We love love love Birchbox here at Lovelyish, so we are pretty excited to be let into the loop of whats up and coming for the incredible company. Birchbox has announced that they are partnering with Women’s Health to create a special edition Birchbox for the month of April! The Birchbox, themed “Tiny Tweaks, Big Results”, is launching in April in conjunction with the Women’s Health beauty issue (hitting newsstands March 12th).
The special edition box, curated by the editors of Women’s Health, features a bunch of amazing products to upgrade your beauty routine, as well as a one-year subscription to Women’s Health. Check out the box below and find out how to get it!
If you already have a Birchbox subscription, you’re in luck — All current Birchbox subscribers will receive the special edition box in April. If you don’t have a subscription, have no fear… new customers can sign to up to receive their Women’s Health Birchbox here!
I’ve had a subscription to Birchbox for over a year, and I have yet to be this excited about a box. I can’t wait till April!
Would you be excited to receive any of the products shown here? Personally, I’m pretty excited about getting anything Kiehl’s or Malin+Goetz!
guest
WTF is it? A monthly box of samples or something?
sunflower / 311 posts
@WaitingToShrug@xanga - yep!
rose / 786 posts
@WaitingToShrug@xanga - It’s $10/month. There are other monthly subscriptions out there that are better though. I do Beauty Army. It’s 12/month, but you can actually pick your samples.
guest
i was a birchbox subscriber but it was just getting too expensive for me…i’m still subscribing site just not samples.
guest
Hermes was a god of transitions and boundaries. He was quick and cunning, and moved freely between the worlds of the mortal and divine, as emissary and messenger of the gods,[1] intercessor between mortals and the divine, and conductor of souls into the afterlife. He was protector and patron of travelers, herdsmen, thieves,[2] orators and wit, literature and poets, athletics and sports, invention and trade.[3] In some myths he is a trickster, and outwits other gods for his own satisfaction or the sake of humankind. His attributes and symbols include the herma, the rooster and the tortoise, purse or pouch, winged sandals, winged cap, and his main symbol was the herald’s staff, the Greek kerykeion or Latin caduceus which consisted of two snakes wrapped around a winged staff.[4]In the Roman adaptation of the Greek pantheon (see interpretatio romana), Hermes was identified with the Roman god Mercury, who,