1 DIMITRI VEGAS & LIKE MIKE 2 MARTIN GARRIX 3 DAVID GUETTA 4 ARMIN VAN BUUREN 5 MARSHMELLO 6 DON DIABLO 7 OLIVER HELDENS 8 TIËSTO 9 AFROJACK 10 STEVE AOKI 11 ALOK 12 HARDWELL 13 TIMMY TRUMPET 14 R3HAB 15 KSHMR 16 DJ SNAKE 17 ERIC PRYDZ 18 W & W 19 CALVIN HARRIS 20 LOST FREQUENCIES 21 SKRILLEX 22 ABOVE & BEYOND 23 DVBBS 24 NERVO 25 QUINTINO 26 THE CHAINSMOKERS 27 ALAN WALKER 28 VINAI 29 HEADHUNTERZ 30 FEDDE LE GRAND 31 VINI VICI 32 UMMET OZCAN 33 ANGERFIST 34 BASSJACKERS 35 CARL COX 36 BLASTERJAXX 37 NICKY ROMERO 38 WOLFPACK 39 ATB 40 KURA 41 DANNY AVILA 42 SWEDISH HOUSE MAFIA 43 TUJAMO 44 ALISON WONDERLAND 45 MARTIN JENSEN 46 CAT DEALERS 47 VINTAGE CULTURE 48 ADAM BEYER 49 MARIANA BO 50 ZEDD 51 MATTN 52 KYGO 53 CLAPTONE 54 MIKE WILLIAMS 55 DIEGO MIRANDA 56 YVES V 57 WILL SPARKS 58 STEVE ANGELLO 59 FERRY CORSTEN 60 NINA KRAVIZ 61 ALESSO 62 BREATHE CAROLINA 63 FISHER 64 ILLENIUM 65 DEORRO 66 RICHIE HAWTIN 67 DIPLO 68 DA TWEEKAZ 69 MISS K8 70 3 ARE LEGEND 71 DEADMAU5 72 CARTA 73 CARL NUNES 74 CHARLOTTE DE WITTE 75 WARFACE 76 CEDRIC GERVAIS 77 YELLOW CLAW 78 LUCAS & STEVE 79 ANDY C 80 PEGGY GOU 81 DENIZ KOYU 82 ROBIN SCHULZ 83 VICETONE 84 TOM & COLLINS 85 BORIS BREJCHA 86 MARCO CAROLA 87 PAUL VAN DYK 88 SOLARDO 89 THOMAS GOLD 90 BLACK COFFEE 91
Category: City
THE ESTATE DAIRY as Seen on Telegraph Luxury
THE ESTATE DAIRY— www.theestatedairy.com/ HOME DELIVERY We’re delighted to now be offering a home delivery service of our products & other artisan foods throughout London . Please click the link below to take you through to our online store. ORDER NOW! Idyllic Somerset Pastures The Estate Dairy is a collective of young passionate individuals dedicated to producing and bottling the highest quality milk and cream. We source the richest milk from the Chew Valley, which is located right in the heart of the Bristol countryside. Our milk and cream is produced from our Guernsey cows which gives our milk a unique golden colour and a beautiful rich flavour. Our herd is farmed sustainably on over 500 acres of idyllic Somerset pastures. We believe in treating our dairy produce with the respect it deserves and close attention is paid to the cow’s nutrition their diet throughout the winter contributes heavily to the flavour of our dairy. Our unique farming system yields a high protein milk that deserves to be as unprocessed as possible and to best preserve out dairy’s goodness our milk and creams are unhomogenised. Drawing from more than 10 years of research into the complex makeup of milk and how it behaves, the team are devoted to the pursuit of bringing our customers exceptional dairy produce all from traceable single farm gates. Our experience in farming, scientific research and hospitality means that we have an unrivalled perspective on what can be achieved for the specialty culinary industries. BICKFIELD FARM
Forever Dress | Karen Millen
Click here to find out about the Forever Dress from Karen Millen, part of our latest Pencil Dresses collection ready to shop online today! — Read on www.karenmillen.com/forever-dress/AKK98094.html
Your Vulva and Cycling: What you need to know
Fanny. Foof. Vaj. Blossom, whatever you want to call it, this sensitive area of your body takes a darn good battering from the trials and tribulations of cycling. This relatively small and intimate region is responsible for so many important functions; expelling bodily waste, facilitating intercourse, having orgasms and, in some cases, giving birth.If you look at a bicycle saddle, suffice to say that it’s not the most comfortable of perches to rest on, let alone lean in, push down and take impact through. As Hannah Dines wrote in her candid account of having vulva surgery as a result of being a pro cyclist: “While the valuable parts of the male genitalia can be moved out of the way, female cyclists sit right on the money“. It’s true, especially if you’re a road cyclist, leant right over in vulva-smushing attack position. Sure, there are bike brands like Specialized who have saddles with cut-out channels, shorter lengths and wider sit-bone designs to accommodate the female anatomy. However, vulvas come in all different shapes and sizes which means we have the painstaking task of going through trial and error to find a saddle that’s right for us – unless you’re a unicorn with a perfectly adaptable foof. I’ve had my fair share of cycling-related vulva nightmares, one being the swelling and soreness from my first 100-miler where my sit bones and labia were almost unrecognisable. I’ve suffered from sit bone sores, ingrown hairs of doom and tenderness of the pleasure zones, all
Make mental wellness a priority this month with our 28-day feelings challenge
January 01, 2020 at 11:30AM by CWC Have some empathy for the “She Doesn’t Even Go Here” chick from Mean Girls; it can be hard to have a lot of feelings—and to know how to productively channel them. That’s why, for the next four weeks, we want to encourage you to focus on your emotional health. Per clinical psychologist Carla Marie Manly, PhD, author of Joy From Fear, emotional health means being in touch with your emotional state in a “balanced, grounded way” and being aware of and able to process and regulate those emotions. Because it takes 28 days to make a habit, we’ve compiled 28 daily tasks to help you get more in tune with your emotions and mental well-being. By the end of this month, you should have the tools to make checking in with the way you feel and the headspace you occupy a priority every single day. Get to know the plan now, sign up for our special email to have each week’s tasks delivered to your inbox* (in the box below), and sync the plan’s tasks onto your personal calendar now. On January 5, get ready to get emotional. Keep reading for the full 28-day emotional wellness challenge: Graphic: W+G Creative Day 1: Set goals It’s easy to make a resolution December 31 and have your efforts swan dive before you return to the office. So to set emotional-wellness-related goals in a manageable way, Dr. Manly says it’s best to set only one or
Buh-bye brow gel: Brow pinching is the fastest route to lifted arches
December 30, 2019 at 11:01PM by CWC [youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DsKTLOkwws4] When it comes to eyebrows, there used to just be waxing, tweezing, and filling in the patchy spots with a pencil, but as we approach 2020, there are now brow treatments aplenty. You can swipe on a gel for quick volume, get a microblading treatment for a fuller effect, or try eyebrow extensions if you’re looking for more length. There’s also brow pinching, which is a more holistic way to lift your brows. In our latest episode of What the Wellness—Well+Good’s YouTube series that examines the wackiest wellness treatments around—director of creative development Ella Dove visits the Blink Brow Bar at Saks Fifth Avenue in New York City to experience “pinching.” Brow pinching is derived from a traditional Ayurvedic practice that involve massaging (and well, pinching) the area around the eyes to help lift the brow bone. After Dove hops into the treatment seat, brow therapist Mayuri begins the 10-minute massage (which costs $26). A blend of soothing almond oil and aloe vera are used to work through marma points, AKA healing energy points in the body used in Ayurveda. Massaging these places is supposed to boost positive energy into your chakras and, in addition to helping to make your brows appear more lifted, can help with other common skin-care issues such as dark circles, puffiness, and fine lines by increasing circulation and promoting lymphatic drainage. BTW, brow pinching is something you could do yourself, much like a regular facial massage (though,
Infuse your 2020 travel itinerary with these 7 transformative experiences
December 29, 2019 at 02:00PM by CWC For many, travel experiences exemplify the reward portion of the “work hard, play hard” continuum—and evidence abounds to support the notion: Both solo travel and soloish travel are growing in popularity; engaged couples are opting for honeymoon funds as part of or even in place of more traditional registries; and celecations aren’t going away any time soon. Even if a sense of wanderlust isn’t currently nipping at you, perhaps that’ll change upon learning about the meaningful travel experiences so many had in 2019. Allow them to spark some inspiration—and don’t worry, these are far more exciting than hearing your friend drone on about her study-abroad experience in Denmark. (It’s been 10 years, Jessica, we’ve gotta move past it). So, allow the seven transformative travel experiences rounded up to inform your 2020 itinerary. Photo: Getty Images/Allard Schager 1. Why the most magical way to see a Greek Island is to run on top of it If for some reason you weren’t already drooling over the cerulean waters of Greece on Pinterest, that’s about to change, thanks to Hydra Island, an authentic off-the-mainland paradise where one writer weaved through the small fruit markets and white stone houses on a grand runner’s tour. True to Greece’s mythical reputation, she even spotted a unicorn…well, okay, kind of. Photo: Stocksy/Juri Pozzi 2. How crying cathartic tears of joy in an Australian Koala sanctuary set me free Not all of us are professional public criers (ahem) and thus can only find
Derms say “moisturizer layering” is the fastest way to hydrate skin that’s dry all the time
December 27, 2019 at 09:32PM by CWC Using a moisturizer is the most important step in any dry skin routine. It delivers hydration, seals important natural oils into the skin, and strengthens the barrier so that it can better defend itself from the (harsh! cold!) environment. But every once in a while, particularly when the weather gets extra cold and dry, your regular cream just won’t cut it on its own. In those cases, says board-certified dermatologist Mona Gohara, MD, you’re going to want to double down. “Just like you think about layering your clothes, you’re going to want to think about layering your moisturizer,” she says. To start, you’re going to want to look for products that have wide-ranging ingredients, like squalane, glycerin, hyaluronic acid, and ceramides that can benefit skin in different, yet complementary ways. If you’re finding skin to be particularly dry, make certain that whatever moisturizer you’re reaching for is a heavy cream versus a lighter lotion. To enhance the moisture in your skin even more, derms suggest “moisturizer layering” aka using a moisturizing ingredient in every skin-care step you complete. Start with a serum, then slather on a moisturizer, and finish with a facial oil as the final step in your routine. Topping everything off with an occlusive oil helps to seal all of that hydration in, and prevents any H2O from evaporating back into the environment. While in most cases, using too many products on your skin may not be the best idea, in the
Choosing to go to my high school reunion taught me the biggest lesson of my decade
December 27, 2019 at 02:00PM by CWC We rolled up in Sonia’s mom’s minivan, driven by Sonia’s little sister, which simultaneously made me feel teenage and ancient. In reality, I am 28. The Romy and Michelle year. The Grosse Pointe Blank year. The year pop culture declares you show up to your high school reunion Full Adult and dressed to impress. And granted, 28-year-old me had her gameface on. But my inner 18-year-old, with her yellow bangs, combat boots, and grandma cardigans was like, “You sure you want to do this?” I rebelled to everything, as long as it wasn’t challenging. I felt so inherently different than my classmates that I shut them out. Like, ACTIVELY. I mean, even my friends rocking liberty spikes and mohawks joined the powderpuff team. But I was a committed Misery Chick, running with this idea that I was “strange” and it would be easier to reject my classmates before they rejected me. I was so preoccupied with being an outsider that I skipped senior prom and, yes, I know it was just a lot of barely legal teens wearing Jovani gowns and grinding to “Gasolina.” But I instantly regretted that. And so, my 10 year reunion became a big, exalted metaphorical make-up quiz. I needed to be Peak Mary Grace, or I could not go. You understand, right? Growing up, I saw a high reunion was the one opportunity to catch up with classmates and (hopefully) debut a glow-up that started the second you get to college
An underwater yoga class in Dubai helped me find inner peace after a breakup
December 26, 2019 at 02:00PM by CWC I’m an active, exercise-loving person—but my favorite workouts are sweaty, high-intensity sessions, à la Rumble and SoulCycle. I prefer to be so busy that I’m more focused on the struggle to catch my breath than on mindfulness about my breath’s very existence. I generally use my workouts as a means to distract me from how I’m feeling (whether that’s good or bad), so I can clear my mind and think about nothing at all. However, a recent breakup, which heightened my anxious thoughts, changed all of that. I tried calming yoga for anxiety, and it worked. In the weeks following the rough breakup, I couldn’t eat, I barely slept, and my mind was running amok in circles. Traveling generally would have been a great, Eat, Pray, Love-approved way to escape these emotions, but unfortunately, my ex was slated to join me on a work trip I was taking to Dubai only a few weeks after our breakup. Clearly, that plan was no longer in tact. And even the trip itself, which I had be excited to take, became an emotional trigger. So, when I found myself newly single and sad about it in the UAE, I searched for HIIT-style workouts to help take my mind off the anxious thoughts that wouldn’t stop buzzing: What’s he doing right now? Is he seeing other women? What could I have done differently? When will I be able to think about something else? And while I did