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    I’ve got a Fever for the perfect fall blush | MAC Fever Powder Blush review, swatches, photos

    The product: MAC Powder Blush in Fever (Matte)

    So, weird little confession coming up. When I’m toeing the line between “vaguely healthy” and “deliriously feverish,” I actually look… healthy. Seriously, it’s like, the only time I ever have a “healthy flush.”

    (A little less sickly and I’m just a weird interpretation of pale; a little more and I look like someone’s got me on a stretching rack. Probably because my brain is being held captive on a stretching rack by the flu.)

    Where was I going with this?

    Oh, right. MAC Fever! And the fact that it’s quite pretty.

    MAC Fever Powder Blush swatches

    Consider it a strange personality quirk, but I’m really into wearing tiny amounts of really pigmented products, rather than normal amounts of medium-sheer ones. With blushes like Fever, it’s just so easy to get that flushed-from-within glow, because you need so little that they wear like a stain – that is, you can’t see evidence of blusher on your cheeks, no matter how up-close-and-personal you get, and they just last and last and last.

    Fever is a really intense, matte raspberry red. MAC describes it as a reddish-burgundy, but I’d go more along the lines of… I don’t know; a brownish raspberry. (Raspberry, oxidized!) It’s honestly just – god, the pigmentation is ridiculous, and the shade! It’s utterly perfect for that expanded-capillaries, blood-beneath-your-skin effect, and the amount of pigment (not to mention, the depth of colour) means it’ll show up on pretty much everyone.

    Keep reading… the review’s not nearly done yet! »

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    “Glossy” smokey eyes | How to get a wet-finish, faux-gloss lid

    Matte black base / Faux-glossy eye / Faux-glossy eye with gloss applied on top

    Dear internet, I AM SORRY FOR BEING BORING. I’m going to start making it up to you today, though! :D

    One lid look that I’ve always been a huge fan of is that “glossy” finish, but it’s one that doesn’t exactly wear well off the runways. No matter what kind of gloss you’re using, the facts are the facts: oils and emollients on your lids will make your shadow crease, no matter how many primers you wear or how careful you are.

    So, here’s how to get my theNotice approved™ faux-glossy smokey eye. Come on – you know you want to.

    How to get the faux-gloss finish »

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    theNotice’s fourth-year celebrations | The Colour Giveaway

    Sorry that this is a week late! It took me ages to finish photographing this one; I forgot until the last minute & autumn in Edmonton has finally hit. (Translation: I get home at five, and the sun starts setting at five-thirty. Not optimal.)

    But I digress!

    This giveaway includes: two Annabelle 4Show Eyeshadow Quads (ahem, can someone please make a four-show/four-year joke? Please?) in Pop-Eye and Vivid-Eye, plus three FaceFront Lip Lust Sheer Hydratone Lip Balms in Can’t Elope, LUSTQuest, and Kiwi for Lunch. Aren’t they adorable? ;o)



    More photos »

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    Holiday shopping | Bare Escentuals, Benefit, and Bobbi Brown

    Each Holiday season, we try to put together a bit of a “holiday shopping guide” – a simple, concise way for you to check out this year’s holiday collections, without having to do all the digging yourselves.

    The Shopstyle widgets went over pretty well in 2010, so that’s what we’re using this year, too. My apologies to those of you reading this through a feed (depending on what you’re using, the widgets may not show up), but it’s so much easier for me to put together a few of these than it is to save hundreds of images to my hard drive, re-upload them, and track down the pricing and details. If you’re getting a whole lot of nothing below this paragraph, click here to view the post on theNotice!

    Enjoy the post, and happy shopping! xx

    Bare Escentuals

    Benefit

    Bobbi Brown

    (Next week: Dior, Laura Mercier, and NARS)

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    Bottega Veneta Eau de Parfum review | An autumnal classic

    The product: Bottega Veneta Eau de Parfum

    Up until about a month ago, I was completely certain that the hilight of the Fall 2011 launches would be Balenciaga L’Essence, the flanker to the original Balenciaga Paris (one of my all-time favourite scents).

    And then the Bottega Veneta Eau de Parfum came creeping out of nowhere, like some incredibly stealthy ninja cat, and I think it’s safe to say that it blew us all away. I mean – I wasn’t even aware that the house was doing a fragrance until their videos went live, and now I can’t get it out of my head.

    See? Stealthy.

    The fragrance

    Made to capture an elegant, austere villa in the Venetian countryside, the Bottega Veneta scent is just perfect: classic without inundating your olfactory glands with aldehydes, leathery without coming off as too masculine, and distinctive enough to make you go hmm, okay, I like that without a discordant shock of contradictions.

    It features naturally-sourced Italian bergamot, Indian Jasmine Sambac, and Indonesian patchoulli at its heart, and is accented by leather, Brazilian pink peppercorns, and the suggestion of mown hay, flowers, earth, and wood.

    My thoughts on the scent

    The top and base note separate well, but I get a lot of bergamot and leather from this overall – perfect for fall, and exactly (exactly!) what I had wanted this to be.

    Like a luxe leather handbag, the drydown is smooth and supple, with the sillage and tenacity you’d expect from a gently leather-based EdP. One spritz is enough to create a sheer veil of fragrance that lasts throughout the day, and it wears just close enough to the skin: noticeable to those around you, but without leaving you swimming in headache-inducing sillage. It opens with fresh bergamot and patchouli, and wears with a dry warmth – no syrupy stickiness.

    For what it’s worth, if I had to pick just one scent department store fragrance to wear for the rest of, um, forever – this may well be the one.

    Keep reading »

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    The Neutrals | Annabelle Smoothie Eyeshadow Pencil review, photos, swatches

    The product: Annabelle Smoothie Eyeshadow Pencils in Melonade, Mokamirage, Cocoaloco, and Licoriche.

    The shades: Annabelle’s definitely outdone themselves on this colour range, if you ask me! It’s great to see such a variation of shades from a drugstore company, and to be honest, I wouldn’t expect any less from my favourite Canadian drugstore brand ;) There are eight shades available right now, four neutrals and four brights, and while that isn’t a ton, what’s really great about it is that all eight shades are different.

    So,  yeah. If you give the formula a try and you really, really love it… well. You’re going to need all eight of ’em.

    Melonade is a distinctive peachy, melony shade. Mokamirage (my favourite) is a lovely taupey-champagne. Cocoaloco is a medium-light brown, sort of a slightly bronzed chocolate. Licoriche is a smooth, matte black.

    I’d love to see an inner corner shade added to the line (Melonade’s rather too orange to use as such, at least for me), but aside from that, I can’t really think of any “essentials” that they missed.

    Swatched L-R: Melonade, Mokamirage, Cocoaloco, Licoriche

    Swatched L-R, blended: Melonade, Mokamirage, Cocoaloco, Licoriche

    The formula: as I pointed out in our review of Licoriche, these feature the exact same formula (and really similar packaging, to be honest) as Urban Decay’s 24/7 Glide-On Eye Pencils ($24) – so at under $9 CAD, Annabelle Smoothies are definitely a great buy. Both lines have a great colour range, in terms of brights and neutrals, but I don’t know if there are any spot-on dupes.

    I find these pencils a bit difficult to work with; they glide on really smoothy, but don’t blend out very well – I have to pull at my lids in order to move the colour, and they tend to go a bit patchy if sheered out.

    The wear: The first time I tried these, I tried a really sheer layer… and, predictably, was a mess within the hour. The wear is a lot better if they’re applied thickly, but I still feel like the colour sort of “slides” down my lids, ending up thicker around my lashline and sparse on the edges. I don’t end up with a thin, crinkly line of eyeshadow, like I do with a lot of other products, but the colour migrates downwards if I’ve blended it out too much.

    Unfortunately, I also found that I can’t wear the shimmery shades on my waterline – I was really impressed by Licoriche (which is matte) when I tried it there, but the other three itch and slide off within a quarter of an hour. Not for the sensitive of eye, I suppose! :P

    The verdict?

    Okay, so I’m right on the fence with these. They’re a fantastic drugstore dupe if you’re into Urban Decay’s 24/7 shadows, and I know a ton of bloggers who love them, but they just don’t work on my lids. Which, I mean, kind of sucks, because they have some pretty awesome shades, but – well. Nothing you can do, right?

    (Except quench your sadness in ice cream and pie, of course.)

    (What? Don’t look at me like that. Creasing eyeshadow is totally a good reason to sad!eat ice cream.)

    Try them if…

    • You’re going for a graphic shape: if you can refrain from buffing them out (I can’t), they honestly do not budge.
    • You like the UD pencils, or you wanted to try them,
    • Your lids aren’t as finicky as mine – if TFSI or UDPP work for you, I think these would, too!
    • You usually like eyeshadow pencils – though I didn’t love these, they’re the best eyeshadow pencils I’ve tried thus far.

    P.S. Check out Licoriche in superhero form!

    Ingredients and more photos »

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    Good for your skin, good for the world | L’Occitane Ultra Rich Body Cream in Hibiscus Flower

    The product: L’Occitane Ultra Rich Body Cream in Hibiscus Flower

    It’s rather more summery than the weather we’ve been getting, but I thought I’d share a few photos of one of L’Occitane’s current LE products today.

    Hibiscus Flower is one of three scents available this October, with packaging designed by Olivier Baussan to represent the Bogolan cloth, a traditional fabric worn by West African women. Along with Cocoa and Desert Rose, the scents (along with the print-like designs) have been crafted to reflect the culture and scents of the region – cocoa flowers from the ivory coast, Egyptian hibiscus, and the Moroccan rose.

    The L’Occitane Shea collection gets a lot of press, and it’s not just because the products are ridiculously moisturizing. The company, in line with the L’Occitane Foundation’s work to aid the economic emancipation of women in Burkina Faso, employs over 12 000 women in a sustainable co-development program under the EFT (ECOCERT Fair Trade) certification.

    The ties between L’Occitane and Burkina Faso stretch back over twenty-five years, and include not just the production of shea, but also microcredit programs, entrepreneurial awards, and literacy projects.

    The Hibiscus Flower scent is a little agressive in the jar, but it’s surprisingly soft once applied. It’s warm, sweet, and a little ethereal – a distinctly tropical sort of floral. It reminds me of a frangipani-and-shea moisturizer I once had, but so, so much better. Other dry-skinned ladies will understand what I mean when I say it’s refreshing to find such a comforting moisturizer paired with a light, unrestrained floral: it’s such a nice change from the typically heavy scents paired with such rich moisturizers.

    Along with the 25% shea body cream, the three scents are available in hand cream and lip balm format. (The hand cream and lip balm contain 20% and 10% shea, respectively.) I’m actually quite taken with the look of the lip balm – they’re adorable!

    More photos & ingredients »

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    Fall swatches | I’m feeling like…

    I’m feeling like the colour of leaves in autumn. Like the 40’s. Like Essie Very Structured. Like Joan Holloway. Like Slow Dancing Society’s The Warm Familiar Sound of September.

    Eyes

    Maybe it’s something in the air, the light, the era – I don’t know, but I’m head over heels for desaturated greens, burnt sienna, tan, and a mix of mink browns to balance everything out.

    It’s strange: I usually fall into a rut of brown and berry in the fall, but I’m just crazy for sienna this year. I mean, sienna; what absurdity! It looks terrible on me, which more or less explains why I couldn’t stand it. Perhaps I’ll have to find it in a handbag or pair of gloves, yeah?

    Swatches from left to right: 1. Marcelle Waterproof Eyeliner in Metal Green, 2. Lancome Colour Design Eye Shadow in Mochaccino, 3. Annabelle 4Show Eyeshadow quad in Tiger Eye, 4. Marcelle Wet & Dry Eyeshadow in Coco Chic, and 5. FaceFront Steel Finish Artistic Pigment in Lost in Nishitama.

    Lips and Cheeks

    Plum lips, of course. Perhaps with a mix of cranberry. And, strangely enough, burnt corals and bronzes on the cheeks – preferably matte. Tons of contouring; no colour whatsoever some days.

    Swatched from left to right: Clarins Blush Prodige in Sunset Coral, MAC Lipliner in Plum, Clarins Colour Quench Lip Balm in 05 Delicious Plum.

    More product photos and swatches »

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