First off, Terrybly is a dreadful, dreadful, dreadful name for a diffusion range of cosmetics. Especially a diffusion range that is, in actual fact, more expensive than the original line ...
Right, that off my chest, lets have some lipstick porn, for these are the most beautifully packaged lipsticks in all of creation:
These are gorgeous, weighty and glamorous to carry around, particularly in their little silk bags. So, what are the shades like? Here you go:
And with flash:
Yes, I went for brights, and what beautiful brights they are. A wonderous deep blood-red and fuchsia. Ah, fuchsia, how I've missed you and your hard to spell ways ... I love the retro-80's nature of the fuchsia shade! I had this one applied at an event before Christmas, and immediately had to ask the team to open up the tills so I could purchase one ... I'm easily led, what can I say?
Natural Light:
And with flash:
These are very emollient - By Terry wax lyrical about "Lumilip" technology on the packaging, without, of course, mentioning what it is, but I think it has something to do with rubies. These shades do, in fact, have a glow about them, and I enjoy wearing them a great deal.
However, they cost £31 each, which is on a par with Tom Ford (£36), so are they as good? Well, yes and no, to be honest. On the packaging side, I'd say the Rouge Terrybly win. I know everyone goes on about the click of the Tom Ford lipsticks when you close them, but I don't think they're particularly inspiring personally, nice, yes, but ... I prefer the Terrybly. When it comes to performance, well, Tom Ford wins hands down.
When I bought these lipsticks, I was told that they wouldn't wear off, they were longlasting, and wouldn't leave a ring of doom. Well, all of these claims are untrue. They're no more longlasting than any other lipstick, and they do wear off within a couple of hours of applying (you'll be finding lipstick stains on everything for days afterwards), and as for a ring of doom, well ... RING OF DOOM might be better putting it!
Serves me right for listening to a pushy sales assistant, I guess. More fool Get Lippie.
All that said, I do like these lipsticks a great deal, they're moisturising, and they're wonderful colours in great packaging, but they're not a groundbreaking formula, they have average (very average) staying power and aren't really any better than other lipsticks in their price range, but they are pretty. Very pretty ...
The Fine Print: Purchases. Lovely, lovely not-at-all longlasting, impulse purchases.
This post originated at: http://getlippie.com All rights reserved.
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Wednesday, 4 January 2012
Tuesday, 3 January 2012
Estee Lauder Cyber Eyes Collection
It seems Estee Lauder are continuing their innovation in eyeshadows into the new year, and their first collection by Tom Pecheaux this year is Cyber Eyes, a collection of six "tribryd"* gelee eyeshadows, four mascaras, and six eyeliners. I selected a few to get a feel for the collection:
Here you can see Cyber Copper, Cyber Pink and Cyber Green eyeshadows (the other available shades are Cyber Teal, Cyber Lilac and Cyber Silver) with Blackened Cocoa and Blackened Plum Eyeliners. The other shades of liner are Electric Teal, Blackened Olive, Blackened Sapphire and Blackened ... um ... Black ...
Here are the shades with flash:
The shades are beautiful, as is the product in the pan. The Cyber Eyes shadows are a creme/gel/powder, which lends them to being used either wet or dry. Used dry, you get a beautiful sheen, and a complex shade on the skin:
They are easy to blend and last extremely well on the skin with or without primer beneath.
Applied wet, you can see how the colours deepen, and gain a lovely metallic finish:
Even the pink, which applies a little more sheerly than the other two shades.
The pencils are a real treat, being both densely packed with pigment, and very, very soft and easy to blend. I think, if it came down to it, I'd say the pencils were the best part of the collection, but it'd be a very close-run thing.
Here are swatches of both Blackened Plum and Blackened Cocoa:
Plum is at the top and cocoa is at the bottom. Blackened Cocoa is lovely, but I'm a little disappointed with the Plum, it's a little more of a navy blue with a hint of purple than a plum, which is nice in itself, but it's not the shade I was expecting from the name, I always think plum should be on the redder side of purple than the blue. That aside, these are lovely, lovely pencils, soft, smudgeable and unbudgeable.
MrLippie and I had a bit of a giggle over the name of this collection, as there's very little "cyber" about it (and hey, "Blackened Black", really? How much more black can it be? Answer: none, none more black*), and it has to be said that with the exception of Cyber Green, the shades themselves aren't hugely original choices, but these are lovely, glorious glowing eyeshadows and I can see I'm going to get a lot of wear out of them.
Cyber Eyes Shadows are available now, and cost £19 each. The liners cost £16 each. Some of the shades are limited edition though, so you'd better get your skates on ...
The Fine Print: Cyber samples, through the interwebs.
This post originated at: http://getlippie.com All rights reserved.
Sunday, 1 January 2012
Haircare Gadget of the Year
Haircare gadgets and I do not get along. I'm both a cack-handed muppet, and lazy. Very, very, very lazy. I do, in actual fact, own a hairdryer, but I've no idea where it is at the moment. In 2011, I practically gave up using all heated appliances on my hair (even my beloved Cloud Nine's have taken a little break over the last six months or so), because I'm both that lazy, and that cack-handed. Because of my commitment to the blog though, I continued to trial and test gadgets, and there was only one I used more than twice.
These:
Enrapture Extremity Heated Rollers.
To say I fell for these would be a mild understatement, I fell big, and I fell hard. These are your average muppet's daydream for glamorous hair, needing not even the slightest bit of hair-styling talent to be able to use them.
The secret is in the clip, metal-lined so they heat up alongside the roller, and ensure that your hair is heated from both inside and outside the curl you've formed on them. Oh, and the clips ensure they stay in place too - I've had horrific trouble with velcro rollers slipping out, and rollers with pins are, well, painful, lets face it.
I also discovered that it doesn't matter how haphazardly you position them, either, you always end up with wonderful bouncy, shiny, glamorous hair.
Anything that can take my hair from looking like:
It's not dry, it's frizzy, I got caught in a rainshower before I took this pic! |
(Um different room, and I'd finished applying my makeup...) |
This post originated at: http://getlippie.com All rights reserved.
Friday, 30 December 2011
My Lipstick Of The Year
There has been one lipstick this year that I've reached for again and again and again, and it's this one from Tom Ford:
Um, which one? Well, oddly enough, it's the one on the right - NOT the red shade. It's Indian Rose.
Creamy, pigmented, and doesn't make me look like a corpse, I can't get enough of it, and it's practically a nubbin as a result. I might even get a back up. Yes, a backup of a £35 lipstick.
Kill me now.
See my original post on this shade here, and let me know what your pick of the lipsticks of 2011 is in the comments.
This post originated at: http://getlippie.com All rights reserved.
Um, which one? Well, oddly enough, it's the one on the right - NOT the red shade. It's Indian Rose.
Creamy, pigmented, and doesn't make me look like a corpse, I can't get enough of it, and it's practically a nubbin as a result. I might even get a back up. Yes, a backup of a £35 lipstick.
Kill me now.
See my original post on this shade here, and let me know what your pick of the lipsticks of 2011 is in the comments.
This post originated at: http://getlippie.com All rights reserved.
Friday, 23 December 2011
The Very Best Christmas Present For A Beauty Blogger
Would be a lipstick named after them. It's been a while coming, but, very shortly after Daniel Sandler and I cooked up this shade back in May, the wonderful Lynne Sanders of Cosmetics A La Carte let slip to me that they were adding "Luce" to their permanent line, and I've been like a little kid waiting for Santa ever since! Imagine, a lipstick that real people can actually buy, named after little old me!
I finally caught a glimpse of it on the website this week, and just the sight of my name on that shade list gives me little chills. It's definitely one of the greatest presents a beauty blogger could ever have, and I've been wearing my "Luce" all week in celebration*. It's a lightly sparkling coral shade, which makes for great everyday wear.
My deepest, most sincere thanks to both Daniel Sandler, and Cosmetics a la Carte for making this particular beauty blogger's dream come true.
The Fine Print: Not an affiliate link, and I'm not remunerated if anyone buys it!
This post originated at: http://getlippie.com All rights reserved.
Wednesday, 14 December 2011
Project Perfume - Aromatics Elixir Perfumers Reserve
Well, it's beautiful. Still smoky, resinous and as incense-packed as I remember, it is also somehow softer, rounder, gentler and less spiky IN YOUR FACE than the original. An astonishing trick to pull off for what is - or could be - regarded as a flanker. So many flankers (which are perfumes brought out by a perfume house to cash in on the popularity of an already best-selling fragrance) resemble the original only in name, but I'm happy to say Perfumers Reserve is very definitely easy to recognise as being based on the original. This version however, manages to push the flowers more front and centre, and its easier to recognise the roses in the formulation as a result. It wears a lot closer to the skin. Lacking the almost nuclear sillage of the original, this is much easier to wear, and could be considered more office-friendly.
Not that office-friendliness has ever bothered me much, I've spent the last couple of weeks wearing some complete and utter patchouli bombs (both of which I'll review soon), with little or no thought to my co-workers. I like perfume, I'm afraid, and I like to be able to smell my perfume, but if you're scared of wearing "big" fragrances, Perfumers Reserve might be a good way to try something huge, in a way that won't frighten the people around you.
A word about the bottle, I love that it's a "dabber" rather than a spray, so make sure you don't open the bottle the wrong way up, you will end up with damp (but gorgeously fragranced) knees. The amber bottle with the engraving is rather lovely too.
Oh, and if Santa is reading, I'd like the solid, please, it's in a beautiful compact that can be used as a necklace:
If the new formulation still doesn't sound like your cup of tea (or incense for that matter), then the original has been reissued with a new bottle to celebrate its birthday:
Happy birthday Aromatics Elixir! Life begins at forty, they say, and I'm happy you're still showing signs of life, even now ...
The Fine Print: I was sent the anniversary bottle of Aromatics Elixir, but I bought the Perfumers Reserve myself.
This post originated at: http://getlippie.com All rights reserved.
Monday, 12 December 2011
My Pick of the Christmas Candles
I love candles, it's no surprise to anyone reading this blog, really, I mention them a lot. For a variety of reasons, we're not having a lot of Christmas decorations this year, but one thing I couldn't countenance was not making the new flat at least smell of Christmas. Here are my pick of the best festive fragranced candles to make your house smell wonderful over the holidays:
Jo Malone Roasted Chestnut
Woodsy, slightly smokey, and with just a tiny hint of sweetness, this evokes evenings by a real fire. The scent is wonderful, but I do find that Jo Malone candles produce quite a lot of soot compared to others, also, this is a large, single wicked candle, which means that if you don't take care of your candles properly, it could be prone to runnelling. Worth it for the scent and excellent burning time though, I've had this on the go for the best part of two months now, and still have over a third left.
Annick Goutal Noel
Fizzy with the scent of citrus and pine, this is a wonderful evocation of a crisp wintry walk in the countryside. Meant to evoke a Christmas tree decorated with dried fruits in the European fashion, this is a beautifully uplifting fresh scent, and manages - wonderfully - to avoid smelling of pine toilet cleaner. It reminds me a little of sherbet lemons when you first sniff the jar, I love it.
Elemis Starlight Spa
The most "traditional" Christmas candle on this list, this is bursting with oranges, cloves, cinnamon and vanilla, it smells of pomanders, mulled wine and ... well ... Christmas. If it were any more edible, you could call it mince pie flavour and no one would argue with you. I adore the silver jar too, which flickers in the candlelight as the wax inside burns down, to a very lovely effect.
Diptyque Epinette and Perdigone
Epinette, in its green glass holder is a "spruce" scent. Less crisp with citrus than the similar-sounding "Noel" above, this has hints of bosky tree bark underneath the intoxicating pine-needle fragrance, making it a little darker, more reminscent of a pine forest at dusk than a crisp wintery day. Still wonderful though.
Perdigone is a spiced plum affair, hinted at in its red glass holder. Less redolent of clove and cinnamon than the "Starlight Spa" candle, it smells how I imagine old-fashioned sugar plums would. It's slightly sweet and fruity (but not offensively so) and more "perfume-y" than the other four, but it makes a very good compliment to the others, rounding out their various quite sharp scents, and forming a good counterpoint to the smokiness of the Jo Malone too. Yes, I do burn them all at the same time, it's quite addictive!
My only regret about the Diptyque candles is that I went for the mini sizes, and I'm scared I'll burn them all up before Christmas itself ...
What's the scent of Christmas for you guys?
The Fine Print: A mixture of PR samples, and purchases. There will be repurchases of most of them for next year though, you betcha.
This post originated at: http://getlippie.com All rights reserved.
Jo Malone Roasted Chestnut
Woodsy, slightly smokey, and with just a tiny hint of sweetness, this evokes evenings by a real fire. The scent is wonderful, but I do find that Jo Malone candles produce quite a lot of soot compared to others, also, this is a large, single wicked candle, which means that if you don't take care of your candles properly, it could be prone to runnelling. Worth it for the scent and excellent burning time though, I've had this on the go for the best part of two months now, and still have over a third left.
Annick Goutal Noel
Fizzy with the scent of citrus and pine, this is a wonderful evocation of a crisp wintry walk in the countryside. Meant to evoke a Christmas tree decorated with dried fruits in the European fashion, this is a beautifully uplifting fresh scent, and manages - wonderfully - to avoid smelling of pine toilet cleaner. It reminds me a little of sherbet lemons when you first sniff the jar, I love it.
Elemis Starlight Spa
The most "traditional" Christmas candle on this list, this is bursting with oranges, cloves, cinnamon and vanilla, it smells of pomanders, mulled wine and ... well ... Christmas. If it were any more edible, you could call it mince pie flavour and no one would argue with you. I adore the silver jar too, which flickers in the candlelight as the wax inside burns down, to a very lovely effect.
Diptyque Epinette and Perdigone
Epinette, in its green glass holder is a "spruce" scent. Less crisp with citrus than the similar-sounding "Noel" above, this has hints of bosky tree bark underneath the intoxicating pine-needle fragrance, making it a little darker, more reminscent of a pine forest at dusk than a crisp wintery day. Still wonderful though.
Perdigone is a spiced plum affair, hinted at in its red glass holder. Less redolent of clove and cinnamon than the "Starlight Spa" candle, it smells how I imagine old-fashioned sugar plums would. It's slightly sweet and fruity (but not offensively so) and more "perfume-y" than the other four, but it makes a very good compliment to the others, rounding out their various quite sharp scents, and forming a good counterpoint to the smokiness of the Jo Malone too. Yes, I do burn them all at the same time, it's quite addictive!
My only regret about the Diptyque candles is that I went for the mini sizes, and I'm scared I'll burn them all up before Christmas itself ...
What's the scent of Christmas for you guys?
The Fine Print: A mixture of PR samples, and purchases. There will be repurchases of most of them for next year though, you betcha.
This post originated at: http://getlippie.com All rights reserved.
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