El equipo de Lady Moustache llevamos tiempo trabajando en la página web de nuestro cliente E-PILATES, escuela virtual de Pilates con sede física en Navarra.
Detrás del diseño de la web hay una reflexión muy profunda y necesaria, ya que ofertan clases virtuales presenciales, formaciones para profesionales y otros productos formativos en torno al Pilates que hay que diferenciar y organizar correctamente para que sea intuitiva la compra.
Además, la web incorpora una tienda virtual de material deportivo, ropa y otros productos, por lo que la reflexión de categorías ha sido vital para la organización de estas compras.
Si estás pensando en comenzar a practicar Pilates, no dejes de echar un ojo a la web porque hay muchas modalidades disponibles que se adaptan a cada circunstancia personal. Infórmate en www.e-pilates.es.
En Lady Moustache diseñamos páginas web para clientes dedicados a la actividad física como Pilates ya sea de forma virtual con estrategia online o de forma física en un centro.
Todas las Little Brand Stories en www.ladymoustache.es.
This is what maintenance looks like for my scalp these days. By now, it is painless - in spite of my face looking rather tense here most of the time. But a word of warning to all that consider trying this themselves: this was very, very painful in the beginning.
The smoothness afterwards is just indescribable. And it doesn’t go away after twelve hours like when you use a razor. By the way, my skin doesn’t look nearly as red under normal light conditions; at least I‘d like to think that ☺️.
No amount of money could ever convince me to shave my armpits permanently tbh I love how soft and downy my armpit hair is plus it's cute ♡ armpit hair FOREVAAAA!!!!!
El equipo de Lady Moustache ha desarrollado el branding de la marca de E-PILATES, centro físico y online dedicado al Pilates en el área de Pamplona.
En ese proceso de replanteamiento de su marca y branding, el equipo de Lady también le ha dotado de algunos soportes de marca para su estrategia de contenidos en redes sociales y algunas acciones de branded content dentro de su estrategia.
Además, se han diseñado una serie de plantillas corporativas para que el equipo de marketing de E-Pilates pueda utilizarlas en su día a día en sus comunicaciones.
El estudio de comunicación Lady Moustache ofrece un servicio de comunicación y branding integral en colaboración de los equipos de marketing de nuestra clientela, de forma cuidada y diferenciada. Más Little Brand Stories en www.ladymoustache.es.
Using An Epilator On My Head (Part Two) - The Scalp
Sometimes I get the question how I managed to epilate all of my head, and how I have kept it that way. The short version and my inspiration for doing it the way I did can be found here.
Unlike others who seem to be able to get through the entire process during one weekend, starting from what I'd see as a considerable hair length (half a centimetre maybe), I needed several weeks to complete it. Shaving, then waiting maybe half a day before letting the epilator grab the very first stubble. Waiting more time, epilating again, this time with more stubble being ripped out, and repeating this process till it hurt so much that I shaved again, starting the cycle all over again.
One thing I had to deal with relatively soon were pimples/small ingrown hairs.
Not the end of the world, but not the best look, either. There are different methods for dealing with this, all of them basically some kind of peeling to enable the newly growing hair to find its way to the surface and stop the pores from clogging. What worked really well for me was a spray against ingrown hairs after epilating - a chemical peeling of some sort. To this day, I tend to apply it once a day, mostly in the evening before going to bed. On the day of a tweezing session applying it can sting, but it is bearable and a good sign that it does its work. Even if a pimple is already there, it will go away much quicker with this extra help.
Another thing I had to live with for a short time was a certain patchiness on my scalp. I'm talking about the small-scale level here, you can see some of it on the picture above. No-one ever commented on it, from a certain distance it wasn't even noticeable, neither was it under little light. Or maybe everyone just thought I hadn't done a good job shaving?
In any case, it went away after having tweezed every hair at least once, which took some time because of the different phases of the growing cycle the individual hairs were in. Once that was done, things got much better very quickly in every respect. The hair that did grow back was finer, which made it a lot less painful to epilate. Since I kept on tweezing twice a week (always in the evening), there was also not that much to remove in an individual session any longer. And regrowth has kept getting less over time.
The MPB zones were the first one where the hair seemed to give up, my natural hairline for example never really returned after going over it with the epilator a couple of times, the same is true for the stretch that goes from there to the crown. The hair more to the sides is also getting less dense now as far as I can tell; to be sure, I would have to stop epilating for a while, and I don't want to do that.
What I still do after every tweezing session on my scalp is a wet shave. Especially in the beginning, and even after having epilated every hair at least once as explained above, just tweezing wouldn't give the totally smooth feeling yet. The shave is extremely quick and effortless, and after that my scalp has almost a glass-like feel to it. Over time, the smoothness I achieve just by tweezing has improved considerably as well. Being consistent in using the epilator definitely has had its rewards.
(Another photo from last summer, not even a year after starting the scalp tweezing, but the work I had to put into maintenance was already so much less than at the beginning of the process, and while there was some regrowth after one or two days, I was shadow-free one hundred percent of the time.)
For those who consider venturing into this as well, I would like to stress (as Tom did on http://scalptweezing.com) that using the epilator on your scalp is likely to lead to noticeable permanent hair loss pretty soon. So that should be something that you want or at least accept in exchange for the benefits. It can also be part of the thrill to know you are changing your appearance in a way that cannot be undone, at least that was my case. Just don't forget that the point of no return can come really early.
am i abnormal or is it really normal to cry out over the tiniest pain? my classmates are quite vocal over the tiniest pain they feel while i usually just try to suck it up i guess and deal with it, its not the end of the world
i just have the image in mind already. tsukasa watching the final student council election debate and realizing that, unlike tori, he has not moved forward as much since last year
honestly besides the obvious 'not dying from blood loss and blunt force trauma' stuff healing factor would be such a useful super power for when you give yourself an embarrassing wound doing something stupid