SISTER SITES
The Fashion Spot Momtastic
FOLLOW US

Quiz: Beauty Tip or B.S.?

We've all heard some pretty wacky skin, hair and body advice, but can you tell the tips that actually work from made up nonsense? We dare you to try

You hear them all the time. Your well-meaning grandma probably has more than a few. Makeup counter salespeople are notorious for theirs and smiley TV talk show correspondents love nothing more than to drone on (and on) about them. Yes, beauty tips -- solicited or not -- abound. The hitch? Not all of them are bona fide and more than a few can actually work against your beauty rather than enhance it.

Scroll down to start the quiz now.

Call them urban legends, apocryphal tidbits or just plain wishful thinking, off-the-wall recommendations for maximizing your looks can sometimes be stellar "how'd I ever live without knowing this" advice, but other times, they're just bad news.

And, you can't tell whether they're legitimate just by hearing them. Some of the weirdest beauty tips, like, say, the one about using a dryer sheet to control static-y hair, are true. While others that sound logical, like using oily mayonnaise as a hair conditioner, are categorically false.

It's part of human nature to want to buy into tips -- whether they're purported to be timesaving, penny-pinching or simply "too cool" in nature. But, with this little thing called the World Wide Web at our disposal, offering up solid, respected sites (TotalBeauty.com) that are chockfull of sage, expert advice, it's easy to a) discount cockamamie tips and b) find practical, helpful ones.

But, just for fun, let's take a quiz. This will test whether, without the help of any website or reference book (or frantic call to your brother the dermatologist), you can discern the real beauty tips from made up nonsense. It's a little game we like to call "B.T. or B.S.?" (Beauty Tip or well, you get the picture.) Wanna play?

Scroll down to answer the first question…

Question 1 of 10

1. The "Tip": Monistat Chafing Powder can double as an inexpensive makeup primer.

Your Results

The correct answer: Beauty tip
Beauty bloggers and fans of the (not-for-vaginal-use) product agree that the main ingredient of the Monistat item, dimethicone -- a silicone emollient that forms a barrier between your skin and your foundation -- is the same one that's found in all those expensive department store brands. And, at $6.47 for a 1.5 ounce tube, you're getting a huge bargain.

Next
member comments
View old comments
-->
Welcome to TotalBeauty.com!
Ready to unleash your inner beauty junkie? Enter your email and check the boxes below to get free samples, exclusive deals, discounts at Total Beauty Shops, and expert beauty tips delivered straight to your inbox!
Email to a friend



monitoring_string = "e4ea8133a649aad124e80f99f8831005"