If you’ve ever had the pleasure of scribbling a Live Tinted Huestick on your face, you know how the creamy crayons effortlessly hidebrown spots, red dots, blotches, splotches, and overall discoloration. No surprise that they’ve won an impressive list of beauty awards and fans. Now, the brand founder, Deepica Mutyala, is bringing out a long-awaited foundation with the same smooth, soft goodness. The Huestick Complexion Stick comes in a travel-friendly solid form that you can apply directly to your face, but no one would object if you got all fancy and wielded a brush. The 20 shades offer coverage without looking spackle-like, functioning as a foundation, concealer, contour, or bronzer, and they’re all enriched with ceramides, squalane, hyaluronic acid, and vitamin C to coddle your skin in the process. ($38, livetinted.com) —Linda Wells

Protect
It’s All a Blur
Martha Stewart once told Air Mail Look that she applies tinted sunscreen before her 6:30 AM Pilates class and looks “better than most people at that hour.” Ever since, I’ve been following in her tinted-sunscreen footsteps. Now, Bobbi Brown has whipped up what just might be the most flattering SPF 30 on the market. The Jones Road Everyday Sunscreen contains blurring ingredients—silica particles that diffuse the light—and is sold with an application brush, the first one I’ve seen for sunscreen. And you know what? It’s a marvel. The formula comes in four color-correcting shades and one colorless version and works seamlessly under makeup. I won’t go so far as to hop on the Reformer next to Martha—the pressure!—but I feel pretty swanky on my sticky mat at home. ($42 each for the sunscreen and brush; jonesroadbeauty.com) —Linda Wells

Paint
Hail Mary!
How’s this for bona fides? Mary Phillips is the makeup artist to Kendall Jenner, Hailey Bieber, Sabrina Carpenter, and Kim Kardashian, had a contract with Chanel Beauté for years, and is now coming out with her own line, called m.ph. With it, she brings professional techniques to the clumsy and unschooled. First up is the Underpainting Palette based on Phillips’s viral method of applying concealer, contour cream, and highlighter before adding foundation (in other words, underpainting). She compares it to “laying down the bones under the skin.” Her blush is a creamy, sheer marvel that makes even the most jaded user look fresh and innocent. She also turns out lip pencils with remarkable glide. The result is the snatched look so many people seem to be chasing, without seeming like you’re that person chasing the snatched look. ($25 for the lip pencil, $36 for the blush, $64 for the Underpainting Palette, sephora.com) —Linda Wells

Chop
A Cut Above
David Mallett’s new Manhattan salon in the WSA building is a revelation—and not just because the master of French-girl hair gave me the best cut of my life (cue The Princess Diaries makeover scene). Perched on the 23rd floor, the intimate space offers sweeping views up and down the East River. Barges drift below, planes trace arcs overhead, and inside, the usual salon chaos—blow dryers, chatter, stylists darting between chairs—is replaced by classical music and a sense of calm. The salon only books a handful of clients at a time, all treated like VIPs. It’s efficient, too. My go-to Pilates studio (Stefanie Bertoncini’s buzzy NYC Athletic Studio) and lymphatic drainage spot (the hot-girl favorite Ricari Studios) are just an elevator ride away. Where else can you get toned, detoxed, and transformed without leaving the building? ($700 for a haircut with Mallett, davidmallett.com) —Clara Molot

Relax
Bloat, Be Gone!
Who knew it was possible to feel so calm and confident in a white nylon catsuit? Wearing one is the first step to the new Ricari Studios treatments at The Peninsula London’s Spa and Wellness Center. The Ricari Signature protocol includes massage, infrared lights, and Lyma lasers to target muscles and skin. But the highlight is a gentle pummeling from the Icoone Multi-Microstimulation System machine, a wand fitted with rollers that travel from ankles to neck to stimulate the lymphatic system. (Hence the catsuit, unless you’d rather go naked?) Ricari, named after the Italian word for “recharge,” is especially restorative after landing at Heathrow. (There are also locations in New York, Los Angeles, Grand Cayman, and St. Moritz.) Its founder, Anna Zahn, believes that her bodywork should be straight-up spoiling, so once you’re thoroughly depuffed, decamp to the Peninsula’s relaxation room and indoor swimming pool for the rest of the afternoon. A perfect first vacation day in London: Sorted! (From $260, ricaristudios.com) —Ashley Baker

Spritz
Nose Dive
Marc-Antoine Barrois, an exacting Parisian couturier who makes just 55 pieces a year, is quietly building a niche fragrance world with outsize success. He and his collaborator, the young star perfumer Quentin Bisch (“my creative twin brother,” says Barrios), approach their seven scent creations with patience, looking for something that expresses their personalities and letting people discover the scents on their own terms. My favorites are Ganymede, a Fragrance Foundation Award winner that’s a soft mineral leather with fresh violet notes—and Tilia, an unusual floral based on the honey-like linden blossom that, Barrois says, smells like “summer happiness.” The latest is Aldebaran, a creamy tuberose with a peppery, smoky aspect. Meanwhile, Barrois recently launched his ready-to-wear collection of just 12 precise white shirts. “I’m not industrial,” he says. “I’m still an artist.” Clearly. (Starting at $170, bergdorfgoodman.com) —Linda Wells