Showing 1 - 10 of 19
Life, Published on 16/08/2021
» A thermometer read 38.2C when I measured my body temperature.
Life, Noko, Published on 03/11/2020
» Along with the autumn/winter 2020 collection, Lunasol has launched its Makeup College on YouTube to provide instructions in applying its new products.
B Magazine, Normita Thongtham, Published on 18/09/2016
» I posted a photo of a plant on Facebook and was pleased with the interest that it aroused among some friends. "What is it?" several asked. "Is it aloe vera? Is it malunggay [maroom in Thai]?"
Guru, Mika Apichatsakol, Published on 10/06/2016
» Ten reasons why Thailand is the haute-est fashion hub.
B Magazine, Andrew Biggs, Published on 20/09/2015
» HBD. Those three letters coursed relentlessly across my smartphone screen last weekend. The message came from students, friends and acquaintances.
B Magazine, Andrew Biggs, Published on 12/07/2015
» As the trial of the two Myanmar accused of murdering British tourists starts on Koh Tao, where do you think your favourite columnist is filing his story from this week?
Life, Noko, Published on 11/11/2014
» Throughout the history of beauty, brows have had their ups and downs, reaching rock bottom when they were completely shaved off or tweezed into the thin, high arches popular with women in the Middle Ages.
Muse, Napamon Roongwitoo, Published on 22/03/2014
» Aren’t women today spoilt for choice? We don’t even have to go to a department store to buy beauty products — even convenience stores now stock them. With more and more players each day, the beauty industry is more vibrant than ever. Here are interesting new brands we have recently embraced with open arms (and wallet).
Amornrat Mahitthirook, Published on 06/01/2014
» Thanks to modern health care, ko-eah, a conventional over-the-counter Chinese medicine to treat skin abscesses, has found itself on a list of old-school remedies.
Published on 06/01/2014
» Today's feminine sanitary pads are an altogether different specimen than their traumatic-looking predecessors. Some of the earliest forms of menstrual management were rabbit skins, sponges, rags and homemade knitted aprons. Earlier still were menstrual huts, a refuge that separated menstruating women from the rest of the community.