Bertinelli sometimes serves this salad with a bed of romaine lettuce, and you can find
The star of her evening look was, without a doubt, her khaki trench coat from White Abyss with a voluminous, complete with exaggerated, oversized sleeves and ribbed cuffs. But as always, great style lies in the details—and the artist, alongside her stylist Sam Woolf, knows this best.
She Doechii-fied the schoolgirl outerwear with thin black square glasses, her signature face tape, and a white button-down shirt peeking out from beneath a burgundy tie, printed with diagonal white and gray stripes.For footwear, she chose black pointed-toe slingback heels from Jacquemus (which retail for a cool $950), paired with long tan ribbed socks that hit just below the knee—perfect for those days when you're anticipating rain in NYC but don't want to sacrifice the look.As always, her glam stole the spotlight in its own right. It consisted of a high-contrast lip, tightlined eyes offset by a stark white hue, and a long French set manicure with gold accents that proved equally covetable.
Stars are slaying monochromatic outfits and servingwith their most matchy-matchy looks.
always looking chic in a single-color pantsuit to
pairing a mint green dress with a coordinating shawl in 2019, celebrities have gotten creative with the fabulous fad., which has previously highlighted
, shares what parents need to know about crib mattresses and the chemicals they may be releasing.If you’ve ever opened a new product and been hit with a strong chemical smell, you’ve experienced off-gassing. In simple terms, off-gassing is the release of
, airborne chemicals emitted as vapors from synthetic materials. That “new” smell is often a sign that your baby’s mattress (or any number of household items) is emitting potentially harmful toxins into the air.And it doesn’t stop once the smell fades. Many materials continue to off-gas for weeks, months or even longer, releasing odorless fumes that can still impact indoor air quality. According to the recent CNN report, body heat and pressure—like your baby’s weight during sleep—can actually accelerate the release of these toxic gases.