Self Selects our Savvy Eyebrow Shaping for Special Attention

As seen in Self July 2002
"If
you think you have mastered the art of the brow, we have news for you.
It?s a constant learning curve. Your face changes as you age (that?s a
good thing), and your brow shape needs to evolve or you may end up
looking too juvenile or too late era Joan Crawford,? says New York City
spa owner Dorit Baxter."
Belly Works Wows New York
Dorit Baxter's Belly Works (Ab
Strengthening the New York Day Spa Way) was recommended by New York
Magazine in "Best of New York," March 25, 2002 and featured on NBC's
"Good Morning New York," "Fox at Five," and New York's WPIX "Survival
of the Fitness" segment.
As seen in New York Magazine
March-April 2002
As day spas seeped into the social fabric of
American life, Dorit Baxter generated a setting for events from bridal
showers to corporate gatherings. She even made an inroad on an event
not traditionally associated with facials and algae wraps as Dorit
Baxter Day Spa inspired the following story in the New York Times.
"On Friday a bunch of bankers will
arrive in N.Y. from Wilmington, Del to reenact this rite of manly
passage. Their first stop: The Dorit Baxter day spa at 47 West 57th
Street." Click Here to see the original article.

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Dorit Baxter presented successful urbanites with a lifestyle innovation
at the start of the 1990?s when the skin care specialist opened on
Manhattan?s fashionable Fifty-seventh street one of the first Day Spas
in the U.S. and soon attracted the interest of trend-spotting Time
Magazine:
"Dorit
Baxter opened a spa in mid town Manhattan after listening to her
skin-care clients say how they longed to visit a spa for only two
hours. Now they get slathered in a thick green paste made from
Mediterranean seaweed, baked, cooled, cleansed and then zip back to the
office in little more than an hour." Time, July 22, 1991
New York Day Spa?s romance with the press continued as the most prestigious beauty/fashion magazines reported on new treatments:
 A Vogue reporter referred to a Dorit Baxter Paraffin Wrap as " very
Hollywood extravagant," adding that the treatment made her feel "like
Liz Taylor in Cleopatra."

Allure
praised Dorit Baxter?s use of Dead Sea derivatives in lavish and
healthful therapies: "Her Dead Sea Salt Scrub delivers immediate
satisfaction."
As once exotic body treatments became an established part of the
American woman?s beauty/wellness regimens, Dorit Baxter was often
quoted as a source in the most popular publications.


Cosmopolitan gave its readers Dorit Baxter recipes for Aromatherapy. Click here to see the original article.
As day spas proliferated throughout the country, Dorit Baxter treatments continued to reap accolades.
BODY SCRUB
"Body Scrubs are a maintenance ritual rather than merely an indulgence,
so the key is to find a place to slough comfortably and efficiently.
The wet treatment, a chilling experience elsewhere, is relaxing on
Baxter?s heated table."
New York Magazine, April 15, 1996
New York Magazine, Best of New York, 2000
"And for the active set, Dorit Baxter offers a terrific sports facial
geared to athletic types (warm mint-tea solution softens bumps, and a
mask of cod-liver oil, thyme, and kaolin helps reduce impurities and
minimizes pores)"

BEAUTY MARK Holiday Glow
"Dorit
Baxter compares her new Party Masque Treatment to ?a little face lift.
This thirty-minute treatment masque leaves your face ready for public
viewing-just dab on some makeup and you?re ready for the holiday
festivities. The effects of the masque last about seven days-just
enough time to get through the week?s parties all aglow."
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