An emerald-green, sleeveless knee-length dress hangs from a dress form inside the Las Vegas Convention Center. Next to it, a royal blue number hangs, beckoning passers-by to look.
Fashion
When unflattering Facebook photos surface, keep your chin up. According to the American Society of Plastic Surgeons, patients are taking that advice to the operating table. Chin augmentations soared 71 percent between 2010 and 2011. Doctors point to social media as the culprit.
It’s not legal for two women to marry each other in Nevada, or two men, for that matter. That didn’t stop dozens of gay and lesbian couples from filling a ballroom at Circus Circus last Sunday to find everything they need to plan their weddings.
You know what they say: The couple that shops for lingerie together, stays together.
A few years ago Sara Rosenberg of Miami took one glance at the fashion look of accessories such as pocketbooks and tote bags that showed sports team logos and was aghast.
Where the inspiration comes from – to turn nightclub hostesses into faux dominatrixes drinking gasoline can cocktails and flaunting industrial paint manicures – Alexander Stabler doesn’t know.
Lindsay O’Brien stood under the bright studio lights striking her most intense female assassin pose: hands on hips, her ample cleavage jutting out, providing a fleshy contrast to the black fabric of her couture gown.
There are two lounges, blowout stations and six vanity mirrors, each lined with nail polish bottles across the bottom. You might be guessing the new tenant at Tivoli Village is a salon. Right and wrong.
Before you head to the department stores to check off the items on your shopping list, consider these sources for your fashion and beauty gifts.
So many gifts to buy, so few gift ideas. It’s an annual dilemma, sometimes even a monthly one.
Black Friday versus Cyber Monday really comes down to a sleeping bag in front of Target or sneaking clicks on company time. If it concerns an unheard of deal, shoppers will find a way to justify either. Sometimes both.
For anyone who ever uttered the words, “They’re just clothes,” a class at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas has built a fine rebuttal. It has scoured famous closets, private collections and casino archives to find garments that hold within their threads the fabric of Las Vegas.
Kimberly Cardoza, 47, loves when strangers confuse her and her daughter for sisters. Or when her son is mistaken for her boyfriend. What she doesn’t love are needles or the thought of injecting toxins into her face.