But I grew up going to Sephora with my mom and her outlook on beauty set the standard which is what I'm teaching my daughter.
Beauty is an art form you can choose to participate in. There are many ways to define beauty and selflove.
She taught me how to behave in Sephora how to use testers appropriately. But the most important lesson is that skincare is personal. Just because all your friends are using St. Ives Apricot Scrub and ProActiv does not mean that your skin also needs it as well.
Walking into Sephora feels the same to me as an artist walking into an art supply store.
It's a hands-on sensory experience.
Sephora is not a bar. Yes we go to candy shops, Claire's and other places.
But if I want to buy a moisturizer and my daughter wants to come with and pick out a little lip balm that's fine too.
I actually would love to see Sephora put together a tween/teen section. Skincare organized for kids who want to learn the basics of a gentle face wash, moisturizer and SPF
I've even purchased products myself and then find out later it has a form of retinol or vitamin C in it. Neither of those are things I would recommend tweens starting with.
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