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BEAUTY REPORTER LONGER LASHES, A COOL BODY LOTION, AND ALLURE’S FIRST NAIL-POLISH COLLECTION
Calvin Klein Collection
Hairstylist Guido worked a nickel-size blob of Redken Move Ability 05 shine-enhancing paste from midlength to ends before curling, then finished with dry texturizing spray.
Roberto Cavalli
After curling the hair, hairstylist Sam McKnight misted it with L’Oréal Professionnel Beach Waves salt spray and then with water to encourage natural bends and waves.
Ralph Lauren
Starting with air-dried hair, Guido wrapped sections around a curling iron, then applied texturizing spray from ear length down.
The New Waves LOOK NOW
It’s hard to label the waves we saw on the fall runways. They’re too shiny to be beachy, too bouncy to be lived-in, too loose to be laborious. Hairstylists achieved them by blow-drying the hair smooth, twisting two-inch sections around a one-inch curling iron, and layering products to get a not-too-matte, not-too-glossy finish. We may not know what to call them—but we know we want them. —JENNA ROSENSTEIN