*chuckles *  I totally understand what you are saying, Alina. 

  And I am totally with you on the Elsie Dinsmore books, Cassandra!  I was so sick of hearing how Beautiful and Good she was. 

  I do not empathize with perfect characters well. 

 They are unrelatable.  *gets off the soap box before that topic dominates my post and I derail things *
I kind of take a different approach to my characters, though, then what seems to be the general consensus here.  Honestly, there are lots of beautiful women in the world.  There are also lots of very masculine, attractive men.  Now don’t squirm everyone, hear me out.  
There is nothing wrong with being beautiful.  God created beauty.  In fact, I have lots of beliefs about women being beautiful, but they are a little off topic. 
 
  I don't think there is a need to say that women are not pretty, or to say they are plain.  I come out and say that my female characters are pretty, when they are so.  I also don’t have an issue with saying some of my male characters are appealing to the human eye.  However, their physical traits are not my focus.  
I know some girls who may not be the prettiest girl on the block, but they still 
look beautiful.  Why?  Because they 
believe they are beautiful.  I can spot a girl from a mile away who believes she is pretty.  There is this light that shines out of her eyes.  Her skin glows.  Her smile says she believes she is a beautiful creation God has made.  This is different than girls who think they are God's gift to men, by the way.   

  That sends off a completely other message I find repulsing. 

  These girls believe they are beautiful.  Also, a girl who has found peace with herself, and believes she is beautiful, has also found the peace of knowing she is worth something.  She is sacred.  I have never found a girl who believes she is beautiful in the way I am talking about, who wouldn’t still believe she was beautiful if she was stripped of every physical attribute the world finds appealing.  
In portraying the physical attributes of characters, I play a lot off of how other people react to my characters.  Instead of telling you Airianna is a pretty 12 year old, I use circumstances and other people’s reactions to portray that.  I find this is more effective, and my reader doesn’t feel like I’m forcing her beauty upon them.  
I once read a story (The Lost Clue) where the girl was not said to have any really distinguishing features.  It was said early on in the story, and not focused on.  Instead, the story focuses on her character.  I want to tell you, everyone I know, when they get to the end of that book, think that woman is beautiful.  
I am not ashamed that my women are beautiful.  God is not ashamed that he created women to 
be beautiful.  After all, who created the beauty that is around us?  Who had his temple inlaid with gold, with jewels, with the finest woods?  It was God.  He loves beauty.  He loves for us to appreciate the things He has made.  
I think the beauty is not the problem.  The problem is when we have an unhealthy focus on that beauty.  For example, how many of us (raises her hand) have read books where you just keep getting told over and over again how beautiful the girl is.  *gags *  I literally get sick of hearing her charms, her appeal, her beauty, the way her voice is as smooth as caramel.  When the focus shifts to her physical attributes, as opposed to her character, that's when I think things become unhealthy.  And unfortunately, there are lots of books with this in them. 

I imagine this is what you mean, Alina, by going out of your way.  I have seen it, and it is rather repulsive to me.  I do not think it is bad to describe her voice, to mention the color of her hair multiple times.  I think the problem is the focus.  Because the worth of the woman is being portrayed as her beauty, not that that beauty is the byproduct of her soul.