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January Jones Has #NoRegrets

Photo: Courtesy of Ku00e9rastase.
Be it an unfortunate run-in with an at-home hair-dye disaster or the misguided notion that plucking one’s eyebrows into obscurity would look super-cool, we all have our beauty regrets — the things we look back on and cringe, wishing we could erase them from our personal history. January Jones — former Mad Men mean girl Betty Draper and current The Last Man On Earth post-apocalyptic survivor — disagrees with that never-again mentality, arguing that "regrets" shouldn’t be in your beauty vocabulary. “I always think it's not a good idea to look back and regret — you can definitely learn from things,” she says. "I think trying something new, even if it doesn't end up working, isn't a bad thing. That's how you learn what works for you. I've certainly done things that I look back [on] and think, That did not work for me." In Paris to promote the announcement of her partnership with and role as the new face of Kérastase’s redesigned Nutritive line, Jones tells us that although there are definitely some red carpet moments she has thought were questionable, she’s not embarrassed by them — especially the ones that have been ripped apart by critics.

I always think it's not a good idea to look back and regret — you can definitely learn from things.

January Jones
"One year at Met Ball, [the theme] was punk and I did a bleached eyebrow and Swarovski crystals, and my hair was in braids," says Jones. "It was a very severe look, and even my own parents were like, ‘What happened?’ But I loved it, and I felt super-badass, so if it evokes a feeling of confidence in you [do it].” Jones cites Kérastase as one of her beauty staples, and her hair routine is actually pretty low-key — most likely a welcome reprieve from seven seasons of super-styled, “done” hair. “I am a huge fan of masks,” she says. “I’ve been using [a Nutritive] mask for over a decade. I leave it on longer than I probably should. I'll do a heavy mask for like 30 minutes, and then rinse it out. But that's about it. I’ve just been letting it go and healing, because after 10 years of movies and Mad Men it's been a lot of strain on my hair.” On an altruistic note, the actress spoke about the #AskHerMore social media campaign and the importance of teaching young girls that beauty doesn't have to follow a specific set of rules. “It's not just about how we look on the outside — you can still be concerned or aware of it, but [girls should] not feel the need to look so much like one person or group of people,” she says. “I do encourage experimentation and finding what works for you, but not to make your personality [be defined by] what you look like on the outside.”

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