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Sunday, 31 January 2016
Skincare of the Week 31 January 2016
A short and sweet Skincare of the Week this week because I was ill, and hanging around a cold bathroom taking pictures of my skincare (like you do) took a deserving backseat to me being wrapped up in the duvet, and slathering myself in Pommade Divine, frankly. Nothing better for a sore nose than Pommade Divine, if you ask me.
Anyhoo, yes, I'm still a bit obsessed with Tata Harper, but I'm finally swapping things around a bit, they're still great products, but I do need to keep mixing things up a bit. I was in the mood for something rosy on Monday, so I pulled out my bits from the ByTerry Cellularose range, including the cleansing oil, and the Hydra Toner both of which are softly scented with rose, and leave the skin soft and clean without stripping. I followed those up with Pixibeauty H20 Serum and Glowtion Day Dew after prepping with their rose oil blend. I have to say, the H20/Glowtion combo is quickly becoming a firm favourite, adds hydration and glow without greasiness, and no matter how little sleep you've had, always leaves you looking well rested - a great base for foundation, too.
A new brand I trialled this week was Eloquence Beauty, which is based in Chester (my old home town!), and their Eloquence Beauty Nourishing Treatment Oil made it into my routine this week when I realised I needed a little more oomph than Tata Harper Rebuilding Moisturiser alone could provide. Eloquence specialise in mid-price beauty products (the 50ml oil costs £29.99 and is the most expensive product in the range) containing Sacha-Inchi oil, which is high in fatty acids and proteins, and is similar in effect to argan oil. It absorbs quickly, and I've enjoyed using it, but I'll be trialling a few more bits from the range in the coming weeks.and I'll be sure to let you know how I get along.
But mostly, this week is dedicated to Pommade Divine. And Kleenex. And duvets.
The Fine Print: PR Samples and purchases
This post: Skincare of the Week 31 January 2016 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
Sunday, 20 December 2015
LipsNspritz of the Week 20.12.15
Well, unlike last week, there were no hugely stunning nasal revelations, alas, but there was still a lot to love about LipsNspritz this time around, and one nice discovery, which is good. If you're wondering what LipsNspritz actually is, it's my way of smelling something different every day in an attempt to cure my parosmia, and a way to force myself to actually wear ALL of my something like 6/700 different lipsticks. I'm documenting them daily over on Instagram, where you can join in with the hashtag if you like! As well as lipstick and perfume, there's also generally gin, handbags, candles, the occasional sweary makeup bag, and very rarely (don't panic) a glimpse of my face.
Anyhoo, this is how this week went:
Monday: Mercure Ombre by Terry De Gunzberg and Estee Lauder Empowered. Mercure Ombre is a warm and rich blend of violet and orris with hints of a very lipstick-y rose, and powdery ambre-sandalwood base. It's really rather lovely indeed, and I liked wearing it a lot. Empowered is a sheer warm tomato red, which is really nice to wear.
Tuesday was L'Artisan Perfumer Nuit de Tuberose, alongside Givenchy Interdit Vinyl in Rouge Rebelle. I love Nuit de Tuberose, and it was a definite contender for my wedding fragrance back when I was searching for "the one". It's an unusual take on tuberose, starting off with a bright but sour (and slightly green) mango, which also has something a little damp and bosky (even ... swampy?) alongside. Then the chewy bubblegum confection of tuberose arrives, and it's fun from that point on. I love the unusual mango-opening (I love sour things generally), and this is a great fragrance. Givenchy Interdit Vinyl lipsticks aren't actually in-store yet, but they're sheer and lovely, and have some of the most pleasing packaging it has been my pleasure to photograph! Full review on this (I have a couple of other shades to wear yet) coming up soon.
Wednesday was my work Christmas party, so I dug out my bottle of Nuit de Noel by Caron and paired it with a fab red, Raspberry Blush by Pixibeauty. I love Nuit de Noel, and always save it for this time of year, it's gently spicy, and doesn't fall prey to any of the orange-pomander-cliches you expect. It's soft and lovely, and a real skin scent. Raspberry Blush is a great example of the slightly pinked-reds I love, and the texture on this soft matte shade is great too.
Thursday I wore Alaia by Alaia for a full day for the first time, and wore it with ByTerry Rouge Terrybly lipstick in Cherry Cherry. Alaia by Alaia is a difficult fragrance to pin down, it has hints of suede, of rose, of apricot, but it also has a strangely addictive creamy quality (it smells like perfumed and well-lotioned skin after wearing suede gloves, I think) that reminds me slightly of the now sadly-discontinued Amaranthine by Penhaligons. All in all, rather lovely, but it'll take me a couple more wears before I can really pin it down, I think. Cherry Cherry is a really matte red, that wears very well.
Friday saw me back in tuberose, but this time in a classic version, Fracas by Robert Piguet. I first heard about Fracas in Rivals by Jilly Cooper, and I've been a bit obsessed with it ever since. Jilly described it as a "sharp, dry scent", and it was worn constantly by Cameron Cook. Jilly is sadly wrong about the fragrance, it's neither sharp nor dry, but it's a loud, strident, neon pink confection of hefty tuberose, and ... just a hint of sex. And bubblegum (all tuberoses eventually smell like bubblegum to me, I have no idea why, luckily, I rather like the smell). I love wearing this. Almost as much as I love Jilly Cooper, now I come to think of it. Worn with my other Art Deco Dita von Teese (I have two, the other one is pinker), lipstick, which is blood red and hot.
Saturday was me in 1970 by Bella Freud (composed by Azzi Glasser), and Revlon Balm lipstain in Crush. My parosmia has caused 1970 to be troublesome to me since it arrived chez Lippie, as it opens with both vetiver and patchouli - both of which my post-parosmic nose still struggles with and registers as burned - but on Saturday something clicked and the smell finally registered properly for me. A happy occasion, as 1970 is really rather nice. Alongside the aforementioned patchouli and vetiver, there is saffron and rose, and after a rather full-on inital hippy-chick vibe, the rose and saffron take over, from that point on it's a lovely and warm and slightly spicy rose. Happy to have discovered this one at very long last! I do seem to default to tinted balms at the weekend though, it's too much effort to put on a full face of slap on a Saturday ...
There's one more LipsNspritz of the week to come, featuring all my favourite Christmas fragrances, and my brightest reddest shiniest lipsticks of the year, but that'll be my final post of the year ...
The Fine Print: PR Samples and purchases.
This post: LipsNspritz of the Week 20.12.15 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, 8 April 2015
ByTerry Ombre Blackstar eyeshadow sticks
I mentioned yesterday that my makeup routine takes me around five minutes, and it does. Some days, I can barely be bothered applying makeup at all, and so a little liquid liner and a bright, bright lipstick is all I do, over a CC cream, or something. On the days when I want a stronger look, I increasingly find myself reaching for eyeshadow sticks, as they're pretty foolproof, and I am both lazy and a cackhanded muppet.
Here we have ByTerry's cult favourite Ombre Blackstar eyeshadow sticks in Midnight Forest, a deep, deep blackened green, plus Ombre Mercure, a greyish taupe, and Black Pearl a shimmering softly glittering black.
Closeup of Ombre Mercure |
Here you can see there are subtle hints of bronze in the green, but the taupe is pretty much a universal shade. I like to use Black Pearl and Midnight Forest as thick liners, applying close to the lashes, then smudging out over the mobile lid. Ombre Mercure I use more as a traditional eyeshadow, and wear with a separate liner.
They're gloriously smudgy, and blend beautifully, but they do eventually set, and will stay in place most of the day. I do experience some creasing after a particularly long day, but that is easily rectified by just re-blending with a fingertip. You can wear them over primer too, which increases their opacity, and decreases smudging, but I rarely bother.
However, they are glittery, especially Black Pearl. You will end up with glittery lids. I normally abhor glitter - especially on nails for some reason, and bar glitter actually makes me feel a bit sick - but eye crayons like this are about the one thing I'll make an exception for, convenience trumps sparkle!
byTerry Ombre Blackstar eyeshadows are £29 each and are available from SpaceNK. I am just miffed they never EVER have the purple one in stock whenever I visit ...
The Fine Print: Purchases. Look there was a sale on, okay? And I had a voucher. Any rumours that I had to sell a kidney to buy these are completely unfounded.
The Even Finer Print: We're not featuring full fragrance reviews on Get Lippie at the moment owing to illness - please see The Parosmia Diaries for more.
This post: ByTerry Ombre Blackstar eyeshadow sticks 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
Monday, 28 July 2014
ByTerry Rose Infernal Collection: Eye Powder-Kajal, Rose de Rose, and Baume de Rose Fig Fiction
It's too darn hot right now, and when that happens, my mind always starts to think wistfully about cooler seasons, I'm not a happy summer bunny, alas. Not to mention that I always prefer the Autumn and Winter makeup collections to the ubiquitous summer bronze (with a splash of "unexpected" blue) that we've been seeing all summer every summer since, well, time began.
ByTerry is one of my favourite brands, and this micro-collection of makeup staples (the wider collection has two fragrances and some really lovely skincare, which I'll tell you about another time) is a lovely one:
Yeah, 'scuse the finger marks, I couldn't wait to try the lipbalm. Sorry! Not sorry. |
The Rose de Rose contains three shades, a pink-coral, a salmon-peach, and a pearly pink highlight. It comes complete with a small brush, and a good-sized embossed mirror. It does kick up a lot of dust on application, but it's really nice - pinker than you'd expect - colour on the skin:
This has been applied with a heavy hand to get the colour to show up in pictures, but a lighter application leaves you with a sheer pink rosy glow that looks almost lit from within. The different colours are probably too small to be able to get to the individual shades with the average blusher brush, but the pan is a great size for swirling. The powder smells divinely of roses, as does almost everything in this collection.
I do love a powder eyeliner, I own an entire set of the Guerlain loose kohls for example, and this is a good one. The tip of the applicator is actually a sponge, which is really handy, as it adds a bit of flexibility to the application process - Boots No7 did a limited powder liner with this kind of tip a few years ago, I've always wondered why they didn't bring it back to be honest - and with a black this black (for it is indeed very black. Indeed) you're going to need all the help you can get when you're putting it on:
It blends out easily, and a little goes a long, long way, so if you want to do a soft but intense smokey eye, this is great. You can see from the swatch above that there is not much grey in the formulation, so you're not going to end up with a wan, pale grey smokey eye here. You will get a lot of fall-out with this - it is the nature of the beast with eyeliners of this nature, to be honest, there's no avoiding it - so I suggest you do your eyes first and then do the rest of your make up, and especially your base, afterwards. It lasts and lasts, particularly on the waterline, and barely fades at all. I've not noticed any staining, but this is a great BLACK liner.
I'm not a massive fan of the original Baume de Rose, to be honest. It's actually a great balm, and has a really nourishing formulation, but the milky film of colour it leaves on the lips is, for me, a killer. With that in mind, I may have given a tiny whoop of delight when I saw the six new shades of Baume de Rose recently. This is Fig Fiction, a sheer and easily wearable plum colour.
Anything that isn't milky on the lips is a winner for me, and the sheer but not unpigmented colour is great. With the same gorgeous rosey scent as the original, this feels nourishing and cushiony on the lips, but it IS a balm, and therefore won't last very long. It's a pleasure to reapply (even though it does come in a pot, a particular bugbear of mine), so this shouldn't be too much of a hardship.
The ByTerry Rose Infernal collection will be instore from September (the blush costs £72, and the eyeliner will cost £29) but the coloured Baume de Rose collection is in SpaceNK now, and they cost £35 each. I'll be picking up Cherry Bomb and Bloom Berry come payday ...
The Fine Print: PR Samples
This post: ByTerry Rose Infernal Collection: Eye Powder-Kajal, Rose de Rose, and Baume de Rose Fig Fiction 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, 1 July 2014
By Terry - Cheek to Cheek: Cherry Cruise and Tint to Lip: Pink Palace
Enter By Terry, with a couple of stains perfect for the cack-handed muppets amongst us, and I'm happy to report that they're amongst the more affordable products in her range too, which is good news!
First, Cheek to Cheek in Cherry Cruise:
Best thing about this formula is that it is blendable. We have all seen cheek stains that stain from the very first instant it comes off the brush - STRIPES! - and have ended up with dolly-cheeks as a result, but with this one, you just drop a drop (two if you're braver than I am), rub it onto the fingers of both hands and blend into your cheeks. You'll have around a minute to play, and you won't get those little tell-tale circles on your mush.
However, nothing budges this stuff. It'll look the same when you come to take it off as it did when you first applied it, and that's fabulous. Just make sure you have kind lighting in your bathroom the first time you use it, as it can be easy to overapply when you're still getting used to it. I warn you!
Now, the Tint to Lip in Pink Palace, in the same two-phase formulation as the Cheek to Cheek above, it's purely for your lips:
Here it is both without the shimmer, and shaken to show the more opaque shimmery formula. A cooler-leaning raspberry pink, it is unusual for a lipstain in not going completely fuchsia as you might expect on the lips.
It is ... fairly ... long-lasting. It won't survive a sandwich, but a couple of cups of tea won't scare it completely off. Personally, I prefer the look of the tint without the shimmer on the lips, I think it looks a bit frosty with the shimmer and that isn't a good look on someone my age, whatever the shade, but the colour, for me is perfect. One coat is just enough to give my lips a whisper of colour, but you can build up the pigment for a more intense look.
Here you can see the differences between the colours more clearly. A bright cherry red, and a clear raspberry. Here's how they apply on the skin:
OBVIOUSLY I've overapplied! But you can see how the products stay runny when applied to the skin, which is what allows you some blending time. I wiped half of this off, and blended them out:
Again you can see the (slight) differences between the colours, and the sheen you get from shaking the product up. However for the cheeks, you really do only need a single drop, I probably applied enough for four cheeks here. The lips you'll probably need about two dips with the doe-foot sponge, more if you want to layer up. Both products have the classic By Terry rose scent, but it wears off quickly, and you don't have that nasty chemical after-taste with the lipstain.
Cheek to Cheek costs £29 and Tint to Lip is £22, which, in By Terry terms, is practically pocket change.
The Fine Print: PR Samples. Pictures for this post were taken with a Nokia Lumia 1020 lent by Microsoft.
This post: By Terry Cheek to Cheek and Tint to Lip 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
Thursday, 22 March 2012
Back to Basics - By Terry Sheer Expert
A holdover from my recent foundation "week" - and featuring the return of "Maurice", by popular request (you nutters) - This is Sheer Expert foundation by ... er ... by Terry. I've had this a little while now, and it's time I got my thoughts out on the interwebs.
Packaging
I love the signature by Terry metallic purple packaging, and this tube doesn't disappoint, squeezy and easy to read, it's a winner.
Formula
A rather runny liquid, with a rather whipped mousse-y kind of feeling on application, it's easy to spread, and blends with your natural skintone very well. It has an exceptionally strong rose-scent though, which some people won't be able to tolerate, but this wears off after a little while on the skin.
Shade Selection
This is available in ten shades - more than the average "high end" foundation (usually there are six, or, if you're lucky, eight), but it's still weighted towards white women, the darkest shade, "warm copper" doesn't look all that dark on the Space NK website. The shade in the swatches by the way is 03 Neutral Beige.
Coverage
Coverage, despite the word "sheer" in the name, is about medium, and is quite buildable, without becoming cakey.
Finish
It's quite a light, dewy finish, which I really like. I personally, don't powder over, but oilier skins might benefit from a dusting of your favourite powder to set it. You can barely feel it on your skin, and it's a pleasure to wear once the smell has worn off.
Wear
Wear is surprisingly good for such a light finish, I found it didn't need a reapplication for around eight hours or so.
Price
Okay, sit down. Are you sitting comfortably? Then I'll tell you. This little beauty is £44 a tube. Yes, you read that right. Forty four of your earth pounds. Admittedly, nothing in the by Terry range is cheap, but ... yeah, this is a little too rich for my blood.
Overall Thoughts
It's a nice product, if you like the smell of roses (personally, I do), but at this price, it's not outstanding.
The Fine Print: This turned up in a goodie bag, once upon a while ago.
This post originated at: http://getlippie.com All rights reserved.
Wednesday, 4 January 2012
By Terry - Rouge Terrybly 203 Fanatic Red & 304 Cherry Cherry
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.
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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