Friday 17 October 2014
Urban Decay Black Eyeliner Collection
To say I like a bit of black eyeliner would be a mild understatement ... alongside my red lipsticks, I think a decent black liner would be my desert island item. Well, alongside a full set of Zelens skincare, and a few bottles of Guerlain that is, but I digress ...
Anyhoo, I was superhappy when Urban Decay revamped their black eyeliner collection a few months ago, Here we have 24/7 Velvet Liner in Black Velvet, a blacker version of their normal 24/7 eyeliner formula, Ink for Eyes, a waterproof liquid liner, All Nighter, a deeply pigmented twist-up pencil, and a pot gel-liner.
Black Velvet is a sooty black liner, which is very soft and easily blendable. Ink for Eyes isn't the blackest liquid liner that I have (that would be Illamasqua Abyss, which is unmissable), but it has a lovely thin felt-tip style applicator that is very easy to control. All Nighter is probably my favourite of the four, being soft and incredibly black, and the nib is perfect for tightlining the upper lash line. This simply does not budge once applied. It's not quite as blendable as Black Velvet, but it's great for getting a strong graphic liner look, and it's excellent on the waterline. It turns out that I'm not a massive fan of pot liners (they tend to dry out too quickly for my tastes, but this could be more of a reflection of the fact that I have about 30 eyeliners in regular rotation, lets face it) generally, but this is a good, highly pigmented and deeply black one.
All in all a fab and really very useful little collection of black liners. There's one for all tastes, and they all deliver. I'll be backing up my All Nighter, I can tell you that ...
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Thursday 16 October 2014
In the Pink – with Bleach London DIY Dip Dye and Schwarzkopf Live Color XXL
By Tindara
Readers, I’m having a mid life
crisis. As I write this there is a glinting sheaf of pink visible at
the base of my Sunday morning top knot. Yes, in an effort to stave
off middle-aged boredom I have dip-dyed my hair pink, and it took
some doing. I have very dark hair, with little white or grey. Very
lucky at 43, you might say, but since my somewhat failed teen
experiments with bleaching, dyeing and straightening, I had resigned
myself to my natural black-brown frizzy curls. Until earlier this
year, when I started getting Keratin treatments on my hair.
Now I don’t love poker straight hair
at all, like most people these days I favour a natural looking wave
and after a week or two this is exactly how my keratin treated hair
behaves. There is less body, definitely, but it has a nice shiny easy
wave to it. And even better, I don’t really have to do anything to
it except comb it and put a tiny blob of serum on it every few days.
So far, so easy. But then I kept seeing people with great colours on
their hair, marshmallow and pomegranate and mermaid blues and minty
greens. A close friend dip-dyed her blond bob deep pink and purples
and I was introduced to Bleach London by a friend on a forum. So pretty soon, I was dreaming of rainbow tresses, mermaid
stripes, blue tips, pink and apricot waves, I wanted pastel colour,
dammit.
I was due to have a keratin treatment
in a few weeks and had done some research and knew I had to bleach
and dye before the treatment. When I bleached my hair, I realised
that pastel was going to be a bit of a task. I used Bleach London’s
DIY dip dye kit. It was really easy to use, I recommend it, the
blending lotion that you apply before the bleach really helped get a
gradual effect from lighter to dark. Since my hair is so dark
though, my first attempt made the ends a lovely auburn. This look
great on it’s own, but it didn’t satisfy my need for bright
colour. And when I put Schwarzkopf Live Color XXL Purple Punk over
the auburn, it turned the ends a bright but deep cherry red, which
was lovely but not exactly what I wanted.
After a couple of weeks letting my hair
rest, I used another Bleach London kit to bleach the ends again. They
turned out slightly brassy and wouldn’t really take a pastel dye; I
tried Bleach London’s Rose and it just went from candyfloss pink to
light orange within a few hours. So I chose Schwarzkopf Live Color
XXL Shocking Pink to go over the top. Hey presto, proper bright pink
ends. Probably, too soon, I had my usual keratin treatment with
Alterity Studio in Covent Garden, and now I have straight hair with
pink ends. My dip-dyed ends are now soft and shiny, and considering
how worried I was that my hair might break after all the bleaching
and dyeing, I think it looks pretty good. Not the neatest dip dye in
the world but good.
I will continue to use a deeper colour
while this keratin treatment wears off as bleaching can remove the
effect of the keratin, I understand. I was also told by the lovely
Carmen at Alterity Studio that it’s not recommended to dye your
hair within two weeks of a keratin treatment either, so be warned, if
you’re going to get some colour in your life. I may head to Bleach
London and get something more pastel done before my next keratin
treatment. If you want to see the results follow @Tindara
on Twitter or @tindaras
on Instagram.
Bleach London DIY Dip Dye
is £7 and Schwarzkopf Live Color XXL is £4.
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Wednesday 15 October 2014
Autumnal Tones from Barry M A/W Collection
I've given in. I will no longer shiver because of my bare ankles every morning, I will not shun my cosy coats and thick socks because I refuse to believe it is no longer summer. You know, October.
Now that I've accepted it, I am ready to embrace all things Autumnal and Wintery - fireworks! Matching gloves and scarves! Bobble hats!
Every time I pop to a well-know chemist, I take a trip to the Barry M section just to see what's new! A few weeks ago I picked up some colours from their new Autumn/Winter collection which has a distintly spicy feel. My favourites (and the ones that ended up in my basket) were Cardamom and Paprika. Paprika is a really unusual reddy-brown. Not unlike the colour of a brick. Cardamom is a beautiful warm green, the likes of which I've not seen before. They are good at their colours those Barry M chaps.
Now, I have just moved house (STRESS) and it's the busiest season at work (DOUBLE STRESS) so I haven't really had much time for my nails in the last few weeks. But last night I treated myself to two coats of Paprika...it goes in really thick and glossy (as do all Barry M Gelly Hi-Shine polishes) and then because I am incapable of having one-colour nails I went for a quick diagonal effect on one feature nail using the striping tape and the Cardomom colour. Finally I added a line of simple gold studs by IZ Beauty of London, because I can't resist!
Are you a fan of Barry M? What's your favourite colour from their collection?
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Tuesday 14 October 2014
Precious Oils: The Body Shop Camomile Silky Cleansing Oil
By Laurin
Two weekends ago, I moved
house. In the process of flinging my entire life into twenty
cardboard boxes, I uncovered several boxes of old photos I’d
dragged across the ocean at some point. Baby pictures, holiday snaps,
even old pictures of my grandparents looking impossibly glamorous in
the 50’s. I have carried these with me since the day fourteen years
ago that I left my hometown with a one-way ticket to London and two
bursting suitcases. The Delta check-in agent sweetly looked the other
way when I heaved them onto the baggage scales.
I am eighteen in the
picture above and I am terrified of fat: both of eating it and of
putting it on my face. These are the days of fat-free Snackwell
cookies and Molly McButter, a vile yellow dust that promises to taste
as delicious as butter, but really just looks like an over-excited
daisy got frisky with your jacket potato when you weren’t looking,
leaving nothing behind but a sad smear of pollen. I load my plate
with plain steamed vegetables and lather my face with a Neutrogena
gel that makes my skin feel as though it’s shrunk in the dryer. It
makes sense to me at the time. How can you fight oil with more oil?
Thankfully, times have
changed. I figured out five years ago that plant oil on my face (and
in my mouth, for that matter) is nothing to fear. In 2009, picked up
a copy of India Knight’s The Thrift Book and caught wind of DHC
Deep Cleansing Oil. Since then, I have been devoted to the oil
cleansing method in general and DHC in particular. When I first began
using it, it was only available through the DHC website, which made
it a difficult sell to anyone without £20 to punt on a facial
cleanser that resembled a salad dressing. Happily since then, it’s
now more widely available, but I do appreciate that it is still not
easily found outside of major metropolitan areas.
The Body Shop, on the
other hand, is everywhere. When I was eighteen and snacking on
iceberg lettuce leaves during English class, the Body Shop held an
exotic appeal, largely because we didn’t have one in Mobile. Since
moving to London though, I mostly associate them with fruit-scented
lotions for adolescents and Christmas gift sets that inevitably end
up gathering dust in a cupboard. My loss, really, for they actually
have some excellent products.
The Camomile Silky
Cleansing Oil is one of them. I pinched a bottle from Lippie Mansions a
few months back and I’ve been using it as my morning cleanser ever
since. For £10, it’s seriously good stuff. It’s a paler yellow
and slightly runnier than my beloved DHC, but no less effective at
removing make-up and leaving your face feeling clean and super-soft.
If I’m using it at night, I massage a single pump into my face with
my fingers for about thirty seconds, then use cotton wool to remove
my eye make-up. I then remove the rest of the oil with a hot flannel.
If I remember, I use the Body Shop Facial Roller after removing my
eye make-up, but before the hot flannel.
The complaints I’ve
heard from those who don’t get on with oil cleansing fall largely
into two camps: first, that the oil always runs through their
fingers and onto their clothes or down the drain, and second, that it
ends up in their eyes and gives them blurry vision. All I can say is
that the former has never been a problem for me (perhaps I have
exceptionally well-arranged fingers), and the latter stopped
happening after a few uses.
Will the Body Shop oil be
a permanent replacement for the DHC on my bathroom shelf? Honestly,
no. But my preference is largely aesthetic, not based on
effectiveness. I like the dark, greeny-gold colour of the DHC, and I
like the fact that it smells faintly of olive oil, allowing me to
pretend I’m a Greek goddess, rubbing my alabaster skin with
precious ointments. But I’d happily buy it if it was the week
before payday and I’d run out of DHC. And I’d absolutely
recommend it to anyone who wanted to try oil cleansing without
splashing the cash for the DHC. It’s a tenner. Take the punt.
This post: Precious Oils: The Body Shop Camomile Silky Cleansing Oil originated at: Get Lippie All rights reserved. If you are not reading this post at Get Lippie, then this content has been stolen by a scraper
Monday 13 October 2014
Lipsticks of the (last) Week
Autumn is really kicking in now (anyone else put their central heating on? No? Just me then?), so my lipsticks have taken a turn for the deeper and darker again ...
Here we have (l-r):
Vincent Longo's Americana,
Guerlain KissKiss in Cherry Pink,
Bare Minerals Lead The Way,
Revlon Colourstay Opulent Garnet
Revlon Colourstay Divin Port Wine
OCC Matte Lip Tars in NSFW & Strumpet
and Clinique's Superbalm in Black Honey
Here's how they swatch:
Lovely, lovely saturated colours. Americana is a tomato red, cherry pink is a glorious soft purple with a hint of gold shimmer, Lead the Way is a deep fuchsia with purple overtones. Opulent Garnet is precisely what is says on the label, and Divine Port Wine is a rich deep wine shade. I do find both of these quite drying in wear though, so load up on lipbalm if you need it. I mix NSFW 50:50 with Strumpet for a deep and longlasting pinked red that's my favourite colour of the moment, and Black Honey is an unusual sheer purple-taupe that just adds a hint of depth to my natural lip colour.
Here's how the individual OCC colours swatch. Strumpet is a cool fuchsia, and NSFW is a bright, bright fire engine red. Individually, I find both of them a little difficult to wear, but mixed together makes a gorgeous neutral, totally opaque red with just a slight hint of pink, which is easier for me to wear (I keep an old lipbalm tin around so I can carry some ready-mixed around with me for touchups during the day):
What's been your fancy this week?
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Friday 3 October 2014
Lipstick Queen Silver Screen Collection
Lipstick Queen - long one of Get Lippie's favourite lipstick brands - has brought out a companion collection to the gorgeous Velvet Rope collection they brought out last year. Velvet Rope was a capsule collection of feather-light matte shades in beautiful deco-style packaging.
In the same (albeit silver this time) beautifully heavy packaging, Silver Screen is a collection of highly-pigmented glossy shades, in a tightly edited collection of BRIGHT colours.
Here we have Made It (a deep wine), Have Paris (glorious crimson) and Stella! (an insanely bright in the bullet purple).
The texture is whisper-light, and even though they're a glossy formulation, they're not at all waxy or greasy on the lips. Whilst less pigmented than Velvet Rope, and on the sheer side in comparison too, they're not unpigmented:
As you can see on skin, even the frankly terrifying in the bullet Made It and Stella! are both wearable shades, even if Stella! is still on the ... "editorial" ... side. I'm sure I can pull it off with the right hair and makeup around it though!
Silver Screen lipsticks cost £35 each and are available from Space NK now, available in seven shades, including nudes and pinks. You'll love them.
The Fine Print: PR Samples.
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Thursday 2 October 2014
Aveda Shampure Body Lotion, Body Wash and Compostition Oil
There aren’t many of us that haven’t
been seduced by at least one of Aveda's products. With their
natural ingredients, and superb scents in just about everything they
do, there was a collective sigh of relief when Aveda first arrived on
the scene in the UK, as they proved that harsh chemicals and synthetics in hair
products were unnecessary for healthy hair.
It took me a long while to jump on
board with Aveda, but when I coloured my hair bright red recently I
got involved with the excellent Madder Root shampoo and conditioner.
Anyone who has had a similar colour knows that red hair dyes are
notorious for fading fast, not to mention they're prone to looking a
little lacklustre after few washes, so anything that helps stop those has to be a plus. And the Madder Root range from Aveda really does help
and, as a bonus, it smells amazing.
However, Shampure is perhaps the most
famous, and most-loved, shampoo range from Aveda. With its extremely distinctive
scent that is now synonymous with the brand, it is incredibly popular. This year saw the 25th anniversary of
Shampure, and they've celebrated with the introduction of body products and oils all featuring the
distinctive and much-beloved Shampure fragrance. Well, I say "fragrance", but it is actually the result of blending over 25 pure flower and
plant extracts, including ylang ylang, lavender, and petit grain,
all of which are said to bring on a sense of well being and calm.
This is just as well really, as this is the signature scent of all
Aveda salons around the world!
The Shampure hand & body wash is
sulphate free and has the benefit of added organic Babassu nut oil
which can apparently create a naturally cooling sensation on the skin
which can help with relaxation and insomnia, I love this. The body
lotion is hydrating and easy to apply, and is perfect for keeping that gorgeous Shampure scent
with you throughout the day.
Even more recently they have added the
Shampure fragrance to the ranks of their superb multi use composition
oils. These are credited as being beneficial for body, bath, nails and
scalp, and the universal oil can be used for just about everything
except cooking (like you'd cook with a scented oil!) and obviously,
it smells incredible! It's lighter - and more runny - than the other composition oils in Aveda's range, but it's fabulous for treating dry ends on longer
hair, and makes a great addition to a hot bath that will both scent
your skin and home beautifully. Use it on your scaly bits too, so if
you've ever wanted beautifully scented elbows, now's your chance ... Now, Aveda, sort out a Shampure candle, will you?
Aveda
Shampure bath and body, and composition oil available now.
Prices range from £17 to £23.
This post: Aveda Shampure Body Lotion, Body Wash and Compostition Oil originated at: Get Lippie All rights reserved. If you are not reading this post at Get Lippie, then this content has been stolen by a scraper
Wednesday 1 October 2014
Lipsticks of the Week
Boots No7 Soft Ruby
Lipstick Queen Saint in Wine
Laura Mercier in Healthy Lips
Bare Minerals Moxie in Live Large
Lipstick Queen Sinner Wine
And By Terry Baume de Rose in Fig
Here's how they swatch on skin. These are some of my all-time favourite lipstick colours - what have you been wearing recently?
The Fine Print: Mixture of PR samples and purchases.
This post: Lipsticks of the Week originated at: Get Lippie All rights reserved. If you are not reading this post at Get Lippie, then this content has been stolen by a scraper
Tuesday 30 September 2014
Nail Effects with IZ Beauty of London
By Emily
A couple of weeks ago I
was invited along to the launch of IZ
Beauty of London’s new collection of
nail effects at The Sanderson Hotel in London. Other than nails, my
other favourite thing is pick and mix, so imagine my glee when I
arrived to discover a table piled with nail amazingness and jars of
sugary delights! It’s like they knew I was coming!
Nestled amongst the
bonbons and strawberry laces was a whole new kind of candy…and I
was invited to fill up a box with all my favourite bits. From simple
studs, to punk spikes and gold leaf, this collection is pretty damn
awesome. Even the humble nail sticker has had a makeover: the Deco It
designer nail decals are a revelation; something between a transfer
and a sticker, they lie flat to the nail with no annoying edges to
come unstuck. Most of the elements have
been designed with gel nails in mind, but that hasn’t stopped me
applying some of these amazing effects to my natural nails. I hope
you like them!
I love the simplicity of
this look – a simple black gloss nail with single gold studs at the
base, and a graphic decal in gold on a feature nail. After sealing
with a good top coat I was impressed that the studs stayed put for a
good week (though the provided glue was very strong!).
The second look I tried
was a bit fiddly but once you get into a rhythm applying the studs it
doesn’t take long at all. I started with two coats of my favourite
Essie polish called Cocktail Bling. Then using a dabber with a touch
a glue I added the individual studs (alternating gold flat studs and
blue pearls) in a long strip. I love this effect and once again, it
lasted for a week, with the studs out-lasting the polish!
The
good news is that all these
lovely embellishments and decals will be available at http://izbeauty.co.uk
at the end of October.
And finally, when you’ve
got studs (or worse, glitter polish) that won’t budge, here’s how
to remove it quickly and simply – just soak cotton pads in remover,
wrap around each nail, wrap in foil and leave for about 10 mins. When
you remove the foil and pads away comes all the polish!
This post: Nail Effects with IZ Beauty of London originated at: Get Lippie All rights reserved. If you are not reading this post at Get Lippie, then this content has been stolen by a scraper
Monday 29 September 2014
Sali Hughes - Pretty Honest: Beauty Book Review
By Get Lippie
I love beauty books, I've been collecting them for years now, and even have some that date back to the mid 1800's. There's a special joy in reading beauty regimes from days gone by, and if the book dates back far enough, they're a wonderful historical document, opening your eyes to just what life was like for women back in the day. On the flip-side of that coin, there's the special joy that comes from reading a mid-1980's beauty book, and laughing at all the pictures and wondering how the hell no one noticed just how INSANE they looked. I have a lot of books from the 80s for some reason ... funny that.
Traditionally, "modern" beauty books fall into two categories: the picture heavy "How To" tome, usually presented by a makeup artist, filled with impossible to follow "simple" instructions, which are usually dated the second they're sent out from the printer, and the second is a "lifestyle" kind of tome, filled with snippets of how the author (usually a "celebrity" of some kind) lives their "beautiful" life, replete with soft-focus heavily posed pictures of said celebrity in yoga positions, arranging flowers, diet tips, and a small interview with their hairdresser or makeup artist towards the back.
Delightfully, Pretty Honest by Sali Hughes doesn't fall into either of these categories, being on the text-heavy side, and providing more of a guide for people who fall into the "What the hell are they talking about now?" category when faced with a "helpful" sales assistant in Debenhams. We've all been there. I've actually been known to say it to them, which is why I had to move to London where no one recognises me in the department stores any more.
Pretty Honest is logically laid out, with discrete chapters on every aspect of skincare and make up, for all ages, and whether you like to where a little makeup or a lot. Sali (rightfully) avoids the trap of recommending specific products for specific uses. This can be a particular pitfall of so many books because, as we all know brands tend to discontinue things (or change the formulation) the very second people fall in love with them. Yes, I'm looking at you, Chanel India Pink lipstick.
Refreshingly candid, funny and down-to-earth, I enjoyed reading (and I do mean actually reading, as opposed to flicking through and admiring the pictures) Pretty Honest a great deal. It reminds me, in the very best of ways, of how beauty blogs used to be before the hidden sponsorship and "lifestyle" prettiness took over a year or so ago. I love the pretty blogs, actually, but I do genuinely prefer meaty content to beautiful pictures and Pretty Honest has that in spades.
It's actually a consumer guide on to how to use products (and avoid skincare problems), disguised as a beauty book and I, for one, am glad that it exists. Sali's a great bunch of lads, and whilst I think she's frankly insane on the issue of foundation primers, there's a lot of great information in here.
It'll make a fantastic beauty-related gift for anyone who's ever worn lipstick. It's £22 and available in all good bookstores now.
The Fine Print: PR Sample.
This post: Sali Hughes - Pretty Honest: Beauty Book Review originated at: Get Lippie All rights reserved. If you are not reading this post at Get Lippie, then this content has been stolen by a scraper
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