Holiday Beauty Haul & First Impressions
Today
I want to share with you the portion of my December beauty haul that
consists of the products that were not chosen out of necessity, but
rather, out of want. The other part was all re-purchases and things
that I already have a well formed opinion on that has also been
previously expressed. No, these are items, cousins of which I already
own in my collection, but figured, it's the holidays, and even though
I don't strictly need another eyeshadow, gosh it's nice to play with
something new.
First
up is the most practical of the three purchases – the Guerlain Cils
d'Enfer Maxi Lash Mascara. I'd seen glowing reviews of it here and
there and became intrigues. My previous mascara, the Chanel
Inimitable Intense, was all but dried up and flaky, and even though
it's held the top position of my favourite mascaras, I wanted to try
something new.
What
drew me to the Guerlain was the dainty tube – it's quite small and
flat, which I appreciate – the less space a mascara takes up in my
makeup bag, the better. I loathe obnoxious, gigantic mascara tubes!
And the other was that it has a straight forward, natural bristle
brush, which the Chanel does not. Since I hadn't bought Inimitable in
several years, I didn't understand why some people disliked the
plastic/rubber wand and said it hurt – I couldn't recall that it
did. Well, my eyes and skin must have gotten more sensitive since
then, because after using it again, I concur, it does hurt. Every
other day I feel like I've stabbed myself in the eye trying to do the
most natural thing – get the brush to the very roots of the lashes.
When the spikes hit the water line or the actual eye – instant
pain. It's not a deal breaker for me, I'd still re-purchase the
Chanel, but I wanted to try out something that might have the same
fluttery, demure effect but with a natural brush.
First
off, even though the tube is small, the brush is not so it took
several days of getting used to it to not keep getting mascara on my
eyelids. The tube itself feels very nice and despite the gold finish
doesn't really show fingerprints, which is awesome. The first time I
used it I was incredibly underwhelmed. I kept brushing my lashes and
trying to build up the product and nothing happened. One coat of the
Maxi Lash gives a very natural, your lashed but better, look. It's
definitely lengthening and separating rather than volumizing. On a
daily basis, I prefer the look that I achieve with the Chanel –
slightly more volume and the tips of the lashes come to a very
delicate, fine point. With the Maxi Lash, they appear more sparse,
longer and the tips come to a somewhat abrupt, blunt point. I'd heard
that this mascara could be built up later in the day if say you were
going out, so I decided to test this, because I've never been able to
layer more mascara on my lashes once it had dried – they just
became too dry and stiff to allow more product to go on. With this, I
could feel that it might actually work because once it dries, the
lashes feel very soft, not at all, um, crusty. And it did work! I
applied another coat maybe five hours later and a third one much
later in the evening and it definitely built up the drama. For a
daily look, the tip would be to do one eye, then the other, and come
back once the first one had dried to get more volume. I definitely
like the look once it's been built up. Also, the mascara is quite heavily
fragranced, which based on your preference, you may or may not like.
It's a perfumey scent, not a typical mascara one. I personally like
it although I think it's what makes my eyes tingle uncomfortably just
after having applied the mascara, but this feeling goes away after a
minute.
On
the negative side – I found this mascara incredibly hard to remove.
INCREDIBLY! Even the one, barely there coat. Removing three coats was
an epic undertaking. If you're impatient and waking up with still
some residue, which you thought after all that hard work, you'd
gotten all, irritates you, approach this product with caution. Its
major flaw, however, is that it transfers on me like crazy. After
about an hour or two, I can see a hazy grey circle forming under my
eye and by the end of the day it looks like I haven't slept in years.
In addition, I'll have black stripes of product settled in fine lines
in the corner of my eye. This is mind boggling to me that it would
travel so much and so far off my lashes, considering how hard it is
to remove. I will use it up and the positives of the product are
pleasant enough to do so, but realistically, I wouldn't re-purchase
it because of that last point. I have to opt for smokier looks so it
doesn't look so apparent that it's giving me panda-eyes, and wipe my
under eye area with a tissue several times a day to look presentable.
I
don't have a lot of eyeshadow, but what I do have is all high-end,
and honestly, everything is of so-so quality when it comes to
creasing, longevity, fallout and colour payoff, so I've become very
skeptical of the product as a whole. Maybe wanting true-to-pan
colour, that lasts, doesn't crease and stays on the lid and nowhere
else, IS asking for the moon?? I don't know... I've always preferred
singles, duos and trios to any larger compilations of shadows, as I
feel like you're paying for wanting one or two colours anyway, and
the rest are just a nuisance and waste of time, precious space and
money. Smashbox isn't available where I live but I hear and read
about it all the time in the beautysphere. Since this is a more
“makeup artist” than “luxury/high-end/department store” brand, I
wanted to give them a shot when the opportunity presented itself.
Smashbox have lots and lots of trios, a no nonsense format I like. No
useless little mirror, travel-friendly and compact. After an ungodly
amount of time devoted to looking for swatches of their trios on the
internet, I narrowed it down to two that I might want. Only one was
available where I bought mine – Photo Op Eye Shadow Trio in Cover
Shoot.
When
I swatched a bunch of these trios at the store, they wowed me with
how pigmented they were. However, I have to conclude that it was just
a couple of them that had darker browns and blacks that stuck in my
mind, because the really nude ones were barely registrable and very
similar, so my initial impression of great pigmentation is really hit
or miss depending on the trio. I chose Cover Shoot because I thought
it was purple and would compliment a couple of other eyeshadows I
already have. When I got it home I realized two things – it wasn't
nearly as pigmented as I had thought, and it was definitely not
purple. The colours are a sort of blend of the two families of colour
I dislike the most (on my eyes) – brown and grey - while being
neither. This combo is actually very flattering on me and depending
on the light I still feel like there's some purple in there,
something that would definitely be set off if paired with a purple
liner or cream shadow.
All
of the colours are a step down from what I expected them to be in
terms of pigmentation. I thought the lightest shade, Flirt, would be a good
all over the lid shade, but it's more like an inner corner
highlight/center of the lid pop. I imagined I'd use the middle shade, Dusk, for drama in the outer corner, however it's more like an all over lid
shade. And finally, I thought the darkest, Haze, would be strictly useful
for liner, but it's more like a crease/outer v shade. It depends on
how you look at things – are these shadows not very pigmented, or
are they effortless and impossible to overdo? It's a case of glass half full or empty. You decide.
I
actually love the look that I get with these. If I worked in an
office and saved my vampier, more adventurous looks for evenings out
and days off, this would be my go to everyday look that says “I'm
alluring but I also mean business”. Which is why I'm so sad that
these crease on me, fast and badly... Base or no base. Also, these
are the most powdery eyeshadows I have – so much product kicks up
when you barely touch it with a brush... Just, ugh! I feel like this
has SO much potential to be so much better. Coupled with the Maxi
Lash mascara, let's just say I've been rocking a very worn in grungy
look trying these out lately =p. In spite of the underwhelming
performance of the Cover Shoot trio, I'm actually not deterred from
trying more of them, Quick Take, which was the other one I wanted, in
particular, should I see it in-store someday.
Last
but not least, I got the Clarins Colours of Brazil Summer Bronzng
Compact. Now, I'm not about to start collecting an overwhelming
amount of face colour products – neither my budget nor space
allowance can really hold much more than I already have. In fact, I
hadn't really placed much importance on blush and bronzer until
recently, so when I unexpectedly hit pan on my Guerlain 4 Seasons
Bronzer, I panicked and NEEDED a backup. I wasn't really looking to
try anything new, but then I learned that they weren't carrying that
particular line of Guerlain bronzers where I shop. Some other
counters didn't either, others had some but not my colour, 00 Nude. I
panicked!
I
needed to find something similar. Unfortunately, I couldn't find
anything suitable for fair skin that also had a sort of blush shade
incorporated, like the Guerlain. Boo! I did however decide my new one
needed to have several colours that I could play around with. I had a
couple of candidates – Dior Nude, but the way the colour is pressed
you don't really have any other option than to swirl it all together,
same with the mosaic bronzer Guerlain make. I ended up narrowing my
options down to Clarins – either their bronzing duo from their
permanent line, or last summer's limited edition one. Even though I
couldn't swatch the Colours of Brazil bronzer, I ended up choosing it
because you get twice the amount of product for just slightly more
money, in stunning packaging. In fact, as I'm writing this, the
Clarins UK site has this compact on sale, so you get twice the amount
of product for 7GBP LESS than the regular one!
The
compact is nice and big, something I didn't expect to like having
become accustomed to using the little quadrants of my Guerlain
bronzer. It comes in a velvet pouch and a spectacularly useless
little brush that's housed in a little pocket, crookedly sewn onto
the back of said pouch. The compact itself is beautiful however. It
doesn't feel as nice and heavy as the Guerlain, which isn't a tragedy
by any means. The mirror opens to a full 180 degrees, which I think
should be the norm.
You
get three shades, a lighter and darker bronze and a tiny square of
shimmery peach, which you can't really access on its own unless you
use an eye brush. All of this is embossed with a design that mimics
that of the lid. The powder is as tightly packed as the Guerlain
bronzer – not a single visible speck of product kicks up when you
put your brush in it, so feel free to swirl with gusto, you won't
make a mess! The Clarins bronzer has better colour payoff, which is
great, but I wasn't expecting it, so I sort of over did it the first
couple of applications. Overall, it provides a similar, heathy summer
glow that the 4 Seasons Bronzer does. I use both my Fine Kalla KK002
and RMK powder brush to apply it, depending on my mood, but I really
prefer the RMK because of how quick and easy it is to add colour to
my face, neck and decolletage.
The
only thing I dislike about the powder, is the fragrance. It's not
strong, but if you don't like the plastic scent of those room
fresheners you plug in the wall, you won't care for this either and
despite it being faint, might obsess about it like me. But it's
really a minor thing and all down to preference.
Of
all of my holiday beauty purchases, the Clarins Bronzing Powder is by
far my favourite. I shouldn't be running out of bronzer any time
soon! As for eyeshadows, I'm a little bit discouraged at this point,
but the search for the perfect formula will continue. And the next
mascara I'll try when the Guerlain is gone, will either be Volume de
Chanel or... Something else ;). Hope everyone had a marvelous new year's eve and here's to 2015 bringing new and exciting things =).
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