Susan's Place: 30 years of community, powered by people who believe transgender voices matter.
Started by Hypatia, December 09, 2008, 04:36:56 AM
0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
Quote from: Emme on December 14, 2008, 07:03:43 AMAnd scary pale.
Quote from: Hypatia on December 14, 2008, 03:05:06 AMMy GF tells me: Brunettes never go without lipstick, while blondes never go without mascara.As a very brunette Mediterranean, I can tell you that my whole look depends on lip color. With my coloration, my lips would seem washed-out and disappear against the background of my olive skin. And none of that pink jive for me, ma'am. Got to have deep plum.
Quote from: Emme on December 14, 2008, 07:03:43 AMI'm all mixed up. I have rather dark brown hair, but I'm so white I'm translucent. No, really, I make snow look tan. But, I was a natural blond (see avatar) until my teen years, so my lashes are still blond tipped, even though my hair darkened. I still have yet to find that perfect shade of red lipstick. Most redds look horrible on me, and I have rather full lips. Think Angelina Jolie, then make her poor and not famous, half as pretty, and several inches shorter. And scary pale.I found a Mary Kay foundation that was the perfect color for me one year, and it actually looked grey in the bottle.
Quote from: Nichole link=topic=51193.msg318229#msg318229That exactly the lipstick problem with me. Reds ususally make me lkook like one of the Undead. And totally unforgiving with my skin and hair.
Quote from: Nichole link=topic=51193.msg318229#msg318229I'd love to occasionally wear a red lipcolor, but my goddess, I look like I had just arrived from TRansylvania! Nichole
Quote from: tekla on December 14, 2008, 11:49:43 AMI look, at times like Riff-Raff, the handyman 'igor' character, but since that's the guy who wrote RHPS, and made the money off of it, he's the person I want to be.
Quote from: Hypatia on December 15, 2008, 03:32:39 PMI once wrote a story about the historical Hypatia in a modern setting. I mentioned her driving to her job as chair of a university math department, late for work, and touching up her makeup at red lights, a bad habit she'd tried to quit.A female mathematician saw that and criticized: "This isn't true to life-- there is no such thing as a math professor who wears makeup."
Quote from: tekla on December 17, 2008, 09:42:14 AMLisa rocks, her work on string theory is pretty wild.