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Living in France - signed copies

We have a limited number of signed copies of my book that we're selling direct to the public

Living in FranceAs part of the launch of WebVivant Press - web-based publishing venture set up by my DH and myself - we're making available a limited number of signed copies of my book, Living in France.

The book was published by Harriman House in 2008 and has received some excellent reviews. Sub-titled 'A practical guide to your new life in France', it's a hands-on, nitty-gritty guide for Britons who have bought a house in France, either for holiday use or as a permanent new home. It covers everything from the practicalities of the move, to considerations such as tax, work, marriage, children and the healthcare system, through to the simple savoir-faire of local life and tips for ensuring a happy relationship with the locals (including the rules on how many times you should kiss our new neighbours on the cheek!).

"A great read - entertaining, witty and richly detailed - as well as a really helpful practical guide."

— Heather Leach, writer

 

» Find out more about Living in France »

 

 

 

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Living in France

Just to bang my own drum, my book Living in France goes on sale tomorrow.

blog imageAs a Brit who's lived in France either full or part-time for 12 years, I was asked a couple of years ago to write a factual book about living here.

It covers areas such as removals, getting your utilities connected, learning the language, schools, medical coverage and even dying in France. There are also case studies for different sections to show you how other people have made the move and are coping with, for instance, a different education system or retirement in a foreign country.

I hope, if you're thinking of moving, it will give you what you need to make a success of your new life.

You can buy Living in France from:

UK Amazon.co.uk, US Amazon.com or France Amazon.fr.

 

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Practice makes perfect when it comes to makeup

Not sure about how to apply makeup? Or stuck in a rut? Practice is the key to perfection.

blog imageUntil recently it hadn't occurred to me to practise applying makeup. It seemed a tad self-indulgent at my age, if not plain silly. After all, I'd been wearing makeup for 30-odd years, hadn't I? I knew what suited me, didn't I?

The truth was, no, I didn't any more. Having grown up in that blusher slashed across the cheekbones, three colours on your eyes era of the 70s and 80s, I now felt in a bit of a rut. Clearly, those looks were outdated, but the new ones didn't seem to do anything for me. Lipstick didn't seem to stay on in quite the same way as before, and the colours available didn't seem to suit me. I couldn't find a foundation that would hide my rosacea without looking like a mask. My favourite products had been discontinued. I realised that at the age of 42, I was feeling the same way about makeup as I felt about fashion - that it was, in some obscure way, no longer for me.

As I was muttering darkly about this one day, surprisingly it was my husband who came to the rescue. As a photographer, he'd bought a book on makeup for photography, and alongside it, a general book on makeup. This proved to be a godsend - Making Faces, by Kevyn Aucoin.

I had never heard of Kevyn Aucoin, but even if you haven't either, you're familiar with his work. Prior to his early death from a pituitary tumour, Aucoin was the leading makeup artist of the nineties, largely responsible for the looks that graced every magazine page and red carpet star during that time.

Aucoin seems to have had a rare ability to bring out a woman's inner beauty, and his approach to makeup was both catholic and inclusive, "makeup should be fun and not fascist". You won't find any 'shoulds' or 'must's in his books - only clear instructions on how to get the effect you're looking for.

I have two of his books (though I hope to buy the rest): Making Faces and Face Forward. In them, you'll find looks for young and blog imagewhite women, it's true, but also older women, black women, Asian women, outsize women, even men. Nude looks, fantastic looks, coloured looks, neutral looks, drag makeup, makeup for special occasions, quick looks for daytime, makeup for women who hate makeup.

In Making Faces, Aucoin deals with the different areas of the face, detailing different looks for eyes, lips, cheeks, skin, eyebrows and then the face as a whole. From this, I learned a better way to apply my mascara, and how to use my eyelash curlers correctly. In Face Forward you get more of the same, including different ways to balance the face (dark eye, dark lip; dark eye, light lip etc, which finally taught me quite why I can't wear 60s-style makeup) but also familiar famous faces made up in very different ways - check out Martha Stewart as Veronica Lake.

However, in both books, the faces that I find the most interesting are those that belong to ordinary women, whom he transforms into great beauties with only subtle changes. If nothing else, every woman over 60 should look at how amazingly glamourous Aucoin's mum is once he's finished with her, even allowing for the airbrushing.

I read each book from cover to cover, then worked my way through the individual eye looks, lip looks, whole-face looks etc, in the privacy of the bathroom. Some didn't suit me, but many that I thought wouldn't, actually did. It really pays to shake up your routine a little like this, to try a 'Hollywood' eye, or to mix your own shade of lipstick. The bottom line is, it's FUN. It's like rediscovering your love of dressing-up.

It's also useful. From the styles I tried, I now have half a dozen different 'looks' that I can quickly apply without really having to think, rather than the one look I'd been using for years. I use far fewer products but make more of them. And I know what to do if I've only got five minutes to switch from day to night, or if I've had a bad night and it shows.

Kevyn Aucoin's books are available from Amazon.com and Amazon.co.uk.

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