| MOTHER'S
DAY MAKEOVER
CONTEST WINNERS GET FRESHENED-UP
HAIR, FACE, FASHION
Date: May 11, 2003
Author: Barbara Bradley
bradleybar@gomemphis.com
Edition: Final
Section: News
Page: A10
Index Terms:
HOLIDAY CONTEST
Article Text:
Jamie Dickson, a letter carrier from Germantown,
wore men's uniforms on her mail route, let her husband buy
her other clothes and wore two feet of "Cher hair"
for 30 years because he liked it.
A sloppy T-shirt and shorts wasn't just a
house outfit for her, said daughter Sarah Dickson, 26. "That's
what she wore out."
But no more. Sarah entered Dickson in our
Mother's Day makeover contest sponsored by Stein Mart, WREG-TV
Channel 3 and this newspaper. She and 169 others wrote and
told us why their moms deserved a makeover.
Dickson, 54, won. So did Mary Pratt, 50, of
Memphis, nominated by her daughter Lisa Pratt, 23, and Carrie
Lavell Phillips, 41, of Olive Branch, nominated by her daughter
Tiaa Jackson, 10.
Now they've got new clothes, new hairdos and
new makeup. We think the results range from great to a head-turning
"is that the same lady?"
Jimmy Dickson cried "Wow!" when
he saw his wife Jamie, with her new hairdo created several
days ago. When she stopped by his office to show him her complete
makeover, "he couldn't stop grinning," she said.
"He wanted to take me out for lunch and dessert. He acted
like he was thrilled! to be married to me."
Pratt's transformation was equally dramatic.
"People tell me I look 10 years younger," said Pratt,
an assistant professor of history at Southwest Tennessee Community
College.
When Phillips, a customer service representative
for the Internal Revenue Service, walked in to work with her
new hairdo, her co-workers applauded.
She liked it so much, she said, "I drove
with the windows down so everybody could see me. I tried to
catch all the red lights."
For two weeks, the women have been racing
to appointments, getting a new outfit, shoes and accessories
given to them by Stein Mart and chosen by Jane Curtis, Stein
Mart fashion coordinator. Curtis, a private image consultant
whose company is called About Face, also did their faces using
BeautiControl makeup.
They received new hairdos from stylists Lynn
Shea, owner of Capelli, Ted Cortese, owner of Diva
Colour Studio, and Larry DeLancey, owner of Hi Gorgeous.
All the makeovers were done with respect for
the personalities of the three women, their fashion preferences
and lifestyle needs.
To add icing to the cake, each woman was a star for a day.
The makeovers were featured, one a day last week, on Channel
3's Live @ Nine news/talk show with hosts Marybeth Conley
and Alex Coleman.
"It's been like a dream. So much has
happened," said Pratt. "People are giving me newspapers
and sending me E-mails." A colleague passed a newspaper
photo of her around a room full of people. She said she's
felt pressure to make sure she keeps up her new image.
While almost everyone involved was enthusiastic
about the results of our makeovers, Tiaa, Phillips's daughter,
reacted just like a 10-year-old.
"It looks good," she said to her,
in a bored fashion, then begged her mom to take her to a video
arcade.
Jamie Dickson
The problem
Dickson, long-legged and short-waisted, wore loose-fitting
clothes to hide what she considered an out-of-proportion figure.
Yet, her real love was for feminine, frilly styles.
The remedy
Clothes: Clothes that showed off her small waist but did not
cut her in half. A long embroidered sweater hugged her curves
and lengthened her torso. The embroidery, like the swishy
skirt, satisfied Dickson's love for romantic styling without
being too fussy, and the black and white colors were great
for her cool-toned skin. Her fancy was allowed to take flight
in little black sandals with butterflies on the toes.
Hair: Lynn Shea, of Capelli salon, cut her
long hair to shoulder length, layered it for lift and graduated
the length on the sides to soften Dickson's features. She
wove in dark, warm brown color to cover some, but not all,
of the gray, and added clear color for shine.
Makeup: Fashion coordinator Jane Curtis dusted
Dickson's deep-set eyes with soft white shadow to bring them
up, brushed mauve and blue on her lids for color and drama,
and extended her eyeliner out and up to create bigger eyes.
She used wine-tone blush and rosewood lipstick.
Mary Pratt
The problem
Pratt wore little makeup and left her curly hair gray because
chemicals just made it more unruly. Her children called her
humdrum clothes "teacher" style.
The remedy
Clothes: A classic suit look to make her feel comfortable,
but chosen for her slightly pear-shaped figure. A houndstooth-check
jacket called attention to her upper body and shaped her silhouette
with a black border. The trumpet skirt slimmed her lower torso,
accented her good legs, and provided a flirty touch that enlivened
the jacket. A marvelous shell and red-stone necklace gave
it all panache.
Hair: Ted Cortese, of Diva Colour
Studio, used three low- or no-peroxide colors on her hair
to add light brown color, gold highlights and gloss. He trimmed
it, tapered the sides and created a side part to soften her
strong features. Best of all, Pratt now has "wash and
wear" hair that requires only a styling cream and finger-shaping
to look wonderful.
Makeup: Curtis used pale green eyeshadow to
take the red out of Pratt's lids and soft brown at the corners
to enlarge her eyes. She used plum on her cheeks and a soft
bronze red called "samba" on her lips to go with
her strong necklace.
Carrie Lavell Phillips
The problem
Phillips, who battles her weight, could
hardly bring herself to shop for clothes at all. "Everything
looks too big," she said, "so I think, 'I'll just
do with what I got. I'll get something for the children and
leave.' "
The remedy
Clothes: A variety of styling tricks
that add up to one great effect. A light, feminine, embroidered
pantsuit in slimming black with a jacket that fell over the
hips trimmed Phillips's silhouette. Adding shoulder pads visibly
raised her torso and slimmed her hips. Opening the jacket
created a bright, vertical corridor of color down her torso
that took inches off her waist.
Hair: "We had to get rid of that mullet!"
said Larry DeLancey, of Hi Gorgeous, who cut her hair 6 inches
in back, notched the top, and added dark brown tones and caramel
highlights. He then used a tiny flat iron to create an all-over
flipped 'do that was light, airy and sophisticated. She can
do this at home with a curling iron, he said.
Makeup: Curtis emphasized Phillips's almond-shaped
eyes with taupe on the lid and mauve and plum colors applied
to the outside corners. A rich dark bronze lipstick brought
out her cupid's bow lips. Bronzing powder provided that glowing
finish.
Fashion editor Barbara Bradley can be reached
at 529-2370.
Caption:
By Jim Weber
Jamie Dickson, with daughter Sarah Dickson,
wears an embroidered sweater in rayon and nylon by Items,
and a chiffon print silk skirt by Jones New York.
CAPTION: By Mike Maple
Mary Pratt wears Isabela D's houndstooth-check
jacket and trumpet skirt, with shell sweater underneath and
pointed-toe shoes by Liz Claiborne.
CAPTION: By Dave Darnell
Carrie Lavell Phillips, with daughter
Tiaa Jackson, wears ELCC's silk and linen pantsuit trimmed
with turquoise embroidery and SML Sport Woman cotton and Spandex
shell and sandals by Mootsies Tootsies.
CAPTION: Jamie Dickson, Mary Pratt, Carrie
Lavell Phillipsphoto (6)
Copyright 2003 The Commercial Appeal, Memphis,
TN
Record Number: 0FAFFFBD682F634B
The Commercial Appeal, Memphis, Tn Used With
Permission
www.thecommercialappeal.com
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