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.
No trip to Paris is complete without a trip to Guerlain. And, no trip to Guerlain is complete without a purchase, come to that. This time I wanted to make my souvenir very special, something I can't find in the UK, and the ladies of the Champs Elysée did me proud on this trip:
The gift wrapping in store is exquisite, it was heartbreaking to have to unwrap this. So what is it? (some of you might already have guessed, from the title of the post, I'm aware)
Can you tell what it is yet?
How about now?
That's right, it's a candle. But oh my, what a candle. Guerlain have four scents, and for me it was toss-up between this one and Bois des Indes (Indian Woods), but after sniffing several times, I finally settled for Hiver en Russie (Russian Winter), as it is full of incense and is heady with myrrh, making it, for me a perfect candle for the darker months.
I think it will make a perfect pairing with my Tom Ford Tuscan Leather candle (oddly, both are black candles) for a smoke-y intoxicating scent for the winter evenings. I can't wait to light them both together.
This post originated at: http://getlippie.com All rights reserved.
I love wandering around foreign supermarkets (heck, I love wandering around supermarkets in the UK too - I'm a bit odd that way) looking for things I haven't seen before. On this trip, I picked up a few bits and pieces which, whilst not all that interesting in themselves - they're things like shower gel and deodorants - are different enough from the stuff I can get in the UK to have made me want them.
Here we go:
Shower gels. Rhubarb and custard! Seriously, why can't we get rhubarb scented products in the UK? Whilst I'm the first to admit I don't really care for fruity scents, as soon as I saw this one, I flipped and had to buy it. It smells, almost precisely like rhubarb and custard flavoured boiled sweets. I love it. And hey, rhubarb is a vegetable. So there. I also bought the vanilla and pain d'epices scented variety. A creamy smelling shower gel complete with tiny bits of "gingerbread" in the formulation, this smells good enough to eat. I won't though. But it's tempting.
Yeah, I went a bit crazy buying deodorants. I'm an idiot and had forgotten to pack one, so when I spotted these, in scents difficult to find in the UK, I had to pick them up. From left to right we have an amber scent, a vanilla scent, and a green tea and mint. I can't believe no one makes an amber scented deodorant in the UK, it's a beautiful soft-smelling deodorant, which will layer beautifully with any number of my perfumes this winter. I bought the vanilla because hey! Who doesn't want pits that smell of cake? And the mint one? Well, I go a bit wibbly when it comes to body-products that smell of mint, so this one just had to come home with me. It'll pair wonderfully with my Guerlain Herba Fresca perfume. Might be one to save for the warmer months though.
Cotton wool. I'm a bit of a snob when it comes to cotton wool, surprisingly. I have to have pads, and they have to be embossed ones. I find them so much better to use than just plain smooth cotton wool, especially when it comes to removing nail varnish. Embossed cotton wool just seems to work better with liquids, and smooth cotton wool works better for creams and lotions in my experience.
Here you can see the edges of the pads are bonded - slightly - and you have both a smooth and a rougher side. I may have accidentally bought four packs of this back ...
Anything caught your eye?
This post originated at: http://getlippie.com All rights reserved.
I don't think it's legal to come back from a trip to France without a lipstick as one of your souvenirs. Well, if your blog is called Get Lippie, you kind of have to, don't you? And, if it's France, well, that lipstick has to be red.
I spotted the Rouge Baiser lipsticks on our last trip to Paris, and had been kicking myself ever since for not picking one up, so this time, I was a woman determined to get hold of one.
I adore the packaging:
The pewter case (sadly, plastic), the sunburst detailing, it's too gorgeous for words. If I were a different kind of blogger I'd be saying all kinds of wanky crap like "c'est magnifique!" and "tres chic!" but I find that kind of pretentious Franglais irritating beyond belief, so you'll have to settle for me saying "gorgeous" instead. So there.
Because it is.
Did I mention that it's red?
A semi-matte finish, the red of 302 (and I can't pretend that I'm not disappointed the shades have numbers instead of names, because I am) is a blue-based highly pigmented shade, that covers lips in one coat. I don't find it particularly drying, but, like most long-lasting lipsticks (Rouge Baiser state that this is a "comfort long last lipstick) it's not as emollient as many other lipsticks you might have tried in the past, but it slips well over the lips, and you won't feel like your lips have been run through a shredder if you've been wearing it for a few hours.
It's a classic red shade, and I'll be wearing a lot this winter. What was best about it, was the price: 13 Euros. For the packaging alone, I'm happy to pay that price! I bought a separate shade to give to my mother for some French Christmas glamour for her too.
Do you buy cosmetics when you're away? What do you look for? Tomorrow I'll be showing you some supermarket purchases that I just couldn't resist buying whilst I was away ...
This post originated at: http://getlippie.com All rights reserved.
Just a few - a very few - snapshots of my weekend in Paris:
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Normal posting will resume tomorrow ...
This post originated at: http://getlippie.com All rights reserved.
It's been a while, but it's back, back, b a c k!
Here's what I've been wearing on me mush over the last seven days:
From left to right we have:
Lanolips Lemonaid (love this stuff, particularly when my lips are really dry and hard in the cold weather, this softens them up a treat.
Dior Lip Polish, shade No 2. Similar to the above, but leaves a slight milky pink colour behind
By Terry: Terrybly 302 Fanatic Red - you'll be able to read more about this lipstick later on in the week.
Chantecaille Lip Chic - Tea Rose. One of my default lip shades, there is barely a week that goes by that I don't reach for this one.
Poppy King for No7 lipgloss in Glamour. Lovely light pink shade that perks up my lips a treat.
Clinique Lip Smoothie in Strawberry Bliss - this came as part of a GWP recently, but it's a shimmering My Lips But Better shade, that I wore more or less the entire time I was in Paris this weekend.
Tom Ford - Indian Rose. As with the Chantecaille above, this is a shade I reach for again and again and again. I'm going to need a backup.
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It's been - with one notable exception, a neutral kind of week.
Here are some (blurry - sorry!) swatches:
What've you been wearing?
This post originated at: http://getlippie.com All rights reserved.
No real post today, for as you read this, I'm in Paris. I shall be eating, drinking, getting a facial, hitting the Christmas markets, and - of course! - doing a little shopping. I'll be back next week with some (edited) highlights for you. In the meantime, here's a little something to look at:
This post originated at: http://getlippie.com All rights reserved.