Sunday, September 9, 2012

Premiere: MTV VIDEO MUSIC AWARDS


Emma at the MTV Video Music Awards sporting an interesting dress, with geometric shapes above and an embroidered skirt on the bottom designed by Peter Pilotto. She paired this with some Tom Ford lace-up sandals. more photos

Snap no. 22: Plum Lipstick & Plaits








  Emma's latest fashion fave is fuschia lipstick & plaits, having rocked them at both the TIFF & VMA's  "Perks" press conference. Here, Emma wears it at the Toronto Film Festival Premiere of "The Perks Of Being A Wallflower". Her stunning dress is the Erdem Resort 2013 Sleeveless Dress.





Friday, September 7, 2012

Interview: Late Night Show by David Letterman



   Emma's latest interview was done by David Letterman on "The Late Night Show With David Letterman" on September, 5th. Emma looks absolutely stunning as usual, and as you can see her locks have grown out quite a bit. She has been wearing extensions in so many of her films that I'd almost forgotten she had a 'Bob-ish' look now. I love the black and white theme, it brings the outfit together & makes it so the blazer is really the shinning star of the ensemble.

    I hope you enjoy the interview,


Wednesday, September 5, 2012

Behind The Scenes: Glamour Magazine UK



                                                                   UK Glamour 2012

You can see a behind the scenes of Emma's UK Glamour magazine photo shoot, here!


Monday, August 27, 2012

Snap no. 24: Olafur Arnalds & Ben Hammersley




   Emma was in Iceland for the filming of 'Noah'. It was "Said" that Emma was hanging out with Olafur Arnalds & Ben Hammersley in a music studio. Earlier Olafur tweeted a picture of himself with Emma & Ben,




Had really a fun week making music with and

Saturday, August 25, 2012

Interview: Times Magazine


Emma was recently interviewed by Will Self in Times Magazine. Read the interview below, and view some stunning photos shot by Alasdair McLellan



Emma Watson, the onetime co-star of the most successful movie franchise ever, is a very grateful and a very lucky person. How do I know that? Because I sat down with the 22-year-old in a gastropub in a trendy neighborhood of North London, and in the course of an hour’s conversation she said “grateful” five times and “lucky” eight. True, of those five “grateful”s two were of the “ungrateful” form — yet these were embedded in clauses like “I felt guilty because I felt like that meant I was ungrateful. . . .” So, as you can see, Watson is a young woman who wants it put firmly on the record that she understands human lives are shaken up in the snow globe of uncertainty, and that simply because she’s ended up being covered in golden flakes, she doesn’t take it as her due, oh, no.


Pale skinned, serious of mien, with tiny little Meissen china ears furled tightly against her tiny little Meissen china head, her brown hair scraped back into a bunch, her meager form lost in a baggy white T-shirt, Watson still looks younger than she is. She’s neat-featured; all the headlines of her face — eyes, brows, cheekbones — seem as if underlined. And it’s quite possible that this rather serious emphasis, all those years ago, alerted the casting director that this 9-year-old girl should play Hermione Granger in the Harry Potter movies, rather than the umpteen thousand others who were gagging, swooning, dying to do so. Oh, and then there’s her mouth, which, in mid-moue, has a top lip that looks sharp enough to give you a paper cut.
But setting her calendar age to one side, Watson’s neoteny affects more than her physical appearance, for she is enfolded in the diaphanous — yet profoundly real — swaths of her former status as a child star. I can’t say I ever paid that much attention to her acting in the Potter movies, but I’ve looked for many, many hours in the general direction of screens upon which Watson has performed spells, mixed potions, ridden magical beasts and generally cavorted about. With four children of my own, ranged over 11 years, the eldest the same age as the actress, and the youngest just 11, I’ve been exposed to a great deal more of the franchise than I would’ve wished. Watson’s performances, per se, aren’t the point here: it’s that I, like no doubt many of you, have grown older while she grew up. When the first movie, “Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone,” came out, I was a relatively feisty 40-year-old. But when “Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 2” finally shazammed to its inevitable happy ending, I was a downright cranky half-centenarian.
So, Watson will always be, for me, a nice middle-class English girl pretending to be another nice middle-class English girl who’s lucky enough to have magical powers for which she’s extremely grateful. That off-screen those magical powers consist of the ability to transform cavorting about into huge mounds of gold — her personal fortune is estimated at $40 million — only goes to prove that we live in a world at least as strange as J. K. Rowling’s fictions. Now Watson has started to cavort in rather more adult vehicles; the first of these is “The Perks of Being a Wallflower,” an indie venture directed by Stephen Chbosky and adapted from his novel of the same name (out next month). It’s a semi-disturbing bildungsroman, set in early 1990s Pittsburgh, about a misfit kid named Charlie, who finds his niche in high school when he falls in with a bunch of like-minded misfits. Watson plays his object of desire, Sam, and she does this with reasonable éclat and newfound maturity. She also manages the difficult feat — for a nice English middle-class girl — of sustaining an American accent. I told her how good it was and she thanked me nicely and explained how she’s honed her vowels: “My grandma said — when I was really young and I’d sing along to the radio — why do you sing in an American accent? I guess it was because a lot of the music I was listening to had American vocalists. And that was something Steve said to me as well: try singing the lines in an American accent. That kind of opened me up. Then I worked with a dialogue coach and I just put in the time to really, really listen and just go over it and over it and over it until I could do it without thinking about it too hard. And I just knew it was really important.”
I concede the above has been lightly purged of “like”s (although meanly I left the “just”s and the “really”s), those nonce words so crucial to the speech patterns of any Mid-Atlantean under 30, but it does give a fair flavor of Watson’s earnestness and dedication as an actress. I asked her why she’s waited this long to make other movies and she put her head on one side, thought for a while, then said: “I think at first I didn’t because I was always either studying or filming, I didn’t have time to go off and do other films or other things to sort of show people that, Oh, she is not just Hermione, she is an actress and she can go and do these other parts and roles. . . . I didn’t, because I was so focused on, you know, on my GCSEs and on my AS and on my A-levels and then getting in to university and then whatever, I didn’t really have time to do any of that.” Meanwhile, her “Potter” co-stars, Daniel Radcliffe and Rupert Grint, had already begun to appear in other contexts before the franchise finished; Radcliffe most notably in a stage production of Peter Shaffer’s “Equus,” a distinctly challenging part that entails sturm, drang and full-frontal nudity. Watson considered the performance “incredibly brave, and I think people were impressed by his dedication and his work ethic. I mean he did it when he was, like, 17, and that play is dark and demanding and, yeah, and you’ve quite literally got to be ballsy to do it.”
Watson ended up attending Brown University, and when we spoke had just finished doing a year abroad at Oxford University. She has one more semester at Brown before she completes her degree. Not that she’s only studied and Pottered — Watson is the face of Lancôme, and she’s done a fair bit of modeling over the past three years. She told me that this was her way of establishing a public identity for herself separate from the brainiac character of Hermione Granger.
Watson opted for Brown because it gave her more flexibility to complete the Potter filming, and then do the remorseless grind of publicizing the movies. I wondered if she had enjoyed her time there, given that she was always jetting off elsewhere, and she said, “My first two years at Brown weren’t easy, not because I was bullied or because anyone gave me a particularly hard time, but just because, you know, without the collegiate system . . . and at Brown everyone does completely different things and very much chooses their own path, which is great, but it’s also much more difficult, too. You’re not with a group of people all the time at one time.”
Her last year at Oxford had been easier, partly because she was living in college and able to find a circle of friends, but also because she was close to her mother’s home. She grew up there, with weekends at her father’s in the same London neighborhood where we were conducting the interview. (Her parents, both lawyers, separated when she was young.) Observing her career over the years in a desultory way, I’d gained the impression that there was someone altogether savvy watching over her — something she initially caviled about, but then said: “Yeah, I think I’ve been lucky in that neither of my parents got swept up in it, it wasn’t something they wanted for me, it wasn’t something that they were overawed by. They gave me the best advice they could, and I think they gave me very good advice. But my mum particularly said, ‘Right, you’re going to go into these interviews and they’re going to ask you anything they feel like asking you, and every time they ask you a question, think about whether you’d be comfortable discussing it with a stranger.’ ”_Grounded Watson undoubtedly is, and that’s possibly why she was astute enough to realize that the Potter franchise had acted as a splint to her career; which is also why she’s taken the time out at college ­— testing her legs in a student production of Chekhov’s “Three Sisters,” among other things — before making her own decision about continuing with professional acting. The measured approach is paying dividends: after “Wallflower” she shot “The Bling Ring” with Sofia Coppola in Los Angeles, and when she spoke to me she was about to start to making Darren Aronofsky’s “Noah” in New York. It’s a fairly sharp ascent — from kiddie flicks to indie flick to grade-A art-house movies — and I observed that from the outside it looked rather calculating. To begin with, Watson demurred: “I’m not really sure how I’ve managed to do it.” But then she got a little more real: “I guess weirdly in my head I knew what I wanted, I didn’t know how it would or if it would ever happen. But before ‘Bling Ring,’ I said I’d really wanted to meet Sofia Coppola and — this is before I knew that she had a film in mind — ended up meeting her. And Darren was someone who actually I met a good year ago. And then I’m doing a film with Guillermo [del Toro] next summer, and I went to him and said Warner Brothers have given me the script for ‘Beauty and the Beast,’ but the only way I’d really want to do it is if you did it. And then miraculously he said, ‘Oh, funnily enough ‘Beauty and the Beast’ is my favorite fairy tale, I can’t let anyone else do this, I’ll start putting a team together.’ ”
There are inchoate glints here of a future Hollywood mover and shaker, but, speaking to Watson, they were offset by an impression of someone still looking for nurture in each new temporary family she encounters — whether it be the Potter circus, the cast of “Wallflower” or at Brown. I suspect it may be this emotional connection she seeks quite as much as fulfillment through acting. She certainly has no desire for the glitzy lifestyle her wealth could afford her, this she made perfectly clear — and I believe her. (Watson did talk to me a little about her roles, but I simply can’t hear actors when they speak about their work — the world around me grows sort of misty, and often I swoon away altogether. A famous Shakespearean actor was once talking to me over lunch about his Lear, and I very nearly put my eye out with the top of the pepper grinder.)
I was also touched by Watson’s tales of coming to realize the horrific extent of her face recognition as a child star. She told me that up until she was 15 or 16 she still took the bus from Oxford to London, determined to be just an ordinary girl — this was her strange form of rebellion — but that it became too much when everyone on the bus was either talking about or at her. Nowadays, while she can walk around fairly happily in quiet areas of London or New York, there are plenty of other places that are off-limits: “If I went to somewhere busy, I wouldn’t last very long. I can’t go to a museum, I’ll last 10 or 15 minutes in a museum. The problem is that when one person asks for a photograph, then someone sees a flash goes off, then everyone else sort of . . . it’s sort of like a domino effect. And then very quickly the situation starts to get out of control to a point where I can’t manage it on my own.” I suggested to her that with fame there comes a point when you decide that whatever the downside of people gawping at you in the street, there remains an upside, and I was still more touched by the trenchancy of her reply: that it’s more just like “if life gives you lemons, make lemonade.”
Nowadays Emma Watson is set to make a lot more lemonade, and as I left her I thought: I damn well hope it’s potable — then checked myself. After all, why does it matter to me? Unlike with her earlier screen incarnation, I will not be compelled by my children to witness these ones. No, I can decide to watch her movies or not, as I choose, just as she has chosen to become a real grown-up actress. And that, surely, is what cinematic art should be: an act between consenting adults.

View the photos from Times Magazine's shoot with Emma in the Gallery



Wednesday, June 27, 2012

Em's Q&A no. 7

Q: What’s the best advice anyone has ever given you regarding fame?

A: My mum said to me very early on in my career, “Never give anyone information that you aren’t comfortable discussing at any time, anywhere and with anyone – once you ope...n the door on a subject it’s very difficult to close it.” That is very true and I am a very private person. It's not always easy to follow but I try to keep it in mind. A film critic also once told me that acting was unlike any other in the entertainment industry – an actors job is to tell other people’s stories; to suspend an audiences disbelief and make them believe you are who you are portraying. That job is made almost impossible if your audience know too much about you, the actor, as a person. That has always stayed with me and the older I get the more I see the wisdom in it. However, as much as I might want to do that, I have to acknowledge that it’s not totally possible with the way my career turned out! People have watched me grow up and I think Harry Potter became more famous than I or I think anyone ever anticipated.




From Em, To You

Hello,
I just wanted to correct some of the stories in the media saying that I chose to dye my dog pink. The dog I am pictured with is called Darcy and she does not belong to me. Darcy has been temporarily dyed pink whilst my friend Sophie ...
raises money for breast cancer research - not as part of a fashion trend. To date Sophie and Darcy have raised £1,500. Here is the link in case you would like to support her cause: http://myprojects.cancerresearchuk.org/fundraise/fundraising-pages/pinkdarcydog

Love, Emma

Em's Q&A no. 6

Q: What would Harry and Ron say about Hermione being in Perks?

A: Harry and Ron aren’t real people and I think that is confusing for people sometimes but I hope that Daniel and Rupert would like the film ! I am no longer playing the role of Hermione even though I love her dearly! I played her for so long of course it's going to be hard for people to detach me from her but I am Emma and an actress and I hope I have many different people's stories inside of me. If I am lucky Hermione will be just one of many female characters I will play during my career.




Em's Q&A no. 5

 Q: Lucy in My Week with Marilyn was a small role – why haven’t you been taking lead roles recently?

A: The reason I hadn’t at that point taken on a full length part and had been doing some modelling work was because I did not have the time... to dedicate to a lead role in a full length film as I have been studying for my degree. These smaller roles have also given me the time to learn a few different methods of film making. Smaller, more independent films sometimes allow more room for me to learn and grow.








Snap no. 23: Sophie Summer's Pretty In Pink Pooch


  Emma was spotted Friday walking her good friend Sophie Summer's Pink Pooch Dog in Bethnal Green, East London. After The Pink Pooch had it's dye treatment at Groom Dog City.

 Emma refered to Sophie's Pink Pooch in a tweet a while back,

 My friend's dog @PinkDarcyDog is raising money for breast cancer research. She makes me smile every time I get to see her x









  P.s. If you look closely you'll see that Emma's gorgeous scarf is of Scottish Terrier's. 

Thursday, June 14, 2012

Em's Q&A no. 4




Q: What sort of movies are you drawn to? Would you do another Blockbuster franchise?


A: I am definitely staying away from Blockbuster franchises for a while! In terms of the type of parts I am drawn to, I need to be interested in a role, and who I'll be working with. The directors vision is key. Sometimes what's on the page isn't always representitive of what a piece can ultimatley become and a great director can take a good script to the next level and make it incredible.




Tuesday, June 12, 2012

Before And After






Before and After Emma's fabulously chic and elegant hair cut.

Before: Emma had dark chocolatey locks with red undertones,  (Dyed for her role as Hermione Granger in the Harry Potter series.) which had a natural and relaxed wave to them. The cut was just below the shoulders with subtle layers and trimmed hair next to the ears. Bangs were below the chin and were usually sweatly pinned up, or put behind ears. This cut gave Emma an inocent and angelic look, along with a youthful and natural apperance. Perfect for her Hermione Granger.

After: Sharp layers and lots of fringe, Emma dyed her hair back to a color close to her own, a caramel highlighted, deep blonde/Light brown. This elegant Mia Farrow, inspired cut excentuates Emma's jaw, and gives her amazing eyebrows a pop. Next to the ears the clever hair dresser snipped the hair with a straight cut, giving  it a boyish air. As Emma's hair grows she is styling it in posh and enchanting ways, for something new each day.  


 I love Emma's fresh cut and can't wait to see if she will be growing her hair out, or choosing to snip it again!

  

Monday, June 11, 2012

Film: Emma Accepts 'MTV' Best Cast Award


Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 2 won the award for "Best Cast" at the MTV Movie Awards which took place in Los Angeles. Emma was present to accept the award
which she won with Daniel, Rupert and Tom Felton.

On accepting the award Emma stated,


 "I don’t think I will ever accept an award on behalf of so many people. From Ralph Fiennes to Helena Bonham Carter to Hedwig and Dobby and all of them, this is amazing. We had over 200 cast members and I wish they could all be up here with me now. Sadly, they can’t. Obviously I share this award in particular with Dan and Rupert. Wherever you are, I hope you’re watching, and I miss you both dearly. Just, thank you. I really, really appreciate it. Thank you."

Photos of Em at MTV award show

Snap no. 18: Louis Vuitton Dinner







Saturday, June 9, 2012

Em's Q&A no. 3


Q: Are there any more fair trade collaborations on the horizon?


A: There has been a lot of speculation about my People Tree collections, with stories running that they 'Failed' or that I was unhappy. This was really strange because I felt the opposite of this. From the two collections I did with People Tree overall sales were £446,000 which was a huge surprise. The collections generated work for 400 farmers, artisans and tailors! For me though, the most important part of the collaboration was that I was able to raise the profile of fair trade fashion which I think I did succesfully. I visited Bangledesh to see the clothes being made and spoke with the factory workers first hand to understand what the real issues were so I would be able to talk about them in an informed and real way. In terms of other collaborations, I have decided I want to put all of my energy in to my acting carreer, but it was something I really enjoyed doing, learnt a lot from , and am glad I did. 




Friday, June 8, 2012

Interview: HBP



 Above is an interview with the lovely Emma Watson, were she tells all about the coveted, peach, knee length dress which Hermione Granger wears to Slughorn's Christmas party in Harry Potter and the Half Blood Prince.


Em's Q&A no.1



Q: What is happening with Beauty And The Beast?

A: Guillermo del Toro, the director, has just fineshed editing his last film and is working on the script and pre-production for Beauty And The Beast.

Em's Q&A no. 2

Q: Would you be interested in Directing/Producing?

A: Absolutely. I still have a lot to learn, but I would definately like to do something like this in the futer.







Em's Q&A: Submit Your Questions



  You can go to Emma's Facebook page and comment asking her a question about her career as an actor! She will then be answering some favorites, so keep a look out to see if your question is answered, and read the answers to other interesting questions, all on Emma's Facebook page!

Submit your questions Here!




P.s Don't forget to "Like" Emma's Facebook page to keep up with the latest news, upadates and posts for Emma!

 XxRaniiDai

Thursday, May 31, 2012

From Em, To You


 "Harry Potter is like Santa Claus. Something you can't see but wish it was real so badly that you end up believing it." 

Wednesday, May 30, 2012

From Em, To You

Emma's Official Facebook Can Be Found Here!


 "I think when you put away all of the premiers and press stuff and all the special effects, then you just come down to the fact that it's all about acting, and I think that has been the best bit for me." - Emma Watsone 

Snap no. 16: Bling Ring Gang

Wednesday, May 9, 2012

Snap no. 13: Shopping











Snap no.12: Em & Mario Vivanco


Interview: Glamour Magazine






UK Glamour magazine recently interviewed Emma on her love for lipsticks, her thoughts on nail varnish, and a few tips and tricks for skin care, in their preparation for their June 2012 issue.  Continue reading for some samples of the June 2012 Glamour Magazine interview, that Belfast Telegraph released a few days ago! 

As we are all aware, Emma loves the natural look, and believes many girls hide behind their makeup. Plus, Emma is famous for her understated beauty!

 "I love French pharmacies. I'm obsessed - I could spend hours. They take a very medical, pharmaceutical approach to the face," said Emma in the latest issue of UK Glamour. 


"I love the French - less is more look - there's something very classy about it. It's so sad when people hide themselves  behind too much make-up."


Emma has such fabulous skin, I'm certain you would all love to know how she gets it! And honestly her technique is quite simple,

"I love having facials. I think it makes more of a difference to how I feel than a full-body massage does. You feel so fresh and new. And eyedrops… genius! The anti-redness ones are so good,"she smiled.


Emma stirred up quite a lot of chatter about cutting her locks into an exciting new bob,

"This sounds so ridiculous, but if you analyze what I've done with my hair over the years, it always matches my moods. Cutting off all my hair was all about getting rid of Harry Potter, and going dark was about mourning the end of Potter," she explained.

"I'm told, 'Please, please grow your hair, so we can do different roles."   

She has recently taken a fancy to bright and poppy lip colors as well as nude and subtle ones, 

  'When I was younger, I hated the idea of wearing lipstick. Then, in the past two to three years, I've been wearing lots of different colours - my favourite daytime shade is coral.''

 And of course Emma as the new ambassadrice of Lancome created her own lipstick line, Rouge In Love, as well as a nail varnish collection, Vernis In Love. All of which were amazingly bright, popping, and some deep and rich and others were light as a feather with smooth appliance. 

 Despite Vernis In Love, Emma states that she prefers to wear toe nail polish rather than fingernail,

  ''Nails are fun now too. I rarely wear color on my hands though because I always ruin it within a day, but seeing it on my toes in the shower makes me happy.''

 How does Emma get her lips to look so perfect and get her color to last longer and look more  intense? 

''To get a really intense look, blot off the first layer and reapply your colour. Use nude lipliner to get the perfect cupid's bow and exfoliate your lips with a toothbrush. They'll look great.''

Keep a look out for UK Glamour's June 2012 issue, with the rest of Emma's interview! 

Thursday, May 3, 2012

Sunday, April 29, 2012

Em's Pick

no. 1
Miss Wason shares
some of her favorite 
products and pass-times


no. 1: Berocca,

 "If I'm ever feeling like I need a boost, I'll have some Berocca." 

no. 2: Zumba,
 "I really like to dance! When I was at Brown, I was addicted to Zumba- I did it three times a week, and I was in the front row. Embarrassing, but true."

no. 3: Marmite,
 "I recently discovered Tea & Sympathy in New York, which does all things English, like Marmite and Baked Beans and whatnot. I go and stock up." 

no. 4: Lancome Vernis In Love Polish in Gris Angora,
 "I rarely wear nail polish, because I hate how it doesn't go with everything you wear. But this cool gray color is super-neutral and goes with everything."

no. 5: Smythson Soho Diary,
 "I like this particular one because the pages have plenty of space for To-Do lists. I'm a huge list person!."

no.6: The Fountainhead,
 "I know, it's a cult. I'm not going to take it too far, but I did enjoy it."

no.7: Cottonballs,
 "Makeup artist Linda Cantello taught me this tip: If you make a mistake with your mascara, dip a cotton ball in some foundation to remove it and conceal at the same time."

no. 8: Mason Pearson Brush,
 "I have a pink one, and I bought a Travel-size one for my little sister recently. They last a lifetime."

no. 9: Lancome Bi-Facil Eye Makeup Remover,
 "After the red carpet or a shoot, this removes makeup without me having to scrub my eyes, which is horrible."

no. 10: Goody Headbands,
 "Because my hair is so short now, I've been getting into headbands. I like these plain black ones that you can find at pharmacies."

no. 11: Loreal Paris Colour Rich Lip Liner in Nudes For Life,
 "A makeup artist I met recently used a nude pencil around my lips to give them a perfect outline that's not as obvious as a red liner."

no. 12: Lancome and Solanage Rings,
 "Lancome collaborated with Solanage- Whose jewelry I love- by taking three shades of their new lipsticks and making them into these cool rings."

no. 13: The Kills,
 "I've been listening to the new, Kills album, Blood Pressures."

no. 14: Blackberry,
 "I actually switched over to the I-Phone, and then returned to the Blackberry. It's better for texting! But if they had an I-Phone with a keyboard there would be no competition!"

no. 15: MV Organics Moisturiser,
 "I have the most unbelievebly sensitive skin in the world, so I love this moisturiser. It's extra hydrating and smells of roses, which is heaven."

no. 16: Lancome Rouge In Love Lipsticks,
 "I never used to be a 'lipstick person' because I always felt like I would screw it up, but these go on light and easy."

no. 17: Luzern Pure Cleansing Gelee,
 "It's so gentle and contains no parabens or fragrance."

no. 18: ShopSpanishMoss.com,
 "I'm always checking out their blog. And of course, I love the Sartorialist for getting inspiration."

Wednesday, April 25, 2012

What Emma Wore: Regis and Kelly 2010





Emma was on Regis & Kelly talking about Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part 1 in 2010 where she wore a deep green satin drape dress with polka dot tights and black lace up military heeled boots. A delicate golden snitch necklace with silver wings was Em's only accessory save for a few thin rings.

She styled her texturized cut with some cream and kept her makeup light and earthy toned.

Stepping out into the chill, Em pulled on a Burberry Prorsum Nude Studded Trench, which complemented the dress color nicely.

Em also carried the Burberry Prorsum Night Studded Black Bag.


Sunday, April 22, 2012

What Emma Wore: Struck By Lightning Tribeca Film Festival


  

Emma was recently seen at the Struck By Lightning Tribeca Film Festival, where she sported a Blazer-syle Leather Jacket, along with a Baby Blue Floral High-Wasted skirt, and a Uniquely Patterend Black and White Button Down Collar Dress Shirt. She then added Navy Blue Peep-Toe Heels, and A Baby Pink Zip-Up Clutch.

She also wore a Silver Band Ring, and Rustic Dirty Gold Diamond Stud Earrings. As usual Emma kept it low in the accessorie catagory, and high in class.

 Emma then elegantly pinned back her chocolate nape-of-the-neck length locks, and pulled the by the ears hair out to give some pazzaz. 

  Her make-up went fabulously with her quirky look. Emma used a Jewel Blue Smoked Out Eyeliner to complement her light brown eyes, with a Champange Shimmer and a Chestnut Brown in the crease. Some Black Lengthening Mascara to help her get the coveted "Spidey" lashes. A White Shimmering Eyeshadow was used in the inner corners of the eyes to brighten the them. As always, Emma gave her face a youthfull look by using a Peachy Cream Blush on the apples of her cheeks. It looks as though she then used a Subtle Highlight on the areas which the sun would hit, and a Tiny Bit Of Contour. Her lip color is stunning, and I suspect Emma used her favorite of the Rouge In Love Lip Color Collection for which she modled. (see Rouge In Love Video Here) This Coral Peachy Deep Pink gives some pop and goes well with the colurful eyeliner.
                                  
                                   Lancôme Rouge in love lipstick in Corail In Love

"When I was younger I would, go for a more natural lip, now I like playing with different colors. This is just a beautiful thing to hold and own, It's something that is light enough to wear in the day and remake an impression at night." - Says Emma on Corail In Love


Finally, On the nails Emma wore a light coat of a Shimmering Pearl color to top off her Beautifully Quirky and In-Style Look.