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Why You Should Commit to the Carry-On and Tips for Making it Easy

Why You Should Commit to the Carry-On and Tips for Making it Easy

The world is divided into two different kinds of people: overpackers and underpackers. If you fall into the first category, don’t turn away yet! Give me a few minutes to try and convince you that there is a better way to travel.

As you might already suspect, I am an underpacker. My measure of a packing fail: Coming home with even one thing in my suitcase that I did not need, use or wear during my trip. I do fail sometimes, but not often anymore.

Here’s how to pack lighter – all lessons I learned the hard way.

Start with an Attitude Change

It helps that I don’t really care how I look. I don’t mean I would travel in ripped or dirty clothes. But I don’t need to be the glammed up center of attention. In fact, when you’re traveling, the more you can blend in, the better. You’re less likely to be targeted by pickpockets and local scammers.

Spend a little time researching what the locals wear and try to pack like that. This is the lesson I learned when I wore my electric blue winter coat to Romania, a former Soviet block country where there were two colors of winter coat: grey and black.

So if you simply must be a fashion plate, try to pare down the clothes to a capsule wardrobe of items you can mix and match and pieces that will do double duty.

Use a Packing List

These printable packing lists will give you a feel for the things you’ll need. If the list includes something you don’t think you’ll need, don’t pack it. If there is something missing, make a note on the printed sheet so you don’t forget it.

Check the Weather Forecast

I make this recommendation because I live in Chicago. We like to say, “If you don’t like the weather, wait 10 minutes.” Here, the calendar might say May, but the thermometer might say March. Or July.

So check the forecast for your destination. It will tell you whether to pack a raincoat, sunhat, shorts, or sweaters.

Start Packing Early

If you have a spare bed, room, couch or some other spot to hold the things you want to pack, start a week early and put everything on the bed that you think you might want on your trip.

Then walk away.

Come back the next day and look it over. Is there anything missing? Is there anything you think you might not need on the trip? Make adjustments accordingly.

Then walk away.

Come back the next day with the intention of making choices. If you have two pairs of pants on the bed, take away one pair. If you have four shirts, take away two. And so on, until you have cut in half the things on the bed.

Then walk away.

The next day, it’s time to pack. Start with the pieces of clothing you absolutely MUST have with you.

If you run out of suitcase before you run out of clothes to pack, you get to make a choice: Leave something else behind or pay $40 or more to check a bag.

Buy Packing Cubes

I resisted buying this travel essential for years. Now I can’t believe I ever traveled without them.

Packing cubes are flexible pouches with a brilliant zipper system. You pack them with the clothes you want to take, and zip them shut. Then – this is the brilliant part – you zip a second zipper to compress the insides flat. (Think of it like your expandable suitcase, when you open that second zipper, it gives you an extra inch or two of suitcase space. When you zip it shut, everything inside is compressed.)

As a bonus, the clothes you lay inside the packing cube are much more likely to stay wrinkle free. I don’t know why. But it’s true.

Stick with One Basic Color

When I head to a Caribbean resort, that color will be white. But most of the time, it’s black – black pants, a black skirt, a black dress. Then I add color in the tops I will wear with the pants and skirt. Finally, I pack a few scarves and funky costume jewelry to dress everything up or down and add more color.

Wear the Heavy Stuff on the Plane

There are plenty of TikTokers and travel hacker influencers who will tell you to wear layers and layers on the plane to save suitcase space. Or to pack a pillowcase with your stuff and pretend it’s a pillow, not a suitcase, so it doesn’t count as a carryon.

While that might be useful info for travelers on uber-budget airlines that charge for anything that doesn’t fit under your seat, you really don’t have to go that crazy. Just use a little common sense.

If, for example, you’re flying from Florida to Colorado, you know you’ll need your winter coat, hat, gloves, hiking boots and heavy jeans. Wear the jeans and hiking boots on the plane, stuff the hat and gloves in the coat pockets and carry the coat on the plane rather than packing it in a suitcase.

I do this anyway because I’m always chilly on a plane. I’m always surprised when I see someone boarding a flight in shorts and flip flops. I would be blue by the time I landed!

Think Layers, Not Bulk

Thin layers are always the right answer, no matter where you are. Even a Caribbean vacation requires preparing for chilly evenings or overly air-conditioned restaurants. Layers are the answer to staying warm and packing light.

Make the Best Use of Your Under-Seat Bag

Finally, remember that you get not one, but two things to carry onto the plane – a bag that goes into the overhead and a smaller bag that fits under the seat in front of you.

Don’t waste the space in that second bag!

My go-to is a roomy backpack because I travel with a lot of electronics – laptop, Kindle, phone, ear buds and all of the cords and accessories they require. But those only take up two zippered compartments. That leaves two more compartments for other things – makeup bag, an extra pair of shoes, etc.

The other thing that works for me is a big striped bag that is super flexible. I can cram a lot into it and still stuff it under the seat. The downside of that is it is heavy to carry, unlike my backpack which easily distributes the weight across my shoulders.

Practice, Practice, Practice

I know. This isn’t easy. Especially if you’ve always been an overpacker. But practice will make perfect. Try it on your next quick weekend trip. That will give you a chance to see how it feels to only pack what you’ll need for 2-3 days, how much you like being able to lift that light carry-on bag and how happy you are not worrying about whether your suitcase will show up at the other end of your flight.

Just remember to pack one more thing: a credit card. That way, if you find you truly can’t live without something for a few days, you can head to the store to buy it.

Let’s Have a Conversation:

Are you an overpacker or an underpacker? What’s your favorite packing hack? Share with us in the comment section below.

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A Common Bone-Health Mistake Women Over 60 Are Making

A Common Bone-Health Mistake Women Over 60 Are Making

Most women over 60 know the standard advice for protecting their bones. Take calcium. Take vitamin D. Walk a little. Be careful.

The advice is well-intentioned. It is also incomplete in ways that matter – and for many women, one piece of that incompleteness is quietly working against them.

Bone health depends on more than simply “getting enough calcium.” Nutrition matters, hormones matter, protein matters, vitamin D matters, medications matter for some women, and so does the broader mineral environment that supports bone remodeling.

But there is another piece of the picture that often gets less attention. And for many women over 60, it may be one of the most overlooked.

Bone is not a storage container waiting to be filled with the right nutrients. Bone is living tissue. And living tissue responds to demand.

When muscles pull against bone during resistance training, stair climbing, carrying, lifting, balance work, or appropriately chosen impact movement, the body receives a message: keep this structure strong. Without that message, the body does what bodies do with anything it is not asked to use.

It lets it go.

What Happens After Menopause

After menopause, bone loss accelerates as estrogen declines. The steepest losses often happen in the years around the menopause transition, especially at the spine, and then continue more gradually with age.

By the time a woman reaches her 60s, she may already have lost a meaningful amount of bone. Some women are told they have osteopenia. Some are told they have osteoporosis. Some are told everything looks “fine” but still notice they feel less strong, less steady, or less confident in their bodies.

This is often the point where the message becomes: be careful. Avoid lifting too much. Avoid impact. Walk, but do not push it.

The advice is usually well-intentioned. And for women with significant osteoporosis, spinal bone loss, a history of fractures, poor balance, or other medical risks, caution absolutely matters.

But caution is not the same thing as avoidance. Bones do not become stronger by being protected from all challenges. They become stronger when they are asked, progressively and safely, to do work.

The Exercise That Actually Asks Bone to Adapt

Walking is good for the heart, for mood, for circulation, for mobility. It is far better than doing nothing.

But as a signal to build bone density, walking is usually one of the weaker stimuli. Bone adapts when the load is novel enough, strong enough, and repeated consistently enough to matter. Walking, for many women who have been walking for years, may not provide enough new or progressive load to significantly change bone density on its own.

That is where progressive resistance training becomes important. This does not mean every woman over 60 needs to become a powerlifter. It means that bone responds to meaningful load.

A trial called LIFTMOR studied postmenopausal women with low bone mass who performed supervised high-intensity resistance and impact training. The women trained under guidance and progressed carefully. The supervised high-intensity program produced meaningful improvements in bone density and physical function – where the low-intensity home-based comparison program did not produce the same gains. The trial looked at bone density and physical function, not whether the program reduced fractures directly.

That finding does not prove every woman should do the same program. But it does challenge a common assumption: that older women should only move gently. For bone, gentle may not be enough.

Why “Be Careful” Can Become a Trap

Many women stop challenging their bodies gradually. Sometimes it is fear of injury. Sometimes it is a doctor, spouse, or friend saying, “Don’t overdo it.” Sometimes it is the cultural message that women over 60 are supposed to slow down, soften, and accept a smaller physical life.

The result is often a quiet withdrawal from the very demands that help preserve strength.

Less lifting.

Less climbing.

Less balance challenge.

Less getting down to the floor and back up again.

Less confidence.

And bones notice. So do muscles. So does balance. So does the nervous system’s ability to react when you trip over a curb or miss a step.

Bone health is not only about bone density on a scan. It is also about the body’s ability to prevent the fall, absorb the stumble, recover from the unexpected, and keep moving through ordinary life.

(For readers who want the deeper science including the mineral cofactor side of the argument and the full evidence base, I wrote about it in detail at Proactive Health Labs.)

The Safety Piece Matters

This is not a one-size-fits-all argument. Women with diagnosed osteoporosis, previous fractures, balance problems, severe kyphosis, chronic steroid use, or other medical concerns should not simply start a high-load program without being assessed.

For women with spinal osteoporosis or prior vertebral fracture, the emphasis should be on spine-sparing technique, individualized assessment, and supervised progression rather than generic rules or fear-based avoidance.

The answer is not recklessness. The answer is skilled progression – work that meets your body where it actually is and builds from there, with guidance when needed.

Food, Hormones, and Medication Still Matter

Exercise is not a substitute for everything else. Adequate protein matters. Calcium and vitamin D matter. Sleep, inflammation, alcohol intake, smoking, and medical history all play a role.

Hormone therapy and bone-targeted medications are important conversations for some women. For women at higher fracture risk, medication may be one of the most effective tools available. That decision belongs with each woman and her clinician.

The point is that nutrition and medication do not replace mechanical demand. Bones need materials. Bones need hormonal and metabolic support. And bones need a reason to stay strong.

The Deeper Goal

Bone health is not really about bones. It is about what bones let you do.

Get off the floor without help. Carry groceries up the stairs. Catch yourself when you stumble. Travel without fearing that one fall will end the trip. Trust your body to hold you.

I wrote recently about emotional capacity — the day-to-day bandwidth our nervous systems give us, the difference between window days and keyhole days. There is a physical version of that same idea. Bone health sits close to the center of it.

Capacity rarely improves through protection alone.

The women I have watched do best in their 60s and 70s are not the ones who became the most cautious. They are the ones who kept asking their bodies to work – sensibly, consistently, and with guidance when needed.

They lifted things. They climbed things. They practiced balance. They built strength.

They did not accept the script that said fragile was inevitable.

The mistake is not taking calcium. The mistake is thinking calcium is the whole job.

The work is the work.

Let’s Have a Conversation:

How do you work to protect your bone and muscle? Have you been told that minerals, vitamins, and walking are all you need to stay strong? What physically demanding activities do you pursue on a daily basis?

Skin Care

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How to Make Your Own Essential Oil Blend for Mature Skin (Recipe)

A Basic Essential Oil Blend for Everyday Mature Skin Care

With all the wonderful natural facial serums on the market today, it can be a little overwhelming choosing the correct formula with safe, non-toxic ingredients, all at a reasonable price. The good news is that it’s easy and fun to make a quality product on your own using the miracle of nature – essential oils. 

When I started working with skincare formulas in 2003, one of the first products I was excited about making was an essential oil-based facial serum. My skin needs were changing, and a moisturizing oil made perfect sense for dry, maturing skin.

I decided to work with four wonderful healthy aging essential oils I had discovered: Lavender, Frankincense, Rose Geranium, and Carrot Seed.

The natural and highly effective nature of essential oils makes them perfect for skincare. When blended for their various properties and used with a carrier oil that matches your skin type, you can create a serum tailor-made for your skin.

What Are Essential Oils?

Essential oils are the essence of plants. Hidden away in many parts of the plant, like the flowers, seeds, and roots, they are very potent chemical compounds. They can give the plant its scent, protect it from harsh conditions, and help with pollination.

The benefits of essential oils on humans are diverse and amazing. Lavender flower oil, for example, contains compounds that help soothe skin irritation and redness, while the scent reduces feelings of anxiety and stress.

The beautiful Rose essential oil is hydrating to the skin and sometimes used to treat scarring, while the scent is known to help lift depression. 

There are many essential oils to choose from for specific skincare needs. I have used a myriad of different combinations but keep coming back to the tried and true blend from my very first serum.

The four essential oils used are the workhorses of skincare for mature skin, as well as being wonderfully uplifting for mind, body, and spirit. 

The Base Oil Blend Formula

Here’s what you’ll need:

Bottle

1 oz. amber dropper bottle. You can find those in pharmacies or online.

Base (Carrier) Oil

As a base, you can use one of the oils below or a combination of several that meet your skin’s needs:

  • Jojoba oil is my base oil of choice. It’s incredible for most skin types: it’s extremely gentle and non-irritating for sensitive skin, moisturizing for dry skin, balancing for oily skin, ideal for combination skin, and offers a barrier of protection from environmental stressors. It also helps skin glow as it delivers deep hydration.
  • Rosehip oil smooths the skin’s texture and calms redness and irritation.
  • Argan oil contains high levels of vitamin E and absorbs thoroughly into the skin leaving little oily residue.
  • Avocado oil is effective at treating age spots and sun damage, as well as helping to soothe inflammatory conditions such as blemishes and eczema.
  • Olive oil is a heavier oil and the perfect choice if your skin needs a mega-dose of hydration. Just be aware that olive oil takes longer to absorb and leaves the skin with an oily feeling. This may be desirable for extremely dry, red, itchy skin.

Essential Oils

  • Lavender essential oil is very versatile and healing. It helps reduce inflammation, kill bacteria, and clear pores. Its scent is also calming and soothing.
  • Frankincense essential oil helps to tone and strengthen mature skin in addition to fighting bacteria and balancing oil production.
  • Rose Geranium essential oil helps tighten the skin by reducing the appearance of fine lines, helps reduce inflammation and fight redness, and offers anti-bacterial benefits to help fight the occasional breakout. The scent is also known to be soothing and balancing.
  • Carrot seed oil is a fantastic essential oil for combination skin. It helps even the skin tone while reducing inflammation and increasing water retention.

The Recipe

Let’s start with a simple recipe:

  • 1 oz. Jojoba oil (or carrier oil of your choice)
  • 10 drops Lavender
  • 10 drops Frankincense
  • 10 drops Rose Geranium
  • 10 drops Carrot seed oil 

Place the essential oil drops in the amber dropper bottle then fill with Jojoba/carrier oil. It’s that simple!

Applying Your Homemade Serum

Use this serum morning and evening as part of your regular skincare routine. Serums work best when applied after cleansing your face. You can cleanse with Coconut Oil or a mixture of oils for enhanced hydration (we will cover this in the next article) or use your regular facial cleanser.

Essential oils will not interfere in any way with your normal skincare products.

Keep in mind that the serum is concentrated. Use only a pea-sized amount, work it into your fingertips, and apply evenly over the face without tugging or pulling.

If your skin feels tacky, reduce the amount on the next application. Your skin should feel soft, not oily. Follow with your regular moisturizer if you like. 

Making your own facial serum is fun and rewarding! I look forward to hearing your thoughts and ideas on essential oils and making personalized serums and skincare.

What facial serum do you use? Have you made one yourself? What is your favorite essential oil for skin care? Please share your thoughts with our community!

A Common Bone-Health Mistake Women Over 60 Are Making

A Common Bone-Health Mistake Women Over 60 Are Making

Most women over 60 know the standard advice for protecting their bones. Take calcium. Take vitamin D. Walk a little. Be careful.

The advice is well-intentioned. It is also incomplete in ways that matter – and for many women, one piece of that incompleteness is quietly working against them.

Bone health depends on more than simply “getting enough calcium.” Nutrition matters, hormones matter, protein matters, vitamin D matters, medications matter for some women, and so does the broader mineral environment that supports bone remodeling.

But there is another piece of the picture that often gets less attention. And for many women over 60, it may be one of the most overlooked.

Bone is not a storage container waiting to be filled with the right nutrients. Bone is living tissue. And living tissue responds to demand.

When muscles pull against bone during resistance training, stair climbing, carrying, lifting, balance work, or appropriately chosen impact movement, the body receives a message: keep this structure strong. Without that message, the body does what bodies do with anything it is not asked to use.

It lets it go.

What Happens After Menopause

After menopause, bone loss accelerates as estrogen declines. The steepest losses often happen in the years around the menopause transition, especially at the spine, and then continue more gradually with age.

By the time a woman reaches her 60s, she may already have lost a meaningful amount of bone. Some women are told they have osteopenia. Some are told they have osteoporosis. Some are told everything looks “fine” but still notice they feel less strong, less steady, or less confident in their bodies.

This is often the point where the message becomes: be careful. Avoid lifting too much. Avoid impact. Walk, but do not push it.

The advice is usually well-intentioned. And for women with significant osteoporosis, spinal bone loss, a history of fractures, poor balance, or other medical risks, caution absolutely matters.

But caution is not the same thing as avoidance. Bones do not become stronger by being protected from all challenges. They become stronger when they are asked, progressively and safely, to do work.

The Exercise That Actually Asks Bone to Adapt

Walking is good for the heart, for mood, for circulation, for mobility. It is far better than doing nothing.

But as a signal to build bone density, walking is usually one of the weaker stimuli. Bone adapts when the load is novel enough, strong enough, and repeated consistently enough to matter. Walking, for many women who have been walking for years, may not provide enough new or progressive load to significantly change bone density on its own.

That is where progressive resistance training becomes important. This does not mean every woman over 60 needs to become a powerlifter. It means that bone responds to meaningful load.

A trial called LIFTMOR studied postmenopausal women with low bone mass who performed supervised high-intensity resistance and impact training. The women trained under guidance and progressed carefully. The supervised high-intensity program produced meaningful improvements in bone density and physical function – where the low-intensity home-based comparison program did not produce the same gains. The trial looked at bone density and physical function, not whether the program reduced fractures directly.

That finding does not prove every woman should do the same program. But it does challenge a common assumption: that older women should only move gently. For bone, gentle may not be enough.

Why “Be Careful” Can Become a Trap

Many women stop challenging their bodies gradually. Sometimes it is fear of injury. Sometimes it is a doctor, spouse, or friend saying, “Don’t overdo it.” Sometimes it is the cultural message that women over 60 are supposed to slow down, soften, and accept a smaller physical life.

The result is often a quiet withdrawal from the very demands that help preserve strength.

Less lifting.

Less climbing.

Less balance challenge.

Less getting down to the floor and back up again.

Less confidence.

And bones notice. So do muscles. So does balance. So does the nervous system’s ability to react when you trip over a curb or miss a step.

Bone health is not only about bone density on a scan. It is also about the body’s ability to prevent the fall, absorb the stumble, recover from the unexpected, and keep moving through ordinary life.

(For readers who want the deeper science including the mineral cofactor side of the argument and the full evidence base, I wrote about it in detail at Proactive Health Labs.)

The Safety Piece Matters

This is not a one-size-fits-all argument. Women with diagnosed osteoporosis, previous fractures, balance problems, severe kyphosis, chronic steroid use, or other medical concerns should not simply start a high-load program without being assessed.

For women with spinal osteoporosis or prior vertebral fracture, the emphasis should be on spine-sparing technique, individualized assessment, and supervised progression rather than generic rules or fear-based avoidance.

The answer is not recklessness. The answer is skilled progression – work that meets your body where it actually is and builds from there, with guidance when needed.

Food, Hormones, and Medication Still Matter

Exercise is not a substitute for everything else. Adequate protein matters. Calcium and vitamin D matter. Sleep, inflammation, alcohol intake, smoking, and medical history all play a role.

Hormone therapy and bone-targeted medications are important conversations for some women. For women at higher fracture risk, medication may be one of the most effective tools available. That decision belongs with each woman and her clinician.

The point is that nutrition and medication do not replace mechanical demand. Bones need materials. Bones need hormonal and metabolic support. And bones need a reason to stay strong.

The Deeper Goal

Bone health is not really about bones. It is about what bones let you do.

Get off the floor without help. Carry groceries up the stairs. Catch yourself when you stumble. Travel without fearing that one fall will end the trip. Trust your body to hold you.

I wrote recently about emotional capacity — the day-to-day bandwidth our nervous systems give us, the difference between window days and keyhole days. There is a physical version of that same idea. Bone health sits close to the center of it.

Capacity rarely improves through protection alone.

The women I have watched do best in their 60s and 70s are not the ones who became the most cautious. They are the ones who kept asking their bodies to work – sensibly, consistently, and with guidance when needed.

They lifted things. They climbed things. They practiced balance. They built strength.

They did not accept the script that said fragile was inevitable.

The mistake is not taking calcium. The mistake is thinking calcium is the whole job.

The work is the work.

Let’s Have a Conversation:

How do you work to protect your bone and muscle? Have you been told that minerals, vitamins, and walking are all you need to stay strong? What physically demanding activities do you pursue on a daily basis?

Read More

Lindsay Hubbard’s Black and White Printed Pants

Lindsay Hubbard’s Black and White Printed Pants / In The City Fashion Season 1 Episode 1 Fashion

I can’t contain my excitement for tonight’s In The City premiere on Bravo and for Lindsay Hubbard’s style to keep on coming! Her printed pants paired with a black leather jacket on tonight’s season premiere are bold yet cool. They’re the type of pants that always do the trick with a basic top, whether you’re a mother like Lindsay or not.

Best in Blonde,

Amanda


Lindsay Hubbard's Black and White Printed Pants

Click Here for Additional Stock in Her Pants


Style Stealers

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Amanda Batula’s Navy Blue Lounge Cardigan and Pants

Amanda Batula’s Navy Blue Lounge Cardigan and Pants / Summer House Fashion Season 10 Finale

We love a lounge set and on tonight’s Summer House finale Amanda Batula wears a very cute navy blue lounge cardigan and pants. I’ve been eyeing these two pieces for the past year and they’ve been out of stock for quite some time. But now they’re back. And though at one point in time we would have called Amanda a “girl’s girl” for wearing this label, that title will just have to go to us for shopping this beloved bedbug’s pajama brand.

Best in Blonde,

Amanda


Amanda Batula's Navy Cardigan and Pants
Amanda Batula's Navy Cardigan and Pants

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Originally posted at: Amanda Batula’s Navy Blue Lounge Cardigan and Pants

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Amanda Batula’s Brown Suede Pocket Front Jacket

Amanda Batula’s Brown Suede Pocket Front Jacket / Summer House Fashion Season 10 Finale

I’d be lying if I said that I wasn’t in tears quite a few times during tonight’s Summer House Season 10 finale. The last scene between Amanda Batula and Kyle Cooke being one of those times. Despite the faults they both have there’s a definite sadness to see what is ultimately the end of their marriage and likely Summer House as we currently know and love it. Kind of like some of the stock of Amanda’s brown suede pocket front leather jacket. But don’t worry, like the show, it looks like there’s still more (stock) to come…

The Realest Housewife,

Big Blonde Hair


Amanda Batula's Brown Leather Bomber Jacket
Amanda Batula's Brown Suede Pocket Front Jacket talking to Kyle

Style Stealers

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Originally posted at: Amanda Batula’s Brown Suede Pocket Front Jacket

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Summer House Season 10 Makeup and Beauty Finds

Summer House Season 10 Makeup and Beauty Finds

The Summer House Season 10 finale is tonight and though it kind of feels like the end of an era, we of course can’t wait to see how things pan out…although we already unfortunately know more than we’d like! But as a positive, we had some amazing finds this season, like their beauty and makeup products we spotted. These ladies are doing their own glam at the house which means, from concealer to lip color to sunscreen, they’re only bringing what they love the most for the weekend. And as someone who owns a few of these products I can attest, they know what they’re doing. Because after all, there are some things at the house that should be cover(ed) up.

The Realest Housewife,

Big Blonde Hair


Summer House Season 10 Beauty Finds





Originally posted at: Summer House Season 10 Makeup and Beauty Finds

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Amanda Batula’s Black and Polka Dot Maxi Dress at the In The City Premiere Party

Amanda Batula’s Black and Polka Dot Maxi Dress at the In The City Premiere Party / In The City Fashion May 2026

Tonight is the beginning of the end of Summer House Season 10 finale and the premiere of the In The City. Which means a) it’s a BIG night for us Bravo fans and B) last night was the In The City premiere party. And based on the ITC previews, this cast is going to bring it in the wearable yet city chic style department.

While most of the buzz was about Amanda Batula and Kyle Cooke posing on the red carpet (which Kyle responded to via stories in their defense), we couldn’t help but focus on her $70 perfect-for-the-season polka dot dress. Which is ready for you to wear in the city or wherever else you want to look cute this summer.

The Realest Housewife,

Big Blonde Hair


Amanda Batula's Black and Polka Dot Maxi Dress

Photo : @bravobreakingnews


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