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Sunday, 13 December 2015
LipsNspritz 13 December 2015
I really enjoyed this week's #LipsNspritz, thanks to making a stupendous discovery about Shalimar that I've always missed before. Sometimes having a "before" nose and an "after" nose thanks to my anosmia and my parosmia has it's blessings! Anyway, more about that when I get to the Thursday part of today's post.
Monday was Aesop Marrakech Intense with Lanolips Apples. I love the peppery-spicy rose of the original Aesop Marrakech a huge amount, without at all falling into the Christmassy spice trap, it's a true treat for spice lovers. Ironically, Marrakech Intense drops a little of the peppery-tickly spiciness in favour of a brighter, greener, altogether fresher (without actually turning into a "fresh" scent) take on the spice market, but it's still lovely, nonetheless. It's rosier too, and slightly easier to wear as a result, I guess. Lanolips Apples is a lovely red balm that nourishes a treat on the lips, and never looks fuchsia when you're wearing it, which is something I really appreciate.
Tuesday brought DSquared2's She Wood and Givenchy Le Rouge Givenchy in Rose Dressing. Sadly, something in the formulation of She Wood smells "burned" to my parosmic nose, and I wasn't able to get past that to smell anything else in there, but I'm given to understand that She Wood is a pleasant woody fragrance, designed to smell good to women who like to wear men's fragrances - it has vetiver in the base, which is, I suspect what my nose is reacting too. I'll smell this one again in a few months, I think and see what happens then. Givenchy le Rouge Givenchy in Rose Dressing is a lovely neutral rose-pink, perfect for unthreatening days in the office.
Wednesday was YSL Black Opium and Lipstick Queen Rat Pack. I'd not smelled Black Opium before, and it's a nice fragrance, but it's about as far removed from the original Opium as, say, the smell of freshly brewed coffee is. Inoffensive, and packaged in a gorgeously sparkly bottle, it's a great perfume for people who don't remember the original, and just want to smell "nice". Lipstick Queen Rat Pack, from the Velvet Rope collection is a fabulous red lipstick though, feather light, and with a HUGE punch of pigment, it's one of my favourites.
On Thursday, I thought I'd wear Guerlain. For some reason, in spite of not, actually, liking it very much, I have acquired at least five bottles of Shalimar, of differing strengths, formulations and vintages, but the old classic and I have never really gotten along that well. I've always found it a thick, rather oily and smoky perfume, like an old fur jacket that's spent too long around cigar smokers, and I've found the vanilla overpowers literally everything else in the fragrance. I've read myriad reviews of Shalimar that rave about the bright and sparkling bergamot opening, but for some reason, my nose has always gone straight to the base, and not found it lovely. However, this week, after having not worn Shalimar at all for a couple of years I sprayed it with some trepidation and presto! Bright and sparkling bergamot ahoy! It was a glorious revelation, all the more precious because I've literally never smelled it before. Best of all, the bergamot beat the vanilla into submission so this was infinitely more wearable for me than ever before, parosmia or no parosmia. A happy discovery, and I'm looking forward to trying more of my Shalimar wardrobe as a result. Lipstick was Guerlain Rouge G in Madame Flirte, a lovely soft red.
I was interviewing candidates for a job on Friday morning, so nothing too unusual or outré was required and this Eau des Minimes from Couvent Des Minimes was just what the doctor ordered. A clean and classic herbaceous-citrus cologne, it was bright and lively, and not too long-lived. And can I just say how much I love the packaging? It's really rather lovely. I wore Lipstick Queen Saint Wine, which may just be my favourite lipstick of all time with it. Didn't want to scare the poor accountants!
Saturday was a pyjama day - still trying to shake this hideous cold off - but I dug out my bottle of Guerlain Teazzurra, which is one of their Aqua Allegorica collection (and, I believe, soon to be discontinued, so if you've been interested in it at all, then you might want to snap one up now). Teazzurra is based around citrus and black tea accords, and it smells like nothing more than sweet, sift and lovely lemon tea. Not the most sophisticated fragrance, possibly, and definitely not very complex, it doesn't last at all long, but it's lovely whilst it does. I wore it with a Clinique Chubby Stick Intense in Plushest Punch, because even when you're ill, sometimes you want to look (and smell) nice, don't you?
What've you been wearing this week?
The Fine Print: PR Samples and purchases.
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Skincare of the Week - 13 December 2015
Not a hugely exciting week skincare-wise, admittedly - I'm still ill and still look like death warmed up (if death was into the fourth week of a cough that makes them puke at regular intervals, that is) - but I did get my Caroline Hirons Skincare box this week, so from Tuesday onwards you can see the Tata Harper Rejuvenating Serum, and the Dr Dennis Gross Retinol Eye Cream have been added to my regular rotation. I can't judge their results yet - indeed, it would be unfair to do so, seeing how grotty I look generally at the moment, to be honest - but they're a nice addition to my routine and I'm looking forward to seeing how they work generally once I recover. The box was a good one though, especially as I got back ups of some longtime faves, the May Lindstrom Blue Cocoon Balm, alongside the Zelens PHA+ Bio Peel Resurfacing Pads, in the box too. But more about those products in particular later this week.
I also added some Hydraluron back into my routine, both in the serum and the moisturising jelly formulation. I do like a bit of hyaluronic acid in my routine, and I like Hydraluron very much - I especially like the moisturising jelly as a great hydrating moisturiser for oily/combination skin that doesn't need an oily cream over the top as well. They were on offer at Boots recently, £30 for the serum, the jelly and a box of sheet masks for £30, which is a humongous bargain! I may have bought a couple of them!
I think my dreadful cough is on the wane now, hopefully I'll be back to looking like a human by Christmas ...
The Fine Print: Stuff and things from my cupboard and that.
This post: Skincare of the Week - 13 December 2015 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, 9 December 2015
Votary Cleansing Oil
I love discovering new brands, and browsing around Liberty a good few weeks ago, I was intrigued by Votary Cleansing Oil. From the colour of the bottle - a pleasing bright green, that stands out so beautifully from the white and pastels of many other skincare brands - the gorgeous rose-gold label, Votary looks different to many other skincare brands, and it has a slightly different ethos too.
Designed by makeup artist Arabella Preston, the Votary website has this to say about cleansing (and I quote it here in full because I couldn't agree with it any more if I'd actually written it myself):
‘You’ve been told that clean skin should feel stretched and tight. That’s simply not true. Massage this natural oil into your skin, and follow it with a hot flannel for a fantastic way to cleanse your face and remove make-up. It leaves your skin feeling clean, soft and plumped."
Skin should not feel taut, or squeaky after cleansing. Ever. It's a hard habit to break though, and initial trials of oil-based cleansing are often abandoned by people who claim that their skin feels "coated" or "unclean" afterwards, when in fact they're actually so used to having their skin stripped and dehydrated by (usually) foaming cleansers, that they no longer know what healthy and hydrated skin really feels like! I spent years thinking my skin was both dry and acne-prone when in fact what was happening was that I was stripping my skin so much that it was flaking off because the foaming cleansers I favoured were just removing the oils my skin needed, and spots were just being caused by the inflammation caused by the harsh chemicals.
Discovering oil cleansers - my first was Origins Liquid Crystal, long discontinued now, but held in high esteem here, even now - was the saviour of my skin. So I am delighted to have Votary in my rotation now. It's a slightly viscous oil that spreads easily over the skin, and is particularly suited to massage. It smells delightful (lovely when you have a hot flannel over your face, and are inhaling the steam before you start to remove it), and has an exceptionally short ingredient list; Sunflower, Apricot, Jojoba, Grape Seed, Rose Geranium, and Chamomile oil, essentially.
It does remove makeup, but I like it as a second cleanse for it's nourishing and massage-worthy qualities. One thing you do need to know about the formula is that it absolutely, postively, totally does not emulsify, and so can only really be properly removed with a cloth. Luckily, Votary Cleansing Oil provides a generously sized and luxurious cloth in the box. It costs £45, which I'm aware is a high price, but with such a clean ingredient list, it's not really a surprise that it's on the expensive side. The bottle is a generous one, and you don't need much to cleanse your whole face and neck - I've been using mine 5-6 times a week (mostly as a night cleanse, which is why you don't see it so much on my weekly skincare posts - I'm too lazy to document my skincare twice a day) and I've probably used about an eighth of the bottle so far, if that, so it lasts and lasts. I think I've probably got at least another 5 months or so usage in there, anyway.
An investment purchase then. But if you don't invest in your skin, no one else will. You can find Votary in Liberty Beauty Hall, or at their online shop. If you care about your skin, Votary will care for your skin.
The Fine Print: Personal purchase.
This post: Votary 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, 7 December 2015
Clinique Deep Comfort Body Oil
First things first; I don't have dry skin. Secondly, I don't use body lotion, as a rule. These two facts may be related. I do, however, occasionally get dry shins in winter. I wear trousers a lot, don't wear a full-length coat for fear of looking like a hobbit, and so my shins, protected only by my trousers and the tights I usually wear beneath are the bits of my body most exposed to the weather, really. There's always a week, every winter where my shins get so dry and flaky that they ITCH like nothing on earth and it drives me bananas.
And still body lotion seems like too much of a faff, frankly. They're always too scented, or too thick, or just take too damn long to rub in, and I just can't be bothered. Enter Clinique Deep Comfort Body Oil, a light spray that has just enough heft to be able to hydrate even the most crocodilesque of shins, yet is light enough to barely need any rubbing in whasoever. It literally sinks into skin almost as soon as it is sprayed on, and soothes the itchiest of limbs. I love it.
At £21 or so for quite a small 125ml bottle, however, I suspect my drier-skinned friends (of whom I have many) will be cursing at the price. Admittedly you don't need very much at all, I found one spray per shin plenty to go around. For me, based on two weeks a year usage, and two sprays per shin per day, whilst I doubt I'll ever finish the bottle in this lifetime, as an emergency itch-relief product, it can't be beaten.
This post: Clinique Deep Comfort Body 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
Sunday, 6 December 2015
LipsNspritz of the Week 06.12.15
After spending last weekend doused in Tom Ford's finest Black Orchid (albeit in the new Eau de Toilette version rather than the EdP), I was obviously stuck in a rather Tom Ford kind of groove for the early part of this week.
Monday brought Tom Ford Black Violet, a scent which I have always preferred to Black Orchid, for some reason (but it's now discontinued), a gloriously rich and decadent fragrance, one which reminds me of the glory days of women's cinema in the forties. It's a fragrance with shoulder pads and red lipstick, which I subverted by not wearing shoulder pads, and wearing with MAC Hot Tahiti, which is a slightly browned wine-shade, which reads like a neutral on my lips. I did wear black leather though ...
Tuesday was Tom Ford Tuscan Leather, long one of my favourite fragrances. I was surprised on wearing it this time, however (the first since I lost my sense of smell last year) that I can now pick up the raspberry notes that, in other writers descriptions, have always mystified me somewhat. A nice discovery! It still smells leathery to me - which I love - but now it has an extra dimension that I never noticed previously, a great thing. I wore it with Bare Minerals Call The Shots which is a great red lipstick.
Wednesday brought a neglected gem from my perfume collection, which was Maison Francis Kurkdjian Amyris Femme. This had been shuffled to the back of one of my drawers, and I confess that I'd completely forgotten about it as a result. I'm completely kicking myself about that now, as it is incredibly beautiful. I described it on Instagram as luminous and sheer, bright with citrus in the opening, and warm with woods and resins in the base. Classy and expensive-smelling, it's radiant and gorgeous, and I can't wait, actually, to wear it again. So I'm wearing it again today as I write this ... I paired it with Laura Mercier Cherries Jubilee Lip Parfait, which is a sheer natural red, which I like a great deal too.
I spent some of Thursday talking to various government bods (like you do) so I thought I'd wear something classic. Naturally, when I opened the box, I was a bit hacked off that my bottle of Chanel No 5 was actually a bottle of Chanel No5 Eau Premiere. Not the end of the world, admittedly, but annoying, especially when it turns out that Eau Premiere is just a little too restrained for my damaged nose to pick up in any detail. It's very nice, I'm sure, but it's no No5. Now I'm wondering where my bottle of No5 has got to, I know I have one! I wore it with Revlon ColorStay Moisture Stain in India Intrigue, which is one of my favourite pinks, as it lasts and lasts. It does dry a bit though.
On Friday, I was planning to meet some friends for dinner, so an old favourite fragrance was in order, and I picked Guerlain Pamplune Aqua Allegorica. Grapefruit scents have been tricky for me for a while, thanks to their sulphurous qualities (I struggle with vetiver as well for the same reason), but I think it's coming back now. Either way, Pamplune smelled good, well as good as a sweaty grapefruit (and I mean that in a good way) can, let's put it like that. I wore it with Smashbox Lip Lacquer in Legendary Red, which is a smashing red - I'm ashamed it's taken me so long to wear it.
Saturday I was ill, again, I'm totally fed up with it now, but it's becoming a way of life at the moment, it appears. Anyhoo, I still wanted to smell good, so I picked up my bottle of Balmain Ivoire, which is soapy-fabulous (even though rather thin in comparison to its 80's-tastic fabulousness before reformulations and re-releases happened to it) and classy and very, very clean. Still lovely. I had been planning to wear it with a revlon lipstain, but as I spent the day in my pyjamas, that didn't actually happen ...
What've you been wearing?
The Fine Print: PR Samples and purchases, all combined.
This post: LipsNspritz of the Week 06.12.15 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
Skincare of the Week 06.12.15
Having sensitive skin whilst the seasons are changing can be awkward, certainly I find that I have to be extra careful with the active ingredients in skincare when the weather is at its least predictable. Still being ill with a cough really isn't helping, either. My skin has been on the verge of being really reactive this week (I can usually tell as tiny bumps start appearing on my temples), so I've swapped my routines around a bit, to be a bit kinder to my skin.
I have dropped the acids from my daytime routines and I'm now only using them a couple of times a week - at night. This gives my skin time to recover from using them whilst I sleep, and stops my skin getting irritated by the weather so much during the day. I'm going to avoid using glycolic all over for a while until my skin settles down again.
In other news, I've re-introduced one of my all-time favourite skincare brands back into my routine - namely Kate Somerville. I'm so happy to have Goat Cream (you can see it in my Thursday PM pic above) back in my routine. It's gentle and soothing, and thanks to the lactic acid, it's also ever so slightly exfoliating. I've been using the Pixi Skintreats Glow Peel Pads to exfoliate my chin separately, however, as I have a semi-permanent build up of sebum there, and I'm hoping the 20% glycolic on those pads will help deal with that.
Now, if only these things helped with cold sores ...
The Fine Print: PR Sample
This post: Skincare of the Week 06.12.15 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
Tuesday, 1 December 2015
LipsNspritz of the Fortnight, Pt II
This week, I basically took a "lucky dip" approach to my perfume and lipstick choices. After three months and nearly 80 lipstick and perfume pictures, I realise I'm probably something like a quarter of the way through my fragrance collection, and possibly, maybe, a tenth (perhaps?) of the way through my lipsticks. There's a few months of this to go, yet, I think!
Monday was Miller Harris Cassis en Feuille, which bears a passing resemblance to Jo Malone London's Blackberry & Bay (a perennial autumn favourite), but just has a little more grassy vetiver in the mix, so has a little more ... oomph. I wore it with MAC All Out Gorgeous, which is rather aply named.
Tuesday was Etat Libre d'Orange's Antiheros, which is the lavenderiest lavender there ever was. Luca Turin described it as "cheap lavender soap, but strong", and so it proves to be. I've missed lavender a lot whilst I've been parosmic (up until recently, it has smelled burned and awful), and to have it back is wonderful. Lavender contains such a variety of scents, it's herbal and floral, and has a hint of balsam, and mints in there too. That it is maligned as a "granny scent" is an eternal mystery to me. I wore it with Charlotte Tilbury's Red Carpet Red which is one of the best red lipsticks ever.
Wednesday had me in something just a little more ladylike, the musky prettiness of Sarah Jessica Parker's Lovely. I only like a couple of celebrity fragrances, and this is a good one. It reminds me of Narciso Rodriguez, only at a much more acceptable price-point. I wore it with Illamasqua Stark, which I also like very much, though it's a little patchier than I recall it being on application.
Thursday brought a board meeting and Lancome's Climat - a little-known fragrance from Lancome's back-catalogue. It's a sweet and powdery ladylike little whisper of a thing, a proper "Grown-Up" fragrance so I rarely wear it, for that reason. Paired with Stila Long-last Lipgloss in Firey (I think, the label has worn off), it saw me through a board meeting where I managed not to kill anyone, so a winner, I think.
Friday I wore Boucheron by Boucheron, which is a big heavy-hitter of a floral fragrance, in a beautiful bottle, designed like a piece of jewellery, which always delights when I spray it. Paired with Estee Lauder lipstick in Dominant, which is a very fine pink indeed.
On Saturday I was heading to a party in Soho, so I wore the ultimate party-girl fragrance: Tom Ford Black Orchid, in the new eau de toilette formulation, still loud, and one of the happiest fragrances around, it's a joy. I paired it with the Matte Balm from Revlon in Striking, which is the loudest red I own, and wore them both with sequins. A jolly good time was had by all.
The Fine Print: PR Samples and purchases.
This post: LipsNspritz of the Fortnight, Pt II 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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