‘Greek To Me’ Highlights The Way Ardent Interests Can Enrich A Life
Comma Queen Mary Norris is an uncommonly engaging, witty enthusiast with a nose for delicious details and funny asides that makes you willing to follow her anywhere.
(Image credit: W.W. Norton & Co. )
Star Wars News: Here’s What ‘Episode IX’ Looks Like. Maybe
Samsung Galaxy Buds Review: A Good Reason to Go Wireless
Eat the Problem, A Surrealist Cookbook of Invasive Species
The Secret to Getting Exactly What You Want at the Salon Is So Simple
Some women are born with insanely awesome hair (yes, it’s true and yes, it’s annoying). You know the ones: their thick, frizz-less strands have natural highlights that seem to glow even in poor lighting. We can dream about having perfect hair all day long or we can get it by going to the pros.
We’re no strangers to leaving a salon appointment less than satisfied, especially when it comes to our hair color, but luckily it’s now 100% avoidable. Two women at Who What Wear HQ recently returned from visiting different salons happier than ever with their hair color, and we found out that the common denominator was Wella Professionals.
Both of their stylists used new Wella Professionals Koleston Perfect hair color, which is a pure, balanced product that creates a natural depth and shine throughout your strands. It also causes significantly less hair damage, color after color*, which is a major plus as far as we’re concerned. Learn why these women—with very different hair concerns, by the way—discovered the importance of asking their stylists to use Wella Professionals color.
*Versus previous Koleston Perfect. Valid for Koleston Perfect with Pure Balance Technology.
Theoretical Physics And Down-To-Earth Loneliness In ‘Lost And Wanted’
Nell Freudenberger’s new novel is a bittersweet love story — about a lost friend, a missed romance, and an all-consuming career — that uses dense scientific concepts to illuminate everyday emotions.
(Image credit: Petra Mayer/NPR)
Meet the Woman Behind the Chicest Hotels You See All Over Instagram
Welcome to Second Life, a podcast spotlighting successful women who’ve made major career changes—and fearlessly mastered the pivot. Hosted by Hillary Kerr, co-founder and chief content officer at Who What Wear, each episode will give you a direct line to women who are game changers in their fields. Subscribe to Second Life on iTunes, and stay tuned. We’ll be releasing new episodes on Mondays.
How does one go from a job in the district attorney’s office to a career as a hotelier running some of the coolest hotels in the U.S. and Mexico? Austin-based hotelier Liz Lambert, who runs the impossibly Instagram-worthy Hotel San Cristóbal in Todos Santos, among other properties, sat down with Hillary Kerr during a live recording of Second Life podcast at SXSW to share her journey from Manhattan to Texas and beyond.
Before transitioning into the hospitality world, Lambert’s life couldn’t have been more different. She graduated from law school at the University of Texas and in 1991 became the first openly gay district attorney in the Manhattan DA’s office. There, she prosecuted street crime in New York City, which she describes as involving everything from “subway turnstile jumping to murder.” Head to iTunes and subscribe to Second Life to find out how and why she made the leap into the hotel business in her native Texas and eventually started the Bunkhouse family of hotels, which includes Hotel San José and Hotel Saint Cecilia, both in Austin; the Phoenix Hotel in San Francisco; and El Cosmico in Marfa.
Next, find out how Kendra Scott built a billion-dollar brand.