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Solavie in the news!

December 2nd, 2008

Solavie Testimonials

July 14th, 2008

What is your Enviro-type?

May 26th, 2008

Over the course of the last eight months, I had the opportunity of traveling to 11 countries and 40 different cities around the world. I traveled light, limiting my possessions to what I could fit into a backpack, and slept in accommodations ranging from five-star hotels to tents and open beaches. When spacing and time became an issue which was often and I was forced to choose between loads of products and canned tuna (my breakfast/lunch/dinner of vagabond choice), I, alas, was forced to go with the tuna, and survive off of a single bottle of two-in-one shampoo and conditioner and a similar two-in-one face and body wash. Both products were specific to my own hair and skin type, and had worked satisfactorily up until then. However, as time passed and borders were crossed, I began to recognize a change. Depending on the climate I was in, which varied from tropical to tundra-like, my hair and skin would take on unusual attributes. My skin became dry and ashy in cold and urban environments while my hair would curl in tropical settings. My naive preconceived notion and reliance on type-customized products were tested over and over again, finally bringing me to a somewhat obvious conclusion: if you plan to treat and protect your body based solely on its internal make-up and ignore the entire world outside of it, you may as well go live in a bubble. It is your outside environment that most directly affects your skin and hair, so why not treat and protect them accordingly. Back in the States, I was very glad when I ran into a company that did just that.

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Solavie, a uniquely designed line of beauty products, provides care for hair and skin based on specific environmental conditions and the problems they may cause. Pamela Rae, hair/skin care expert and owner of Solavie Spa Retreat in Sun Valley, Idaho, developed this revolutionary product line in 2003. The line has products tailored to six different enviro-types: Mountains, Urban, Tropics, Shore, Plains, and Desert. This approach has been proven more efficient than products formulated to treat particular hair/skin types. The concept for this system was inspired by that of plant life. Nature protects plant life from different environments with phyto-nutrients, which are adapted for survival in their specific ecosystem. In the same way, potent anti-oxidants in Solavie treat cellular imbalances and premature aging. Since Solavie’s simple system is based on enviro-type it does not require skin or hair analysis. It works equally well for men and women, as well as on any skin or hair type, and is particularly convenient for frequent travelers and gym-goers. Using fewer, better-integrated products, Solavie’s One With Nature system makes taking care of your hair/skin a simple two-step process : wash and nourish. Each enviro-type line includes a face wash and nourish, body nourish, a hair/body wash and a hair nourish/style. Living in Manhattan during the winter, I was eager to try their Urban body nourish. I spend a lot of time outdoors and the cold dry wind does a number on my skin, leaving it dry and cracking. I found the urban body nourish to be light with a clean organic subtle scent. It did not leave me feeling greasy; moments after application it disappears into the skin. After several uses, I began to notice a positive change in my skins ability to withstand the cold harsh touch of a New York Winter. The unique yin/yang design of the bottle allows any two products to be joined together in one compact unit for easy packing no more bulging toiletry bags filled with leaky containers. Also, the rigid side-wall structure prevents bursting during travel. If simplicity is your thing, then Solavie is your product, wherever you are and wherever you may travel. Some of Solavie’s admirers include Jude Law, Cameron Diaz, Jennifer Lopez, Naomi Watts, and Hugh Jackman. Now, that is a pretty impressive list! Source: Beauty News NYC by Peter Notre

Idealistic Principles Combine in a Revolutionary Skin/Hair System That Explores Its Mission with Ergonomic Style

May 26th, 2008

Solavie asks, "What’s your enviro-type?" and recommends one of six lines of products to provide balance inSolavie Skin/Hair Care your hair and skin care. Spa owner Pamela Rae noticed that clients coming to her Solavie Spa Retreat in Sun Valley, Idaho, from all over the world consistently had the same experience their skin creams were inadequate at Sun Valley’s high altitude, and shampoos were too drying in the mountains. After many years, it became obvious: None of the creams or shampoos were ideal. The reluctant Rae, spurred on by a nagging dream that just would not go away, felt compelled to develop skin and hair formulas that would actually work in the Sun Valley environment. Over three years in the making, the Solavie skin/hair care system now debuts with a high-impact bottle containing 30 different products five products in each of six color-coded Enviro-Type lines. ‘What’s your enviro-type?’ Rae developed a matrix of Solavie soaps, shampoos, lotions, and creams that incorporate nature’s evolved phyto-nutrients from within six major ecosystems—Mountains, Urban, Tropics, Shore, Plains, and Desert. Each of the six enviro-type lines includes a face wash, face nourish, body nourish, hair/body wash, and hair nourish/style. Enviro-type products treat the body’s reaction to a specific environment, taking its cues and ingredients from plants. When you’re out of balance, you’re going to have certain types of reactions, Rae explains. Plants are adapted to their environments by the nutrients they produce to help them balance their living cells with the forces of the environment. Rae thought that humans could also achieve homeostasis, or balance, with their environments by using the same nutrients that plants use to achieve homeostasis. Rae wanted Solavie to be environmentally friendly top to bottom, and the products have only natural ingredients in the formulas. Using natural ingredients from plants in an environment had an added bonus in the fragrance department: It was very easy to come up with a formula that smelled like the environment, Rae says. (Well, except for the Urban environment product line.) ‘Mutually engageable twin bottles, one inverted’ Every Solavie bottle is the same shape, and any two bottles (one inverted) snap together in a compact, sturdy, rectangular package. Rae had an equally strong vision for the Solavie bottle as she had for the products inside. After several failed prototypes by U.S. companies, Rae found what she was looking for with bottle manufacturer Sung-do Tech out of South Korea, which now produces the uniquely shaped bottles. The patent says mutually engageable twin bottles, one inverted to describe how the bottles snap together at the back. The products inside are unisex, but the bottles hook up in pairs. The conjoined bottles have a yin/yang unity, and do not fight with each other, instead forming a compact rectangular shape. The heat-injection molded polyethylene and polypropylene bottles have flat, hinged closures that open at the bottom for ease of dispensing. The bottles are also translucent to display that there are definite differences in the products, and two spring water bubbles accent the front. All these elements target world travelers, adventure-seekers, and outdoor enthusiasts both in functionality and shelf impact. The small, sturdy, and robust package pair will take the abuse of being stuffed in a backpack or jammed into an overhead compartment. Rae also wanted the bottle to be ergonomic and technical feeling at the same time. The shape of each bottle (2" x 4" x 1") is similar to a cell phone, and fits nicely in anyone’s hand. If the geometric elements on the front of the bottle look familiar, rest assured that Rae has proof that her bottle design preceded the design of the iPod. A complex and compact philosophy Rae wanted to accomplish so many different objectives in the product presentation, she contacted HartungKemp, a Minneapolis-based design agency, to bring it all together. HartungKemp specializes in unearthing strategic insights and expressing them in a brand’s identity, product development, internal and external communication tools, and advertising. Pamela’s thinking about the product was very complex., with so many objectives, remembers Stefan Hartung, creative director of HartungKemp. Everything was there, and Pamela said: ‘Now put it all together.’ HartungKemp set to work forging a comprehensive branding, advertising, and product launch strategy. All of these elements begin and end with the bottle. Each bottle has two eight-color translucent labels—front and back. The back of the package needed a label for listing all the many ingredients and supplying a visual explanation of Enviro-Type, with a globe map identifying the environments. The color-coded label system helps guide the purchase process and makes the selection of the appropriate enviro-type easy for the consumer. The vibrant color images on the front began life as black and white nature photos taken at the bottom of a volcanic mountain in Sun Valley. The images were digitally remastered and colorized with deep and luminous hues. Rae is still impressed with the final result given the range of her ambitions for the Solavie line. Though the Solavie website goes into long explanations, including a five part Philosophy section, the bottle itself conveys the Solavie philosophy succinctly with engaging shapes, images, and ergonomics. The depth of our message had to be compact, Rae says. Source: Package Design Magazine

Welcome to Solavie community!

May 23rd, 2008

Welcome!