earned a psychology degree from Stetson University in 2005. “After researching all the schools and things like that, Aveda isn’t just about beauty on the exterior, it’s about feeling good within as well. And having gone to college for psychology, it’s really struck a chord with me, and it’s what I love.”


Aveda is Este Lauder’s “natural” line of beauty products. The 30-year-old company, based in Blaine, Minn., makes plant-based products as part of an environmentally friendly mission to offer natural, but professional, beauty care.

Learning to become such a skin specialist or hair stylist doesn’t come cheaply, however: The four-month esthiology course costs $6,800, while the cosmetology course lasts 10 1/2 months and costs $14,000. “Audition” videos are required from prospective students, who once accepted learn about the company and its products as well as the skills needed to land a job. Cosmetology trainees start with mannequins and then practice on friends and family before working on actual clients.

“If anything, it’s going to set the bar higher,” said Lisa Maile, image consultant for Lisa Maile Executive Seminars & Coaching in Orlando. “We have lots of valid [beauty] schools in Central Florida, and the more good training we have, the more good people we attract to the area. . . . We’re growing in the entertainment business slowly . . . [and] Aveda is only going to be another step in that direction for fashion or beauty.” According to Aveda’s Web site, the average salary at a spa or salon is $48,000 a year, but the institute also encourages students to think beyond simply cutting hair. Aveda alumni elsewhere have gone on to open their own salons, to teach or to work in the fashion business on photo shoots and runway shows.

“The thing that I love about getting this education is that I can take this pretty much anywhere in the world with me,” said Derek Donovan, one of the students in the Winter Park school’s inaugural class. “I’d love to be a part of Fashion Week in New York or Paris. It’s the thing that attracts me most about getting this education — taking it anywhere with me and being able to provide for myself.”

For the most part, though, Aveda and other local beauty schools hope to keep the talent in Central Florida.


“Our desired outcome for Orlando is to raise the quality of the work through the training that we’re offering in the school, to populate the Central Florida salons and spas as well as hitting North [Florida],” Petrillo said. “In Florida, we have about 235 salons, and we definitely have a need to populate out of Orlando to those salons.”

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Aveda Training and Spas, Cosmetology, Spa Training