Vintage Daughter

Vintage Daughter




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Vintage Daughter
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I Regret to Inform You Vintner’s Daughter Is Totally Worth It
My bank account didn’t want me to love a $225 essence. Sorry, bank account.
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Vintner's Daughter Active Treatment Essence
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I’m grateful for 99 percent of what I’ve inherited from my mother. Not just the little cropped sweaters she kept for me from 1982, or the diamond bracelet she lets me wear when I have to get dressed up, but also her genetic traits. In the bio lotto, I like to think I cleaned up. Her sense of humor! Her passion! Her kindness! It was a good bequest.
But then there’s the other one percent, and it’s made of pores.
The women in my maternal clan are blessed with clear skin , slender ankles, and not-so-delicate pores. This is our lot in life, and it’s fine. Some people have skin that’s as taut and smooth as stainless steel. And others have a complexion that bears a closer resemblance to Paleolithic ceramics. A little rough. And the pores themselves are less offensive than the blackheads that live rent-free in their depths. Those I’ve tried to eliminate for the better part of a decade. And thanks to extensive experimentation, I can more or less guarantee that all that stuff that promises a miracle? None of it works. The creams, the serums, the pore strips, the masks—it’s all a mirage. Sure, pores can be covered (somewhat). They can be emptied of bacteria, cleansed of pimples, even mattified and powdered over. But pores can’t be eliminated.
It’s Newton’s Law, but for skin care: A pore may be transformed from one form to another, but it cannot be created or destroyed. It just exists.
So when in 2015 people started to whisper about a new face oil—in fact, “ the face oil to end all face oils ,” according to beauty experts—and claimed it reduced pore size, I fell into my usual posture: doubtful but wildly interested. All over the Internet, editors touted Vintner’s Daughter Active Botanical Serum ’s charms and, above all, the glow it gave their skin. Women I admired swore that it was better than bronzer, better than moisturizer, better even than sex. But the oil costs $185, and I’m a self-righteous skeptic. I couldn’t accept that some cult botanicals could do more for skin than several prescriptions and at least three other super-luxe serums had. Plus, I just don’t have skin that reacts well to oils. The details are a drag, but even the fanciest oils tend to make my skin break out. I’m really more of an acids girl .
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Until last month I blocked out the noise. A million women converted, but I remained a heretic! Bottles of the stuff were passed around the office, and I ignored them. No nice oil for me! No, no! I’d rather burn my face off with stuff that smells like rot and feels like Listerine, but for your face. But while I endured a minor chemical peel three times a week to keep my skin in check, Vintner’s Daughter prepared to launch its second-ever product.
Founder April Gargiulo had stuffed her first product with 22 ingredients suspended in a grapeseed oil elixir. Her new mixture, which is stored like the first in a sleek if basic black glass bottle, is jam-packed with three dozen. It costs $225. One afternoon both the original serum and the new treatment “essence” appeared in the office, ripe for a test run. My skin had been remarkably calm, but the winter had left it a little flaky in patches and just dull. I volunteered to review them. (How brave, a woman who volunteers to take over $400 worth of skin care home!)
The new product, called Active Treatment Essence , is supposed to further boost moisture and “resurface” skin texture. It takes five weeks to produce one bottle of the stuff and includes plant actives, pre- and probiotics, red and brown algae sourced from the Spanish coast, stabilized vitamin C, micro exfoliators, and about 60 or so other precious ingredients. A representative from Vintner’s Daughter followed up to assure me that the essence and the serum, when combined, strengthen, brighten, firm, and protect. Think the Jon Snow of skin care.
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She also had tips: Pat on a few drops of the essence first, she said, then “push-press” the serum into your skin. Use the combo with sunscreen before you head outside and add in an additional moisturizer if needed at night. Resist the allure of all other products.
As someone whose usual nighttime routine has at least five steps, I cheered the promised ease. Face wash, two products, done. Sure, the essence smells a little like apple cider vinegar, but it’s laced with probiotics, so it has to be good, and I got used to it after a week. And fine, the oil is somewhat perfumed, but my grandmother wore jasmine, so it just smells like home to me. The fragrances are not the point. The point is the pleasure that came less than a week later, when I looked into the mirror and saw a T-zone that hadn’t been this blackhead-free since it was enrolled in preschool.
I’m the last person who wants to claim that it’s worth it to spend hundreds of dollars on skin care. It’s obscene! But I’m also a person who has spent the past three weeks looking at my credit card bill, scrutinizing purchases I’d happily live without in favor of Vintner’s Daughter. (A few fewer meals out, no more late-night Outnet splurges.) I also haven't worn concealer since April 2.
It’s not even that my skin is so much glowier (it is) or so much clearer (ditto). It’s that I wake up and it feels good. It's not tight or itchy or oily. I used to think of serums and creams the way I did makeup, as just another coat of shellac on top of my skin.
But this stuff is different. A few drops of both sink in within minutes, leave behind a subtle sheen better than tinted moisturizer and bronzer together, and make my face feel like it doesn’t need makeup, or even a particularly good night's sleep, to look its best. It’s hard to put a price on that. But if I had to, I’d estimate it comes out to around $410.
Mattie Kahn is a senior editor at Glamour. Follow her at @mattiekahn on Twitter.
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“American Pickers” star Danielle Colby is sharing the wealth of her television success with her cam-girl daughter, Memphis.
Mom, 45, spread the love to her 233,000 followers on Instagram (now try to keep up here) by re-sharing a clip from her 21-year-old daughter’s TikTok account, in which Memphis is seen promoting her own racy Instagram page — which provides a link to her subscribers-only OnlyFans site — while lip-syncing to Greta Van Fleet’s “Light My Love.”
The 11 seconds of footage depicts the young woman mouthing the words, “Your mind is a stream of colors, extending beyond our sky,” as a filter pulses a graphic of glowing hearts from behind her head.
The caption attached to Memphis’ TikTok update reads, “To be spoken to like this….. a dream. #CurameChoreo #ShowYourGlow #fypシ #fyp #36SecondsOfLightWork.”
Colby is one of the prime “pickers” on the long-running History channel series that sees junkyard and flea market enthusiasts Mike Wolfe and Frank Fritz travel the country in search of rare and antique American memorabilia.
The mother of two republished the video as an Instagram Story without comment on Tuesday — though it’s safe to say she’s bursting with pride, as Danielle’s multiple careers include performing burlesque.
Memphis, a self-proclaimed “ditzy accountant,” has also modeled vintage lingerie and eveningwear for Mom in the past.
“Memphis was born an old soul,” Danielle wrote in a May Instagram post, and shared about the bullying her daughter endured in school.
“Memphis learned to fiercely protect herself at a young age,” she continued. “She protects her space, her friends, her family and she shares what she has without a second thought. She is a warrior.”

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