Stylish Non-Kitten Gifts

cool gifts for teens

I’m sorry, I fell down spectacularly with teen gifts this year. Perhaps because I did a “kids and babies” one and that took up most of my brain space. So here are a few bits and bobs that I thought might be appealing to the girl who likes cool, graphic stuff rather than pretty pastels and cupcakes and kittens. (Nothing wrong with kittens, I hasten to add: love them myself. Just not everyone does. The obsession with cupcakes I do not get, however.)

This post should come with a warning: I do seem to have gone for style over budget with a few of these items! So I’ve broadened the horizons and made this a post for everyone who requires non-kitten non-pastel gift ideas. Problem solved. There’s something for every budget…

Starting with the smallest budget: currently on offer at Superdrug, a can of the very finest non-white-dusty dry shampoo that money can buy. If I may say so myself. (It has my name on it, in case you’re new to A Model Recommends!) A styling essential, especially if you suffer from lank hair or flat roots. Colab London is currently £2.32 here.

nuuna nothing to see here

The “Nothing to See Here” notepad is from Nuuna here – it’s a bit posh with its soft leather binding and black-edged pages, but I’ve included it because a) it looked great in my flatlay and b) everything from Nuuna is gorgeous and differently priced, so you can have a browse and see what fits your budget. This is special, stylish stationery at non-Bond-street prices and I love it.

Little pot of sporty-coloured snag-free hair ties: £5.50 from Hershesons here – XMAS20 gets you 20% off.

The candle is from Bella Freud and is part of a set of four (featured earlier in the week here): I joked that I don’t condone splitting luxury candle sets, but these are very cool and the scents are lovely and fresh and non-stuffy. You can also get full-sized versions, which I would imagine are slightly better value for money. I would stop and work it out, price per gram, but I am typing like some kind of dervish in an attempt to get this finished before Masterchef starts. Bella Freud at Cult Beauty Continue reading

On Trial: Exfoliating Facial Pads

first aid beauty and zelens exfoliant review

Facial pads. Little flimsy rounds of cotton, soaked with strong-smelling stuff that is prone to making your eyes water… God, these bring back memories! Who else had the Clearasil pads when they were a teen? Double-sided – one side like sandpaper, the other only slightly less so, and both of them saturated with enough acidic stuff to strip the paint from a small car.

The pads I’m talking about today, it has to be said, are not like the ones from my teen years. These are far more sophisticated – less abrasive, more effective and far less irritating to sensitised faces. And they’re not just useful for acne-prone or oily skin, either – though they will work a treat to keep skin nicely exfoliated and toned; these are all-round saviours for pretty much any skin type, apart from perhaps the very sensitive, helping to brighten and clarify and treat fine lines. The alpha hydroxy acids in the formulas can also help to boost collagen production and increase the plumpness of the skin as well as sloughing off dead cells to make it brighter and fresher, making them very worthwhile additions to any skincare routine.

I tested out two types of exfoliating facial pads; firstly the Facial Radiance Pads from First Aid Beauty and then the PHA+ Bio-Peel Resurfacing Facial Pads from Zelens. The First Aid Beauty pads cost £20.50 for 60, the Zelens, £65 for 50. Quite a difference in price, but also, as you’ll see, quite a difference in performance, too!

At first glance, the Facial Radiance Pads from First Aid Beauty seem like the perfect dupe for the Zelens version. They contain AHAs, they are pleasant to use and promise to leave skin bright and glowing. The pads are pre-soaked in the formula and housed in a screw-top pot, which does a perfectly adequate job of keeping the pads juicy and fresh. But here’s the thing: a quick swipe over with one of these pads and you feel virtually no tingle at all. Maybe a slight one, to the acid-exfoliant-uninitiated, but really, they are as gentle as can be. Perfect if you’re new to this type of exfoliation and want to ease yourself in; perfect if normal AHA exfoliants are simply too harsh for you. It’s almost just an exfoliating gesture; a kind of half-exfoliant.

The Zelens PHA+ Bio-Peel pads, however: whoosh! Dr Marko Lens doesn’t do things by halves and these exfoliating pads are like powerful one-step mini-facials. If you appreciate an AHA tingle then you’ll love these, but it’s interesting to note that rather than being all harsh and bolshy, these pads have been specifically formulated to be non-irritating and easily tolerated by most skin types. They include “next generation” hydroxy acids that are less prone to causing irritation and the formulation is hydrating as well as exfoliating, leaving skin plumped out and brightened. I actually find that I don’t need to moisturise afterwards – I like to just swipe and leave – but if you want the extra hydration, just wait for five or ten minutes so that the acids can do their business.

Verdict? The Zelens exfoliating facial pads are in their very own little league, I think. This is effective-yet-gentle exfoliating at its very best; great for tired skin, dull skin, skin with large pores or fine lines, any skin that needs a proper overhaul. If you can afford to splash out, then they are worth every penny. The ones from First Aid Beauty are mild and non-offensive; they don’t stick their head above the parapet but they are affordable and a wonderful place to start. If you don’t want to pay for pre-soaked pads and want an AHA exfoliant that you can apply with your own cotton pads, then Liquid Gold from Alpha-H has always been right up at the top of my list. You can read about that here.

Zelens PHA+ Bio-Peel pads are £65 at Cult Beauty here, the Facial Radiance Pads from First Aid Beauty are £20.50 with free delivery at FeelUnique.com. With both, apply after cleanser and then wait a few minutes before continuing with your beauty routine. Have you tried either of these? I’d be very interested to know how you got on, especially if you have relatively sensitive skin.

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Lobsters and Doc Martin: My Holiday In Port Isaac

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The recent weather conditions in the UK (rain, more rain, torrential rain) are precisely the reason why many Brits shun the idea of “staying at home” for their holidays. It’s just too bloody risky. You could land yourself an epic week of blissful sunshine or you could, and this is far more likely, find yourselves holed up in a tiny cottage playing card games and bickering with your in-laws as the wind rattles the window panes. It’s like holiday roulette.

Holidays in the UK: Port Isaac, Cornwall

But there are many great advantages to taking your summer holidays on home soil; for a start, you don’t have to go anywhere near Gatwick airport. Or Stansted airport. Or – God forbid – Luton. That in itself is surely worth at least three whole days of weather-enforced house arrest? Airports, apart from London City, which has everything down to pat, are the bane of my existence. Delays, queues, slow luggage carousels. And then there are the car hire providers with their damage excess waivers and their super-collision damage waivers and other things, who take the price that you have been quoted on the internet (€454) and multiply it by four. Then there’s getting to your holiday destination and having to go straight out to the supermarket before you can even have a glass of wine or a hunger-appeasing slice of bread, because you have arrived virtually empty-handed, because to have brought any more luggage than a rucksack would have incurred a €300 per-person-each-way penalty.

*cancels trip to Greece next month*

ruth crilly blogger

Anyway. All of this is a waffling precursor to the main thing I wanted to tell you about, which was this: at the end of May, in the spirit of great adventure, I went on holiday with the parents and Mr AMR to Port Isaac in Cornwall. A proper, week-long holiday. At first, I didn’t even count it as a holiday, because you could simply drive all the way there. Drive, and not have some kind of stress-induced heart catastrophe or a burst facial blood-vessel. It was all too easy, which as we all know is not a holiday. But my Mum kept calling it a holiday, and so that’s what it became.

Holidays in the UK: Port Isaac, Cornwall

Why Port Isaac? Well. Mr AMR and I have something of an obsession with the television show Doc Martin. (Don’t mock it until you’ve watched all episodes twice over and know all of the words by heart and can sing the theme-tune including mood-variations in your sleep.) I agree it may seem an unlikely obsession; but it’s entirely true and I can’t even begin to tell you how many nights we have spent watching episode after episode… And then we forced my parents to watch it and they became obsessed too! (If you want to see an episode then you can find the first of series two on Youtube here. Thank me later.)

Holidays in the UK: Port Isaac, Cornwall

And so we found ourselves in lovely Port Isaac, home of Doc Martin and an incredibly charming seaside village-in-its-own-right. It’s an absolutely gorgeous little place, filled with all the crooked cottages and tiny, dark passageways that you could possibly wish for. (If, indeed, you wish for that kind of thing. I do, but perhaps I read too many novels and/or have an overactive imagination.) It’s the kind of place, if you take away the throngs of tourists, that makes you suddenly want to give everything up and opt for the “simple life”, sitting on a jetty making sculptures from bits of old fishing net and driftwood. I jest, of course – making sculptures from bits of sea-waste is probably quite hard work, and your manicure would take a battering – but I could totally imagine myself sitting in the top room of one of the weather-beaten cottages, watching the waves crash into the harbour and clacking away on an old typewriter. You could write some amazing pirate stories or thriller-mysteries.

Holidays in the UK: Port Isaac, Cornwall

Where we stayed: put off by the parking issues in the main village (narrow streets, no driveways, generally difficult) we booked a cottage a few miles away. I’d like to stress that if I did this trip again – and I will! – I would bite the bullet with the parking and rent in the village. One of the splendid houses or traditional little cottages up on the cliffs or down near to the harbour. I can imagine that yes, in peak season, driving to your accommodation through the tight streets might be a bit of a hassle, but I’d probably avoid peak season anyway – the crowds must be horrendous! And you could always try to arrive later on in the day when the traffic is quieter. Definitely worth it to be able to have breakfast looking out over the harbour or to be able to take a wander up onto the hillside. I went past quite a few lovely holiday homes that I would certainly check out for next time – you can even rent the house next door to Doc Martin‘s surgery! (Photo above, the white houses to the left on the upper road. Not that I’m obsessed or anything. Doc Martin’s house is the little one nestled right in the middle – he wasn’t in when I knocked, unfortunately, but I’ll try again next time.)

nathan outlaw's fish kitchen

Where we ate: loads and loads of places. The best value meal we all had, by far, was up at a place called Fresh From the Sea. All they really serve there is freshly-caught crab and lobster – half, with a salad or with hunks of white bread and butter. So, so simple and really very inexpensive. You can’t order much else, as they don’t have the facilities to fry chips or what have you, but they serve up a very nice chilled glass of Chardonnay and it’s just a great place to grab a quick – luxurious! – lunch. Half a lobster salad with a large glass of wine cost £14.50 – a crab sandwich, fresher than you can imagine, was £6.99. You can find directions to Fresh From the Sea on their website here.

nathan outlaw's fish kitchen

The best meal of all? Nathan Outlaw’s, down at the harbour. Outlaw has a Michelin-starred restaurant further round the coast, but the little Fish Kitchen right in the village just seemed too convenient to ignore. I hadn’t brought any glad-rags with me and neither had Mr AMR and by the time we thought about having a nice meal it was the end of the week and my hair was in dreadlocks and my clothes smelt of rain! So the Fish Kitchen seemed like a wonderful, cosy option with its old, sloping beams and thick walls.

nathan outlaw's fish kitchen review

Everything we ordered from the menu was perfect – just really fresh seafood, cooked in very interesting ways. Actually, quite a few of the dishes weren’t cooked, so there were zingy, fresh things that came out, soused in acidic little dressings, and then fried things and heavier morsels that were a completely different ballgame. All excellent. Here’s a snippet of the menu, just to get you really hungry!

fish kitchen menu

We had almost everything from the list you can see; the dishes are all quite small and meant for sharing. It does look as though it would work out to be rather expensive, but bear in mind that you don’t have a “starter”, per se. We spent about £50 per head and we were absolutely stuffed. To be honest, if I hadn’t been intending to write about the food, I would probably have stopped at about £40 and that would have been plenty!

The Grey Mullet was wonderful, as was the Wild Sea Trout and the lobster (not shown) was so delicious that I felt irritated when it came to an end. The Fish Burger with Jalapeno was quite large and spicy and everything we had been hoping for! (It was the burger that had drawn us in in the first place.)

nathan outlaw's fish kitchen

The pudding of dreams, above, was (if I remember rightly) some kind of lemon posset with candied pistachios and the most incredible strawberries. If you go to Outlaw’s then get it! And I shall leave you on that very satisfied, stuffed-to-the-gills note, because it’s 11.30pm and a long way to breakfast and I don’t want to work my stomach up into one of those weird thought-induced hunger-frenzies!

Can’t recommend Cornwall enough, really, especially the gorgeous little seaside villages. I’ve been to quite a few now, all around the coast, and they are superb if the weather is good, almost as superb even if the weather is shocking. Take wellies and a waterproof and you’ll never be short of activities. Your own comments and recommendations below, please, should you have any! And also: Doc Martin. Discuss.

*Have just realised that I called this post What I Did in Port Isaac, and I haven’t even begun to tell you what I did! Lots of walking, more walking, lots of walking. We nearly got chased by a bull, which was a low point, but apart from that we walked unscathed.

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