Word: shampooing
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...charm of an 1860’s Victorian home with the amenities of modern living. The Harding House comes with all the perks you’d expect from a typical hotel—complete with complementary parking, continental breakfast, and mini shampoo bottles—but also adds some unique touches such as free DSL internet access and wine receptions every Thursday evening. Best of all, the Harding House is a 5-minute walk from Central Square, just one T-stop away from Harvard...
...from a website she read about in Mother Jones—a company that produces its clothes out of hemp and splits its profits equally among its workers. She attends innumerable protest rallies armed with a cup of fair trade coffee in hand. Her hair is washed with organic shampoo and her teeth brushed with organic fennel baking soda, both from Tom’s of Maine. She made her Macrame bracelet herself while on a summer expedition inspecting labor conditions in Guatemala...
...left the door open for future talks. "We hold the same ideals as Body Shop, but we've done it without all the plastic bottles," he says of Lush's ethics as well as its emphasis on pared-down packaging. The company's catalog, which promotes bars of solid shampoo and bare blocks of deodorant, color-codes ingredients to distinguish the organic from the merely natural. It also tags some 75% of its products with a "green blob" indicating "suitable for vegans...
...Paltrow. Each issue focuses on one place?the Maldives, Milan, Courchevel, with a bit of luxury-travel news at the back. The writers are knowledgeable, but fond of words and phrases that went out with steamer trunks; NB praises a Toronto hotel for its "unguents" (that's soaps and shampoo to the rest of us) and describes how chic Torontonians "tend to have pre-dinner drinks in the restaurant at which they are dining and remove to a hotel bar afterwards." If that charms you, grab a copy of NB, remove to a wing chair and luxuriate in the unctuous...
...Paltrow. Each issue focuses on one place - the Maldives, Milan, Courchevel, with a bit of luxury-travel news at the back. The writers are knowledgeable, but fond of words and phrases that went out with steamer trunks; NB praises a Toronto hotel for its "unguents" (that's soaps and shampoo to the rest of us) and describes how chic Torontonians "tend to have pre-dinner drinks in the restaurant at which they are dining and remove to a hotel bar afterwards." If that charms you, grab a copy of NB, remove to a wing chair and luxuriate in the unctuous...