Anyone have any suggestions for zero/low point nonalcoholic beverages that ARENT carbonated?
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level 1
Mio-type water flavorings! Raspberry lemonade is my fav.
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Um, water on the rocks? LOL!
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Make your own iced tea! I like to do herbal blends, ones with hibiscus are my favorite and usually a fun pink color. I fill a mason jar with tap water (room temp is fine) and add two tea bags, then toss in the fridge for a few hours (or up to a few days). You can add a squirt of lemon or lime juice when you're ready to drink too, and/or zero calorie sweetener too but I find I don't even need it with fruity-flavored herbal teas.
level 1
True lemon packets-the lemon, orange and grapefruit are good. Gold peak unsweetened iced tea is my fave, took a week or so to get used to it!
level 2
I forgot about vitamin water! Thanks
level 1
I LOVE the "Vitarain Zero" from Costco (their brand). It's essentially Vitamin Water Zero. I usually drink mostly water, but do love these!
level 1
Zevia has some pretty good iced teas: Black tea, Black tea peach, Caffeine free black tea lemon, Earl grey blood orange, Black tea lemon, Black tea raspberry, Caffeine free hibiscus passion fruit, Green tea
level 1
Powerade Zero (white label) is what I drink every morning.
level 1
Starburst Pink drink powder. Yummmmm
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My go to is green tea with watermelon strawberry water enhancer. Yumm
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Hot tea with a 1/2 tsp of truvia. Coffee with chocolate premier protein instead of creamer.
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I love the starbucks lemon loaf tea. I get it at target. It's a hot tea, I don't add anything to it, it's enough for me as is. I let it steep for quite a bit before I drink so it gets dark and concentrated. I also enjoy some bigelow green tea flavors (I don't add to those either). I love the pomegranate, but my favorite is the blueberry and acai. Mostly I drink water/coffee otherwise. I occasionally get clear american from walmart (sparkling water, pretty sure it's carbonated, it's fizzy). I still get a very rare diet coke and we keep diet dr pepper with cream soda in the house but it goes slowly.
level 1
Ocean spray diet cranberry. There are options like cranberry lime and cranberry pomegranate etc. Only 5 calories for 8 Oz and are really good adding a splash to seltzer or club soda
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I've been ending my evenings with hot tea and a little stevia! I like ginger lemon, mint magic by celestial seasonings, any of the zingers - and if it's the weekend I sometimes put a little whiskey in for a 3 point treat
Strategic makeup storage is essential to maintaining a clean, organized bathroom or bedroom vanity. And when done well, it can actually contribute to the overall style of your space. More important, the way you store your makeup can make a huge difference in its quality. To gather the best makeup storage ideas, we tapped Allan Avendaño (he's the celebrity makeup artist to stars like Mindy Kaling, Joey King, Camila Cabello, Maya Rudolph, Sarah Hyland, and Ashley Graham, just to name a few) Dr. Tiffany J. Libby, MD, aboard-certified dermatologist and assistant professor of dermatology at Brown University, and Monica Nguyen a seasoned fashion week makeup artist. Keep reading to learn ten makeup storage ideas and secrets from the best of them.
Separate Makeup Into Categories
"The best is to organize your products by category," says Avendaño. Most of us probably don't have nearly as much makeup as Avendaño and Nguyen do, but even if you have an extensive collection, a system based on product type or use frequency system can help you stay organized and also get the most out of your products.
If your bathroom has poor ventilation, you might be better off storing your makeup in the bedroom. "Temperatures can sometimes change the chemistry of the makeup," Avedaño explains. Dr. Libby agrees: "Because smaller, enclosed bathrooms tend to get more humid and temperatures tend to rise above room temperature, it's best to store these products in your bedroom in an area not exposed to direct sunlight to minimize oxidation of the product," she says. "This will prevent bacteria growth and can compromise product quality and lifetime." Designate one of your dresser drawers to makeup, or add a small vanity station in the bedroom with a desk to store your it. If there isn't enough space for everything in the bedroom, prioritize things like serums and creams, which stay healthier in cooler areas.
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Try a Skin Fridge (or a Real Fridge)
If you're really worried about temperature, try a skin fridge. "I have the Drunk Elephant Skin Fridge and it's amazing. It keeps all my skincare products cold, so when I apply it it's very cooling and wakes up my face. It also helps keep skincare products fresh for a longer period of time," Avendaño tells us. On the other hand, if you don't want to invest in one, don't sweat it. Dr. Libby explains that "well-designed products undergo stability testing and are made for room temperature storage, even after opening."
Tamsin Johnson
Some products (like certain lightening creams) keep better in a fridge, and storing those limited items in your regular fridge will do as well. Plus, applying a cooled product or mask will provide a calming effect for irritated skin or help de-puff under eyes, but this can also be achieved by using a regular refrigerator for those select products," says Libby.
Keep Brushes Clean and Dust-Free
And now for an important hygiene lesson for makeup brushes and applicators worldwide. "Ideally, you should clean your brushes as often as possible because the buildup isn't sanitary and it makes your brushes brittle," says Avendaño. Soo, how often is often? He clarifies: "Realistically people get busy and lazy, so I'd say at least every two weeks." Sponges (like Beauty Blenders), on the other hand, should be cleaned every day, according to Nguyen. To keep them extra clean, storage is also key. "I wouldn't have your brushes sitting out in the open either as they can collect dust," notes Nguyen. "I have mine stored in a cabinet."
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Choose Travel Cases Wisely
Cheetah Is the New Black
Now that we've got the basics covered, let's talk travel storage ideas to keep your makeup in good shape. "I would suggest packing your products in a compact case," says Avendaño because a hard case is also usually better than the pouch alternative, which leaves your makeup more prone to breakage. Dr. Libby says to look for travel cases with pockets and compartments so you can actually find your products when you need them. In other words, don't just throw everything in a bag and call it a day.
Pack Precious Cargo With Care
Speaking of which, it's "important to make sure there's not a lot of empty space because products tend to hit each other and break," Avendaño explains. You can fill empty space with cotton rounds or by separating glass containers with soft products in between. If you want to keep the packaging pristine or you're worried about something breaking, bubblewrap them. Electrical wire tape is also your friend when it comes to packing your makeup well. Avendaño uses it to make sure the lids and twist tops stay on products but is also easy enough to take off and put back on.
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Transfer Products When Traveling
Not looking to lug around a heavy carry-on? "I cut the weight of things by transferring products to lightweight travel bottles," Avedaño says. Nguyen, who works at MUA and does a lot of work at fashion week shows, recommends this, too. "Muji has a lot of amazing travel size containers. That store is a makeup artist's dream," she shares. This way, you also won't have to worry about your go-to product being confiscated at TSA.
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Throw Them Out When Necessary
And last but not least, remember that all good things must come to an end. Read: You might have to throw out and replace your makeup products before you've used them all up if they expire. "Most people don't realize that makeup has an expiration date, so some things shouldn't be kept longer than you think,"Avendaño tells us. "Mascara should be replaced every three months (depending on how often you use it). Foundation should be replaced after every year. Powders products tend to last longer because they don't harvest as much bacteria." You'll also want to "check expiration dates periodically to ensure that what you're applying on your skin is of good quality," says Libby. Because the last thing you'd want to do is slap on makeup that makes you break out.
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Hadley MendelsohnSenior EditorHadley Mendelsohn is House Beautiful's senior editor, and when she's not busy obsessing over all things decor-related, you can find her scouring vintage stores, reading, or stumbling about because she probably lost her glasses again.
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How to install round wall mirror
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Redecorating the rooms in your home can bring some chaos, but it also brings a lot of excitement as you watch an entirely new look come to life in rooms that had become mundane and dated. The long-term enjoyment and satisfaction you get from a newly redesigned bathroom, for example, is more than worth the short amount of time you spend completing the work.
When you're decorating a particularly small bathroom — or any small room — you have to make the most of every bit of available space. From creating practical spaces to letting your design imagination shine through, you could take your new bathroom in many different directions. Let's take a look at some great design ideas for small bathrooms.
Go Bold with Wallpaper
Wallpaper may seem like a dated idea, but many of today's modern prints and designs look nothing like those blocky, geometric designs from days gone by. Bold prints and striking patterns that might look overwhelming in a larger space can really shine in a small bathroom. Choose an accent wall and decorate it with bright colors or a punchy pattern or go dramatic and wallpaper the entire bathroom in a textured print.
Photo Courtesy: Tracy A. Woodward/The Washington Post/Getty Images
Keep Counter Lines Clean
If you have an ample budget, changing your bathroom counter can really change the entire feel of the bathroom. Choose a design that adds crisp, clean lines to the space. Decorative finishes and scalloped edges may seem fancy and tempting, but they can distract from the rest of the room and diminish your counter space. Additionally, patterned designs on the walls call for "non-busy" counters and accessories to avoid a cluttered feel.
Photo Courtesy: FluxFactory/E+/Getty Images
Add a Design Element to the Ceiling
If decorating the walls isn't your style or you don't have a lot of open wall space, consider adding an eye-catching design element to the ceiling instead. Drawing visitors' eyes up to the ceiling helps create the illusion that your overall bathroom space is much larger than it actually is, according to Elle Decor.
Photo Courtesy: David Papazian/Corbis/Getty Images
Consider a Floating Sink
Okay, so maybe floating sinks don't really float, but these types of pedestal sinks with no surrounding counters almost give the impression they are really suspended in midair. This sink style allows you to eliminate bulky counters and cabinets by skipping the traditional bathroom vanity. If counter space isn't important to you, look for a modern floating sink with minimal plumbing to keep your walls and floor tidy.
Photo Courtesy: John Lovette/Photographer's Choice RF/Getty Images
Think Outside the Shower Stall
Traditional shower stalls and bathtubs take up a lot of valuable space in a tiny bathroom. If you've got the budget for a full replacement, consider turning your standard bathroom into a European-style bathroom with an open shower and drain on one end of the room, partially separated by a transparent sheet of laminated glass.
Photo Courtesy: Onzeg/E+/Getty Images
Try Hanging a Towel Bar
If you plan on keeping the counter and you need more counter space, hang a towel bar (or two) to free up space. These bars can hold standard hand towels or even full-size body towels in most cases. This use of vertical storage space saves some of your limited square footage for other uses. As a bonus, you can find plenty of towel bars with decorative designs to spruce up your walls as well.
One of the biggest problems in a small space is the lack of light, and dark rooms with poor lighting look not only dismal but also seem much smaller than they actually are. If your bathroom has a window, install decorative blinds or a window shade in a color and material that lets some natural light in, even when the blinds are closed or the shade is pulled down.
You know how funhouses always have halls and rooms with funky mirrors in them? The logic is simple — mirrors are great at creating optical illusions. Oval mirrors, in particular, create an illusion of height, and every mirror reflects both artificial and natural light to make rooms much brighter. Place an oval mirror over the sink or an open wall to add brightness and create the illusion of extra height in your small bathroom.
Photo Courtesy: tulcarion/E+/Getty Images
Use Ledges or Shelves for Storage
If you're completely remodeling your small bathroom, consider choosing a shower and tub enclosure with storage ledges in the walls. If your do-over isn't that extensive, you could hang shelves in the shower enclosure or above the sink. Ledges and shelves are great for storing shower and hair products that you don't want cluttering your counters.
Photo Courtesy: Image Source/Getty Images
Choose Flexible Storage Options
As much as you want to avoid clutter in a small bathroom, it's inevitable that you need certain items in the room. The storage items you choose are determined by the style choices you make throughout the room. If you opt for a pedestal sink, you might be able to slide a basket with fresh towels underneath it. If your shower doesn't have shelves, then look for a hanging shower caddy to drape over the shower head to hold your supplies. If you hang a shelf near your sink, pick up some cute containers to place on it to hold your toothbrush, toothpaste, hairbrush and other essentials.
Cabinetry is one of the most important elements in your bathroom, so it's important that you choose wisely. Here are some tips you can use in your search for high-quality design, style, and color ideas to suit your bathroom.
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Formal Without the Fuss
Vanity, bathroom, storage space
In this bathroom, a symmetrically balanced arrangement of sinks, mirrors, and cabinetry looks graceful and elegant, formal but not fussy. The cabinetry features exposed legs, which gives it the appearance of freestanding furniture. The central storage unit separating the two sink areas features an arrangement of cabinets and drawers that can hold hand towels, hair dryers, toiletries, and more.
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Warm Minimalism
bathroom
This bathroom is all about simplicity, with the tiled vanity wall offering a textural counterpoint to the marble flooring and wall of windows. The vanity is reduced to a straight line of flat-front wooden drawers that benefit from a dark, warm wood grain. Floating the drawers above the floor emphasizes the gravity-defying vanity as a focal point.
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A Federal Case
white bathroom
Furniture-style feet on this built-in vanity trace their roots to the Federal Era. Crown molding and raised-panel doors define the tall cabinets flanking each side of the vanity as traditional, while recessed-panel door fronts and drawers in the central portion look a bit less formal. Painting the entire unit white also gives the traditional-style cabinetry a more relaxed appearance.
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Arts & Crafts Inspiration
Arts and Crafts Inspiration
This built-in vanity, stained a medium brown, evokes the warm oak furniture made popular by the Arts and Crafts movement at the end of the 19th century. Slender molding outlines doors and drawers -- which are punctuated by round metal knobs -- create subtle surface variations. Furniture-style feet on the vanity suggest the look of an old dresser. Arts and Crafts cabinetry works especially well in bungalow-style homes or those where the decorating emphasizes natural materials, stained wood, and rustic simplicity.
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Bathroom Cabinet Storage
Trick out your bathroom cabinets with these clever storage ideas.
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High Contrast
White walls with dark wood vanity
Decorating with white and other light neutrals is a surefire way to expand the look of a small bathroom, but sometimes the lack of color leaves the space feeling washed out and cold. This nearly all-white bathroom benefits from a dark wood vanity topped with a marble countertop. A panel of shallow drawers between the two sink areas provides varied storage for bathroom necessities.
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Chic Statement
bathroom vanity
Inspired by the idea of converting furniture into vanity, this bathroom combines a thick marble countertop and integrated sinks with clean-lined storage units below. The result is a sophisticated, glamorous look. The marble is repeated along another wall and in the shower surround, which lends cohesion to the space. The combination of stone and wood, along with glitzy chrome accents, gives this bathroom a highly-styled look.
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Small but Mighty
Dark wood medicine cabinet with shelves
A wall of tiny mosaic tiles is punctuated by a dark wood vanity cabinet in this small bathroom. The cabinet's deep construction allows for plenty of storage despite the necessary undersink plumbing. A medicine cabinet hung above the countertop features a thick wood mirror frame and provides additional storage for small toiletries and soaps. The sculptural stone vessel sink atop the cabinet ensures the countertop always stays clutter-free.
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Contemporary Elegance
Contemporary Elegance
Long gone are the days when contemporary meant cold. Flat-panel drawer fronts and sleek brushed-nickel pulls define this bathroom vanity as contemporary, while the cabinetry's warm wood finish and tile backsplash add comforting warmth. Undermount sinks reinforce the contemporary look by not interrupting the smooth plane of the countertop.
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Midcentury Modern
bathroom
This bathroom cabinetry is elegant and modern with brushed-metal pulls and handles lending subtle variations to the crisp white cabinetry surfaces. A slender cabinet outfitted with a frosted-glass panel stretches all the way up to the ceiling, which helps the airy unit look sturdy.
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Country Revival
Country Revival
In this bathroom, a pair of weathered wooden cabinets lends traditional country style and plenty of storage capacity. Outfitting your bathroom with recycled and repurposed components makes sense environmentally, and it allows you to create a look uniquely yours.
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Black and White
Black and White
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Designed to Fit
single vanity
This bathroom's ultra tiny construction called for creative storage solutions. The small vanity was constructed using a store-bought cabinet base and a birch plywood countertop. The countertop's curved shape allows the door to open into the small bathroom but still manages to squeeze in more storage. The ring-shape cabinet pulls are small, but they add a dash of vintage charm.
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Asian Inspiration
traditional bathroom
An antique Asian altar table functions as a focal point in this open and airy bathroom. A crisp white vessel sink atop the unit preserves the limited drawer space below, which would have been swallowed up by other sink models. A buffing of paste wax once a month keeps water rolling off the weathered wooden surface of the table.
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Open & Shut
Vanity, baskets
A mix of open and closed storage in the bathroom provides decorative and functional options. Drawers offer accessible storage for toiletries and medicines, while cleaning supplies are best stashed out of sight under the sink. Here, open shelves filled with wicker baskets put towels within easy reach and make a decorative statement. The cubbies also break up the wall of cabinetry, adding a sense of depth and preventing monotony.
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French Impression
bathroom
Inspired by ornately carved 19th-century designs, this cabinetry sports a decorative paint treatment that mimics the look of weathered wood. The marble countertop and gold mirror frame blend well with the vanity's dramatic design. Brushed gold accents throughout the room, such as the faucet and wall sconces, also blend with the vanity's antique character.
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The Unfitted Bath
Console sink
Like the unfitted kitchen, a bath outfitted with individual pieces of furniture rather than with built-in cabinetry avoids a cookie-cutter look and stakes a claim to individuality. In this spacious bathroom, two freestanding cabinets on each side of the airy console sink are used for storing toiletries, linens, and other bathroom necessities. The upper cabinet on each unit was outfitted with a panel of glass, which keeps the bathroom feeling open and inviting.
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Heavy Metal
Vintage Vibe
This bathroom proves that stand-alone storage can blend with just about any bathroom decorating style. Here, a stainless-steel cabinet brings a splash of funky, industrial appeal to an otherwise cottage-style bathroom. Glass shelves in the upper portion of the unit prevent it from looking too heavy and allow for display space.
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Modern Glamour
Bathroom
A sleek, dark-stained cabinet raised on metal legs adds a whiff of Hollywood glamour to the contemporary styling in this bathroom. With modern-style cabinetry, beauty comes from the grain and finish of the wood and the relationships between functional parts -- drawers to doors, pulls to handles -- rather than from carving, paneling, or applied ornamentation. A sleek-lined vessel sink atop the cabinet lends another splash of contemporary appeal.
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Custom Crafted
Custom Crafted
Custom-designed cabinetry allows you to freely express your personal style. In this spacious bathroom, a dark-stained, furniture-style vanity rests on exposed legs, creating an airy, freestanding look. The color of the vanity not only grounds the piece in place, but it also matches the bathroom's plentiful window trim, creating a cohesive look. A hefty slab of limestone atop the unit lends textural contrast to the dark wooden base and nickel door and drawer pulls.
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Transitional Style
bathroom mirror
The combination of recessed flat-panel doors, which convey traditional style, and slab or flat-panel drawers, which reflect contemporary style, gives this bathroom cabinetry a transitional look. Simple round knobs lend themselves to both traditional and contemporary styles, reinforcing the blended effect. Crisp white marble used for the countertop, backsplash, and floor puts an emphasis on elegance.