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From Sweat-Proof to Skin-Loving: Summer Makeup Essentials That Work

From Sweat-Proof to Skin-Loving: Summer Makeup Essentials That Work

News1821-05-2025

Last Updated:
We've curated a list of summer essentials that are perfect for inclusion in your upcoming stories and listicles
As summer approaches, the demand for skincare-infused beauty is heating up! Consumers are looking for multi-functional products that hydrate, protect, and enhance their glow—all in one step. We've curated a list of summer essentials that are perfect for inclusion in your upcoming stories and listicles.
The Body Shop's Strawberry Body Mist – ₹945
Our Strawberry Body Spray is simply irresistible, infused with cold-pressed strawberry seed oil and Community Trade sugarcane essence from Brazil. Its long-lasting freshness will see you through the morning meetings to desk dinners. This ultra-fine strawberry body spray instantly absorbs into your skin and leaves a lingering scent.
● Body mist for women
● Ultra-fine mist
● Delicious fruity scent
● Long-lasting freshness
● Enriched with cold-pressed strawberry seed oil
● Infused with Community Trade sugarcane essence from Brazil
Mila Beaute's Built to Cover Liquid Foundation with SPF 20 – ₹379
advetisement
The Mila Beauté Built-To-Cover Foundation is here to serve high coverage without the heavy feel. This lightweight, buildable formula blends like a dream, giving you that smooth, natural matte finish—no cakiness, no stress. Packed with hyaluronic acid for that extra hydration boost and SPF 20 to keep your skin protected, it's made to handle Indian weather. Whether you're going for a soft, everyday slay or a full-glam beat, this foundation's got your back.
Swiss Beauty's Protect Maxx Sunscreen Air Mist – ₹399
Keep sun damage at bay with Swiss Beauty Protect Maxx Sunscreen Air Mist. It is broad-spectrum, lightweight, water-resistant, non-greasy, quick-absorbing, and suitable for both face and body. Infused with niacinamide and sunflower oil, it hydrates and delivers a cooling sensation while creating a protective barrier against harmful UVA & UVB rays. It has no white cast and is sweatproof for up to 10 hours to let you have all the fun in the sun.
Mama Earth's Sunscreen with Carrot Seed, Turmeric, and SPF 50 PA+++ – ₹399
Formulated with natural ingredients for Indian skin and weather, Mamaearth Ultra Light Indian sunscreen prevents UVA and UVB damage for up to 6 hours. Super lightweight, it doesn't dry out or leave patches, keeping your skin moisturized and protected for extended periods. It protects against the sun, reduces tan, and keeps your skin glowing without making it oily or greasy.
Maybelline's Colossal Waterproof Mascara – ₹399
The Colossal Volumizing Waterproof Mascara is the ultimate beauty companion for stunning lashes that withstand all conditions. Made with an innovative formula, the Colossal Longwear mascara coats each lash from root to tip without any clumping or flaking. In fact, not only is the Maybelline Colossal Mascara waterproof, it also ensures smudge-free and budge-free wear for up to 12 hours and delivers intense black pigment that adds depth and drama to your eyes instantly.
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First Published:
May 21, 2025, 19:29 IST

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It's time that determines perception. We have moved to a sense of nationalism now. There was a time when India wanted to be perceived as global. Now we want to celebrate national strength. It flusters me because I have never changed, I will never stop doing the sari for the red carpet. Even today my mandate with actresses on the red carpet is simple. I will make you an outfit if you wear a sari, because I'm an Indian designer. What do you think about India's relationship with luxury and its evolvement in the post-liberalisation and now post-influencer age? India has a troubled relationship with the West because of the way we were ruled. We felt we were second-, third-class citizens. Today, we feel not just a sense of belonging, but ownership. It translates visually into clothes, and a bit of political assertiveness through clothing is not such a bad thing. What has changed in India is our blind awe of western luxury. You are talking about post-globalisation disillusionment. Now it's post-globalised cynicism. The Indian customer is very smart. There's a misnomer that Indians shop cheap. Indians shop value. If you give them something expensive, and they see value in it, they'll buy. If you sell the same product in every single duty-free around the world and try to pass it off as rarefied luxury, it's not logical. How can you push a logical person to become illogical? You mean like Shah Rukh Khan is the last of the stars? What are stars? They are distant and they sparkle. The most important part of stardom is being inaccessible. Earlier, stars in this country had a veil, a purdah—you never got to see them. The stars only came out at night. Now, all day long, you see them on Instagram; some only exist there. Scarcity creates demand. You can't be available in 10,000 stores and say you are exclusive. Today people do not want to buy some of the most coveted bags in the world. I don't want to spend a lot of money buying a bag that 50 of my friends already have. Does it make me feel exclusive? Absolutely not. How can billion-dollar brands with international distribution be exclusive? If every important neighbourhood has one of your stores, you can't claim rarity. In many ways, luxury does not exist, only the marketed notion of luxury. Some say we will go back to bespoke, custom-made. There will be a price correction. Brands will realise that to retain the halo of luxury, they need to scale back. What really defines luxury is wanting something you don't have. And it makes luxury so relative, actually. It is relative, for some people, luxury is just confidence. So if you buy a product that gives you confidence—social, political, anything—that's luxury. Luxury has to make you feel good from within. You build a luxury brand by creating a great product, but also by creating a great philosophy of business. A brand I truly admire is Hermès. They have created a business by creating a culture. In Hermès, they will take all the time in the world to create a good product. Aesthetically you might differ from the product, but you can't fault the integrity of its creation. When you build the right culture, you build the right respect. People buy your product because they respect your integrity, since most people don't have it. We gravitate towards what we are not. We surround ourselves with things that complete us. My brand is respected in India because everybody panders to the rich here; we do not. We don't customise. I pay 100% tax. If you haven't earned your customers' respect, you have not built a luxury brand. Integrity makes a product sell. What people don't understand is the deeper insight into why a customer shops. They want to buy something that reflects who they are, their values or aspirations. It's like going to a detox centre where you're buying something to heal you from inside. I didn't understand my stardom for a long time. Early in my career, everybody wanted to talk to me about Bollywood. At that point, I made the actors wear Sabyasachi and they all said, 'Oh, Aishwarya looks so good in Cannes', and this and that. Then came Band Baajaa Bride and the big celebrity weddings. Many women came to me and said, 'When my daughter gets married, I want her to wear a Sabya .' Now the narrative has completely changed, everyone I meet, from all over the world, shares one thing with me: 'You make us so proud.' Are you saying product, integrity and creativity are different things? You can have creativity, and you can have a great product, but the most important thing that binds them together is integrity. Integrity is the biggest luxury in the world today because it is so rare. Sabyasachi was built on 25 years of integrity. And to hold your integrity for 25 years and not falter is a very tough thing. During the pandemic we were the first to shut, the last to open. Not a single person in my company got a pink slip. What did you do in that time? Did you create? Stayed at home. Paid salaries. I loved to cook. We had 80 buses going every day to pick up people and bring them to work. I did not allow a single person to come in public transport. We hired a cook for a year and turned the entire terrace into a restaurant. All the food was sanitised. We had a quarantine centre—if anybody had to leave, upon return they had to stay in quarantine for three days. When they were declared Covid-free, they were allowed back to work. You've dressed a lot of women. What do you think about women? Have they changed? I was raised by women—my two grandmothers, my mother, my mother's sister. I learned that women took unflinching responsibility. That men didn't. I wanted to design clothing. There was resistance. How can a man do a profession that's meant for ladies? So my relationship with women is not one of love, but of empathy. I think I understand women because I've experienced similar challenges. I think women make better women's wear designers. A man can only imagine what it is to be in a woman's body. Because of that liability, I constantly surround myself with women to get their point of view. I was not born beautiful. I'm an ordinary man. I don't look a certain way. My body is not a certain way. I struggled with my body and selfesteem. I've struggled in a world where a lot of people have a quicker right of way if they look a certain way. So I had to compensate for my lack of being beautiful with my cerebral strength. I have learnt from my own body as a man to feel that a woman will not feel her best every day. When you approach the human body and your customer through empathy and sensitivity, you'll want to make clothes that empower them to look their best even if they are not feeling their best. I don't make clothes that are difficult for women to live in. The best compliment I get: men tell me they love to see their wife in a Sabya. Many Sabyasachi purchases are family affairs. A very successful female CEO asked me to keep a sari aside and said, 'I want to come back with my husband and show it to him.' We all thought: she's such a powerful woman, can't she buy a sari by herself? So I asked politely, and she said, 'I'm buying a Sabya. He wants to participate.' If you were a designer's oracle, do you see a different market, a different Indian designer in the future? My generation has seen the maximum change: from LP to iPod, from landline to Nokia to iPhone and now we have landed at AI. We have moved from the age of information to the age of influence and now the age of intelligence. The next frontier will be moving from intelligence to wisdom. The most valuable commodity in the age of wisdom will be humanity. Any business that encapsulates the spirit of human beings will find future success. AI will make everything very efficient; but AI will also make everything homogenous. Your differentiator will be your legacy, your story, your product and your craft. Those without the backend of human craft will be pushed out. With AI, the mediocre brands will die. Brands that hold on to integrity and humanity will be the biggest brands. They might not be big in economic scale; but they will be the most important in terms of influence. India has a lot of scope for this. Humanity is here, craft is here, human skills are here. The government is talking about skill development. I will put forward one thing: Skill preservation. We also need to pay attention to human connections. People are suffering because human connections have become poor. It's loneliness. There was a big socialite who came to buy jewellery at the Mumbai store. She came six times, every time getting dressed up to see the jewellery and decide if she wanted to buy it. I felt maybe she came to the store because people would talk to her, because she was lonely. Perhaps she uses the idea of coming to the store as an excuse to be in touch with humanity.

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