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The Towelkini Is Part Towel, Part Bathing Suit—and People Have Thoughts


Summer has unofficially arrived and with it trips to the beach, debates over the song of the season, and accessories like fanny pack wine coolers.

Now, we’ve got a new entry in the weird—but kind of genius—style choice for the summer: the Towelkini.

Special Special

Special Special Edition No. 23 Towelkini™

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It’s the brainchild of Aria McManus, a New York-based artist and the co-founder of Auto Body. She first introduced it last summer, as part of an exhibit at the design store Special Special. But it’s reached a new level of virality in 2019—because, obviously.

Like the name suggests, the Towelkini combines a towel and a bathing suit, in one convenient piece. “No need to carry a cumbersome towel and an easy to lose swimsuit—here they come as one, materialized as idea,” the description on the Special Special website, which is now the exclusive retailer for the product, reads.

The terrycloth garment (?) has cut-outs for your head and your legs, which are left exposed (so don’t forget your sunscreen). It’s currently available in three colors—athletic gold, hot pink, and lime green—for $199.

People have been buzzing about the Towelkini once again, as it got picked up by the British tabloids and then started making the TV rounds this summer. It even appeared on the Today Show ahead of Memorial Day Weekend.

The world can’t decide if the Towelkini is absurd or absolutely brilliant. But, TBH, if you’re the type who went all in on Snuggies and Slankets, the Towelkini is probably your new favorite thing. Buy it at Special Special now.





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The Aquis Hair Towel Completely Saved My Hair Color From Fading


Nothing in my life has simultaneously taught me love, patience, and pain quite like my one-and-a-half-year relationship with bright red hair. Before moving to New York, I had never strayed from my natural shade: a combination of black and sun-toasted brunette. But, when Cutler Salon‘s colorist extraordinaire, Ryan Pearl, asked me if I wanted to try switching it up, the first thing that popped into my head was, “I must have burgundy highlights.”

One session, and I was completely hooked on the way my whole face seemed to light up when it was surrounded by a colorful halo. From there, I went steadily redder and redder in the hands of Pearl and my favorite Bumble and bumble colorist, Diaz. What started as some subtly painted pieces gradually began taking over my entire head, intensifying with each session. For three weeks, I’d feel on top of the world—and then, the fading would begin.

If you’ve flirted with any kind of cranberry or scarlet shade before, you’ll be familiar with the anguish over its short-lived stay. Red dye molecules are especially large, so they disappear from your strands quickly. The intense hues I gravitated toward also had a tendency to bleed all over my belongings whenever my hair was damp. “Why are you doing this to me?!” I would wail as I inspected the swaths of red covering my towels. I didn’t want to consistently blow-dry, either; heat damage was the last thing I wanted on my hair, which had to be repeatedly bleached in order to achieve the vibrant red results.

Luckily for both my hair color and my emotional state, I discovered Aquis a few months into this ongoing catastrophe. The brand is known for their hair towels and turbans—I prefer the latter as they loop around your head and fasten shut, staying securely put as you go about your daily routine. As someone who typically gets her towels from the dorm section at Target, I raised an eyebrow at the $30 price tag, which led to me extensively grill founder Britta Cox about its properties.

Cox calls the fabric “Aquitex”—it’s a synthetic woven material with ultra-fine channels that quickly draw water in at the point of contact. Compared to textured cotton towels, the fibers are much smaller and finer, actively wicking water away without causing friction. It also lacks the tiny loops you see on both cotton and quick-drying microfiber towels; these are great for grabbing dust, but can also snag on your hair cuticles and cause frizz, particularly when they’re wet.

“I was going to the ski [trade] shows where I saw all the first wicking fabrics as they came to market,” explains Cox, who formerly worked with Italian skiwear brand, Colmar, and discovered an unexpected source of inspiration. “I found the company in Japan that invented the first wicking fabrics and worked with them to make a towel.” From a close-up standpoint, the use of moisture-absorbing channels in the place of loops encourages the hair cuticle to lay flat, which cuts down on frizz, breakage, and color loss.

I explain all of this in minute detail so you can have a better appreciation for how it works in practice. Aquis’ towels take my hair from dripping-wet to damp in 5 to 10 minutes, but I find that they also make it dry much smoother and shinier. There’s no rubbing necessary with these—something you should avoid doing anyway, as the friction leads to damage—just sandwich your hair and press gently or (in the case of the turban), wrap it up. If I want to coax out my natural waves, I lightly scrunch sections at the end of the process.

Weirdly, my favorite thing about these used to be cleaning them on laundry day. The directions for care are simple—just throw them in the washing machine with warm water and detergent, avoiding bleach or fabric softeners. (You can dry them on the gentle cycle or hang-dry.) Every time I did so, I would notice that there was barely any red to be seen on the towel, aside from a few, faint imprints. It’s true that I’ve since given up on red and reverted back to my original shade, but during the period that I committed to that beautiful, patience-trying color, these were my everything. And now that I’m caring for a relatively low-maintenance hue, I still refuse to use anything else. They’re just that good.

Aquis Lisse Luxe Hair Turban, $30, ulta.com

Related Stories:
Sophie Turner on the Transformative Power of Hair Color
This Rainbow Ombré Hair-Color Technique Is Perfect For Brunettes
This Hair Oil Is Better Than Any Conditioner I’ve Tried





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Rachel Bloom Actually Bought the Ta-Ta Towel and Shared Her Review With the World


PHOTO: David Livingston/Getty Images

If you took one look at the Ta-Ta Towels that went viral over the summer and thought, “Who would ever actually wear this?” you now have the answer: Rachel Bloom.

A quick refresher: The Ta-Ta Towel is a specially-designed bra (think: a terry cloth boob hammock that wraps around your neck and hoists up the girls) that’s meant to keep your boobs from sweating when it’s hot outside—or in Bloom’s case, when you’re getting ready for a scene on your hilarious hit TV show. The Crazy Ex-Girlfriend star (and all-around hilarious human being) tested out a black-and-white patterned version of the viral bra while on set on Monday, and posted a picture of the results on Instagram.

The verdict? Bloom’s actually into it.

“I am thrilled with my @tatatowels purchase and how well it goes with the hairstyle for the scene I’m shooting today,” she captioned the nearly-topless shot. “THIS frau is keepin’ it classy and dry!” To prove just how well the contraption worked, Bloom also posted a boomerang of herself on her Instagram Story in which she shimmies her Ta-Ta Towel–covered boobs. As the company’s slogan promises, they really do look “high and dry.”

In addition to being straight-up hilarious, Bloom’s Ta-Ta Towel test was also majorly inspiring for many women: Several followers reached out to the comedian in the comments section of her post, thanking her for making them feel more comfortable about having big boobs. “You’re the only person on earth that saves me from my larger than life(pun intended) big boob depression. I need one of these!” commented one user. “Role Model,” wrote another. One commenter also suggested that the Ta-Ta Towel should get its own song and dance number on this season of Crazy Ex-Girlfriend, which is pretty much the best idea anyone has ever had, ever.

Leave it to Bloom, who once performed a rap all about the struggles of having a larger bust, to make a literal “over-the-shoulder boulder holder” look fabulous. You can order yours here (because I’m definitely not the only person who really, really wants one after seeing this).

Related: Rachel Bloom Spends Up to $3,000 on Her Own Non-Sample-Size Red-Carpet Dresses



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This $6 Hair Towel Saves My Curls From Frizzing When I Airdry


I’ve always wanted to be the girl who lives and dies by her diffuser. Unfortunately, patience is not a virtue I posses, and airdrying is my way of life. Every morning my routine is predictable if not ideal. I wake up, jump in the shower—because that’s what my curls need, and I do it for the curls—and then go about at least half the day with a look that I refer to as “swamp rat.” Not in self-loathing way; it is what it is. I look like I’ve emerged from the deep, and the ringlets I eventually end up with make it worthwhile. But still, I’ll try anything that can help speed up the process without giving me a mushroom cloud of frizz. The only thing I’ve found? The unsung hero that is a $6 microfiber turban.

For the uninitiated, that “mushroom cloud of frizz” phrase comes from what happens when you use a terrycloth towel to twist your hair up. While it does suck moisture out, it goes too far—the coarse, grabby fibers ruffle your hair’s cuticle, which leads to an explosion of frizz. The common curly hair alternative is “plopping,” or using a cotton T-shirt to absorb just the right amount of moisture to help your curls dry while staying smooth. It sounds great. Unfortunately, I’ve watched at least ten videos on how to plop on YouTube, and I just can’t get it. I’ve read the how-to forums, I’ve watched the tutorial videos, and it never wrings barely a drop of wetness from my hair.

My savior: the most unassuming thing in any drugstore. Stashed among the shower caps and travel kits, the Swissco Spa Body Micro Fiber Fast Dry Hair Turban waits to change your life. To be clear, it’s just a kite-shaped, ultra-soft towel with a button on one end and a loop on the other—if your drugstore doesn’t have this option, the one they do works. I’ve picked them up while on vacation, and everything stays the same. The best part? It’s cheap enough, you can throw it in the wash and not worry about somehow ruining a $30 hair towel ($30 versions do exist. IMO they’re good, but no better).

After showering, you flip your head over and position the button at the nape of your neck. Twist the overhang of fabric up with your hair inside, and slide the loop around the button. Enter heaven. I go about the rest of my morning routine with the turban on, while the microfiber material pulls out wetness without getting up in the cuticle’s business. Twenty minutes later, I unfurl the turban to significantly dryer strands. They’re still damp, but doable—and at least eight times less swamp rat than when I started. Afternoon comes, dry hair arrives a few hours earlier than it otherwise would, and there’s significantly less frizz in sight. I’ll never be without it again.

Swissco Spa Body Micro Fiber Fast Dry Hair Turban, $6, swissco.com

Related Stories:
I Got a Haircut That Was ‘Bad’ for My Face Shape and the World Didn’t End
You Need This: This $3 Hair Gel Is the Curl World’s Best Kept Secret
21 Seriously Cute Hairstyles for Curly Hair



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