8 Weirdest, Most WTF Beauty Products Ever
Oh the lengths women will go to for beauty. We stuff ourselves into skin tight jeans, subject ourselves to plastic surgery, we wear sky high heels that hurt like hell and we will try anything to get rid of a pimple without leaving a scar. But those things don’t even scratch the surface of the countless outlandish beauty products marketed to the lady who will try anything once. With celebrities raving about bird poop facials and eating their placenta we thought it was vital to share 8 utterly weird beauty products with you.
-Jade Hall
Bird Poop Facials

We all cringe at the thought of a bird pooping on our heads and we dread when pigeons are flying above, but celebs like Tom Cruise and Victoria Beckham happen to be fans of a little bird poo. Celebrity facialist Shizuka Bernstein’s The Geisha Facial, also known as the bird poop facial is the next big thing to hit the spas of the big cities. This facial features traditional Japanese ingredients and powdered nightingale droppings. This traditional Japanese facial was once the secret of the Geisha, used to repair their skin that was damaged by the heavy white makeup. Now, this facial is being offered at the Shizuka New York Day Spa for all who choose to try it.
-Image credit: blogspot.com













15 Comments
Post a CommentNo way
Not willing to try lol
I’ve used lip venom but not a pumper…weird but interesting.
Bird poop facial? Gross.
wth
Sounds weird but i’m willing to try
heard of these before.. crazy
I love my Luscious Lips Lip Pump! It really works! I actually heard about it on Jennifer Stano’s site
http://jenniferstano.blogspot.com/2012/06/lip-plumper.html
Wow interesting..!
y the hell not! Willing to try all of them!
Wow!
I will get the copper pillow
Wth, this sounds so sick, I’m always open to do my research to see if these new fads are worth all the hype but eating placenta…what next eating human poo, come on people!!
Not that I have any interest at all in doing it, but there’s no need to compare a nourishing protective barrier to a waste product.
What about those fish-nibbling pedicures?