Brimming with beauty remedies and advice on everything from make-up application to fake tanning, 1001 Little Beauty Miracles offers quick, simple ways to improve and maintain your good looks. Here are invaluable solutions to such beauty quandaries as disguising blemishes, tweezing unruly brows, and making thin hair look luxuriously thick. Even if you’re an ungroomed, nail-biting, hair-yanking exercise-phobe, these corner-cutting tips will have you looking your best with a minimum of fuss. Esme Floyd is a contributor to The Sunday Times Style magazine.
It sounds like the kind of advice you get in little pieces from beauty therapists or sales people in chemists. It's somewhat repeditive but still quite interesting. The kind of thing you'd give a young woman who was interested in this sort of stuff.
Honestly, I enjoyed this book pretty much. It almost enlighten me in some ways with the advices. I would try some of it and really apply it in real life. However, it took me a long time to fully absorb all the information. Somehow the presentation was a little bit difficult. I could not straightly find what I searched and keep flipping the pages up until I feel a slump to continue. The distraction was hard to handle while reading this. I once hoped that this book would be a little friendly to be presented with more distinct distribution of problems rather than how it is now..
Though this is not an eco-friendly beauty book, it has a very organized collection of beauty tricks, including horrible products containing shark cartilage and botox explanations.