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Thursday 5 May 2011

Nail of the Day OPI DS Chiffon

Posts are a bit thin this week because I've been ill (hang on till Monday though, won't you? I have a doozy coming up!) but this little bottle of precious arrived yesterday and it was all I could do not to paint my mails there and then!





OPI DS polishes are a particular weakness of mine, being - by and large - holographics. And I love me a bit of holo action! I spotted this on lovely Jen's Lipstick Luvvies blog sale at the weekend and had to snap it up!





Under halogen lighting (like the two pics above) it shows as a little peachy-pink number, but under fluorescents and in natural daylight (as below) you can see that it is actually a very sweet, soft baby-pink:





Not a colour I wear often, but very cheering, and a perfect antidote to last week's chocolate brown that I hated so much.

I bought another one too, and I'll show you that soon ...
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Wednesday 4 May 2011

Kebelo Hair Smoothing Treatment

Keen not to market themselves as simply yet another "keratin straightening treatment", Kebelo have arrived with their plant-based, totally formaldehyde-free, 3-step smoothing system, and I was lucky enough to be one of the first people in the UK to try it recently.


Referring to their system as the "foundation for beautiful hair", Kebelo doesn't promise stick-straight hair, but instead it swears to free you from frizz for up to 100 days, whilst leaving you with body, bounce and beautiful hair.  You know me, I can't resist something that promises to tame my crazy barnet, so I leapt at the chance to try it out.


The Kebelo Smoothing Treatment starts with a wash with a clarifying shampoo, which strips your hair of all styling products without leaving your hair dry or brittle, in fact, when my hair was dried off a little at this stage, I was pleasantly impressed at how soft and shiny my hair felt!   Usually clarifying shampoos leave your hair feeling a little like straw, and the ones that don't leave your hair feeling a lot like straw, but not this one.  


Once your hair is mostly dry, the smoothing solution is applied to your hair, and then this is set into your hair with straightening irons.  Because flat poker-straight hair doesn't suit me too well, Aeron set my hair with a slight kink at the ends, and didn't start the straightening right from the root, so that my hair would dry with body, I was really pleased with how it looked.  But, for me, the best part of this treatment is that you don't have to wait three days before you can wash your hair again, literally as soon as you finish the heat part of your treatment, your hair can get wet.


The third stage of the system is the after-care, which is included in the cost of your package - which is a nice touch, and a refreshing change, which I've been trialling for the last few weeks.  In the package (of which there are two, one for oily and one for dry hair), you get a shampoo, a conditioner, and a weekly hair masque.  I've found them to be excellent, pleasantly scented, nicely lathering and highly conditioning.  The weekly masque in particular leaves my hair soft and smooth after use.  Sometimes low-sodium, no SLS shampoos and conditioners can be more of a chore than a pleasure to use, and I'm happy to say this isn't the case with these.


As to my hair, I'm very happy with it.  It's shiny. Very, very, very shiny.  To the extent that some people have actually commented on it.  It doesn't, as advertised, dry completely straight, but it is free of frizz:



This is my hair after air-drying, with no product, and more than four weeks after treatment. It still has body and movement, but I can style it with lots of body if I want to, or just run the straighteners over it to smooth out the ends.  I'm very pleased with it, here's hoping it lasts the full 12 weeks!


The Kebelo Smoothing Treatment costs around £200 and can be used on practically any kind of hair. Click here to find out more.  My treatment took place at Four London in Mayfair, which is a very lovely place indeed.


The Fine Print: Get Lippie was a guest of both Kebelo and Four London.  


This post originated at: http://getlippie.com All rights reserved.
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Tuesday 3 May 2011

Alpha H Daily Essential Moisturiser - Factor 50+

Get Lippie has flu at the moment, so that means a new guest review on the blog!  I'm handing over to my lovely workmate Kate, who asked me for some advice a couple of weeks ago and got a little more than she bargained for ...



Within a couple of days of hearing that my colleague Louise wrote a beauty blog, I'd emailed her with my own particular problem, begging her to offer advice. Like the sparkling, perfectly made-up fairy godmother that she is, she came through with an absolutely corking suggestion.

Here's the problem. I have really fair skin that burns under the sun and colours from the heat very easily. I am also prone to eczema flare-ups - it's mostly stress related, but my skin is an awkward so-and-so and likes to surprise me sometimes. I use a daily moisturiser with SPF15 but as soon as we hit the summer, that just doesn't cut it.

So I'm forced to put my factor 50 Piz Buin on my face. Face is never happy with this and often complains, and I can forget make-up at this point as it all slips straight off.

After hearing my plea, Louise, being the star that she is, came rushing to see me clutching a sample bottle of Alpha-H Daily Essential Moisturiser SPF 50+ and told me to give it a try.

Piz Buin, you will never see my face again (although you can still take care of my back, arms, legs and everywhere else).

The big bonus about the cream is that it's light, but still manages to have enough moisturising might to replace my usual daily. And because it is so light I can wear foundation over the top without looking like
I've just been swimming. Most important of all, of course, is that it has prevented me from burning.

Now that I've gone ahead and bought the full size bottle, I can tell you that it comes in a handy pump action bottle. This is great as a little goes a long way and it'll help me use it sparingly so I don't run out too soon.

I'm going to be wearing Alpha-H 50+ during the daylight parts of my 24 hour, 78 mile walk this weekend. And that little sample tube from Louise will form an essential part of my pack. Thanks, Louise!

Follow my progress from occasional walker to endurance strider at http://wardwalkslondon.blogspot.com


***

Thank you very much Kate, looking forward to seeing if you got burned or not on your mammoth walk!

 
The Fine Print: Original sample size was obtained via a goodie bag at an event several months ago.  Several full-size bottles have been purchased since.



This post originated at: http://getlippie.com All rights reserved.
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Monday 2 May 2011

Project Perfume - Book Review

(Click picture for source)
 Alongside "Perfumes the A-Z Guide" by Luca Turin and Tania Sanchez, I've also read "The Perfect Scent" by Chandler Burr, and it's completely, totally and utterly fascinating.


Burr is the "scent critic" for The New York Times Magazine, and in this book he highlights the journeys of two perfumes on their way to market, One a high-end Perfume House; Hermes, making their way with Un Jardin Sur le Nil, and at the other end of the perfume spectrum, there is Coty, trying to get a celebrity perfume to market, and that is Sarah Jessica Parker's "Lovely".


At times unintentionally hilarious, as when a trip along the Nile becomes a bit of a disaster when the team from Hermes, who have just drafted in Jean-Claude Ellena as their in-house "nose",  discover that the gardens along the Nile don't really smell of anything, but at all times fascinating, it's an instructive and sometimes quite emotive book about how the high end and the mass-market go about things in their respective industries.


The Hermes story is very much about how much a company can have invested in one person's vision of how a scent should be, and how that will affect a company as whole, whereas the Coty story of Lovely is a little of the opposite, about how "smoothing the edges off" one person's vision can satisfy the company's marketing needs.  At least, that's how I read it.


All through the book you're treated to visions from both Jean-Claude Ellena and Sarah Jessica Parker (who played a surprisingly large role in the creation of her first perfume), of how they wanted the perfumes to smell, and what their inspirations were, and how they went from iteration to iteration of each scent until they were ready (sometimes only just!) to go to market.  I found this very interesting, so much so that I went out and bought a sample of each of the scents in the book, so I could smell the finished product for myself.


First things first, I'm not a massive fan of either Jean-Claude Ellena or of celebrity scents in general, Ellena's scents I find are simply too ethereal, too light, and too ... thin for me.  I can appreciate the master skill that he puts into making his perfumes, but, for me, they disappear too quickly, and usually I'm left resentful that after ten minutes or so I can no longer smell them at all.  With that in mind, to me, Un Jardin Sur Le Nil is pleasant, fruity, and, unsurprisingly insubstantial.  It is something that I will probably get more wear out of during hot weather, where I will appreciate something lighter and fruitier during the summer.  I'll be revisiting this one at a later date, I'm sure.


The real revelation for me is  Lovely by Sarah Jessica Parker, which I was surprised to find actually lives up to the name.  I am, I admit, a bit of a snob, there are no two ways about it, and I have, for years totally ignored - rightly or wrongly - celebrity perfumes.  I have no real desire to smell like the latest trend, and as the latest trends in perfume all appear to veer towards fruity toilet cleaners (particularly at the cheaper end of the z-list celeb scale)  then, I don't think I've missed all that much.  But this is a little gem, a non-fruity, rather sophisticated little musky floral that I don't mind admitting that I've been carrying around in my handbag for a week or two now.  It's a simple, easy wear, that doesn't need much thought, but it is, as the name suggests it will be, rather pretty, and sometimes, when you've been wrangling with other perfumes which can, and indeed do smell like cat-poo doused in honey (and that's a GOOD THING btw, but more about that later), Lovely is a nice little no-brainer that won't make you smell like Kerry Katona.


So, The Perfect Scent is a "right riveting read" as my mum would say, and a salutory lesson that price isn't - always - everything when it comes to scent.  Highly recommended.


The  Fine Print: Everything mentioned in this post was bought with my own cash, even the cat-poo-doused-in-honey scent, which I'll tell you more about later.


This post originated at: http://getlippie.com All rights reserved.
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Saturday 30 April 2011

Nail of the Day

I tried OPI's Suzi Loves Cowboys from their recent Texas collection, but the plain dark brown creme shade didn't really suit me, so I souped it up a little with a coat of Nfu Oh #61:




And it turned out a lot nicer than anticipated. However, this was two coats of OPI, two coats of Nfu Oh, and two coats of Poshe topcoat, it lasted a day, then started pinging off all over the place!




So, a nice combination, but next time, only one coat each of the OPI and topcoat ....
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