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    Marc Jacobs Daisy

    Ahh, Daisy. Do you realize that you’ve become practically iconic, as the scent for the under-twenty-five set in the 2000’s? Are you aware that, when anyone in said age bracket walks into the fragrance section of a department store or a Sephora, they’re instantly bombarded with samples of you, and your new sister, Lola?


    Well, it’s true. You’re the popular girl that everyone loves. I bet you’d even wear a purity ring, if you were human. And you’d certainly be a natural light-brunette with blonde hilights from the sun.


    But here’s the catch: popular girls are rarely interesting. You’re fresh, you’re fun, and you’re green — but you’re no rule-breaker. For a beginner getting into fragrance, you have a certain appeal: in a world so full of fruity florals and squeaky-clean fresh scents, your greenery is new and enticing. But soon the greenery becomes too familiar; it becomes the beautiful city you’ve lived in for so long you can no longer see its beauty. 


    I managed to develop an attatchment to you, to your bright grin. But there is nothing in it for me anymore but memories and nostalgia: now the green just makes me think “allergies,” and the sunny yellow “human liquid waste” (indeed, I went there, and I did it poetically.)


    Oh, and Daisy, my love? Please don’t take offense. I do think you’re a wonderfully constructed fragrance, and you make me smile. However, this is only ever shortly before you put me straight to a deep sleep.

    Daisy is a perfume from 2007. She was created by Alberta Morillas for Marc Jacobs.
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    The last hurrah of winter

    Something about red lips and winter make them harmonize just so well — come summer, I feel the need to put away my bright, bold reds, and my darker, moody violets. But before summer comes and we’re forced to do so, I wanted to share just two more lip swatches with you!


    Paula Dorf Carousel (my HG red) under Aura Science Star Coral lip gloss



    Paula Dorf Carousel under Besamé Vanilla lip gloss

    Lesson of the day: layer your lip products! The effect was really subtle here, but with different products, you can completely customize your lip look — and really change up a colour by blending it with another!

    And, before you ask: yes, these were taken sometime last November with my old camera.

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    Did you know that beavers could be lustrous? Because I totally didn’t.

    What it is: Green Beaver‘s Lip Shimmerin “Lustre”.

    On the product: Alright, so right off the bat I’m going to admit that I’m a bit biased — when’s the last time you’ve seen an ingredients list like this?! It’s awesome! Not only are the Lip Shimmers paraben-free, they’re also free of petroleum, peppermint oil, small babies, and lanolin. And while they don’t exactly impart moisture on the level that a medical-grade lip ointment might*, they don’t take it away, either. As for the scent? Can’t beat it! I haven’t the slightest clue what these cute little tubes of heaven smell like, but it’s delish. Light and fruity and tarte and fizzy… mmm!

    Speaking of ingredients:

    Helianthus Annuus (Sunflower) Seed Oil*, Theobroma Grandiflorum Seed Butter*, Canola Oil*, Euphorbia Cerifera (Candelilla) Wax, Copernicia Cerifera Wax*, Cocos Nucifera Oil*, Rhus Verniciflua Peel Wax, Acacia Decurrens/Jojoba/Sunflower Seed Wax/Polyglyceryl-3 Esters, Aroma, Sorbitan Olivate, Vaccinium Macrocarpon Seed Oil*, Daucus Carota Sativa (Carrot) Seed Oil*, Tocopheryl Acetate, Cymbopogon Martinii var motia Oil*. May contain: Mica, Titanium Dioxide, Iron Oxides

    On the shade: Lustre is exactly what it says it’ll be — a lustre! In other words, super fine shimmer sitting in a smooth, translucent base. But the catch is that it sounds boring, and with two separate History courses to do readings for, I do not need any more boring in my life.

    Anyhow, it’s kind of a stunner. Y’know. In the way that Paul Wesley and Ian  Somerhalder are kind of
    stunners.

    (I’m pretty sure that I could have skipped this review altogether and just posted some swatches. Seriously. Bee-tee-dubs, multiple swatches were needed to show just how gorgeous this shimmer is! It’s the same swatch, but with different light values. And also they were needed because I was feeling indecisive and just lovehow this photographs.)

    Click to enrich your life enlarge enrich your life.

    The verdict? I’m pretty sure that if you need me to tell you this is totally holy grail, you do not deserve to use such a product. But I will anyways, because I’m just that nice. So: this is holy grail. I love it. You should love it**.

    *Honey, if this exists, you totally need to hook me up with some.

    **However, you should probably not trust a word I say, ever, because I am so very depraved sleep deprived. But if you end up purchasing this despite what your instincts tell you to (RUN FOR THE HILLS!) then I am fairly confident you will completely adore it. So go pick it up here or something, and you can thank me later with a big hug large box of chocolates Lindt. (Hey, if I’m being greedy, I may as well ask for the good stuff.)

    Another disclaimer: I’m not sure what convinced me it would be a good idea to write a review at 12:55 in the morning and save it to post later, but I did. And it may have been a bad idea. But it’s been fun all the same!

    Edit: want to see this over another lip shade? Check it out here!
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    Lash Boosting: Week Two

    Sorry for the delay! To make up for it, I’m not only showing you one promised incidence in which L’Oreal’s Lash Boosting Serum is used under mascara… I’m showing you two!
    (On a side note: can you even have that many apostrophes in a word? How are you supposed to make something like L’Oreal possessive? Hmm.)

    Aaaanyhow. 


    I’m starting to see some changes in my lashes after using the serum for two weeks! They don’t look drastically longer or fuller, but they do look a touch longer. What I’m really noticing, though, is that my lashes feel healthier — and not in the PRspeak kind of way. Usually, when I’m not wearing mascara often (ie. I’ll wear it once or twice in a month,) they simply feel thicker, like there’s more resistance to them when you touch them. On the other hand, when I do wear mascara on a regular basis, my lashes tend to feel a little (but not too terribly much) softer, like I’ve just had a brief sit in a steam room. Now, though I’m wearing mascara daily, my lashes feel as healthy as they do when I don’t wear it at all for weeks on end.

    But alas! that’s not really what I’m supposed to be discussing today. Nope… today is about how this baby layers! And layer it does. Keep in mind as you look at the photos that this is one coat of mascara, and it’s quite combed out — I like a super-natural everyday lash, one that makes it look like you a) aren’t actually wearing mascara, and b) have really bloody brilliant lashes.


    Check out images of how Lash Boost layers behind the cut!

    To start us off, here’s Fresh Supernova over the serum. I was having a “bad lash day,” unfortunately… my lashes just look so messy, especially the lower ones! Supernova and Lash Boosting give a really gorgeous feathery effect that I’m quickly falling for.



    And here’s Imju Fiberwig over the serum — this is what my lashes wear most days. I’m quite impressed with it! My lashes look long and separated, just how I like them. Though Fiberwig’s crunchy, it does give a shinier effect than most mascaras (which I love,) and it holds a curl amazingly. The latter is quite helpful when you’re working with a lash serum, as they take a lot of the curl out of your lashes already!


    (Review of Fiberwig here. If you’re going to compare the images; compare these to the “everyday lash”! The same application method and ammount of mascara were used for both the original review and the lashes below.)

     New to theNotice? Read more about my Lash Boosting trial here (week zero,) and here (week one!)
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    A quick black liner comparison

    Alternate post title: “Why I don’t like Smashbox Caviar!” 

    Top: L’Oreal HiP cream liner.
     Left to right: Smashbox Caviar cream liner, thickly then thinly, Urban Decay 24/7 Zero cream-pencil.
    After washing my hands, quite vigorously around the HiP liner which would! not! come! off!:



    In short, I dislike Caviar because it is a) shiny, b) not very black, and c) easy to rinse off. The opposites of these are the reasons why I love my L’Oreal HiP liner — it’s very black, stays on like metal in comparison to other gel/cream liners that I’ve tried, and dries to a lovely satin finish!


    Somewhere, I have more black liner photos for a future comparison review of HiP, Smashbox, and MAC. Somewhere… Edit: Wait! I lied. It seems like I’ve already posted that; check it out here!

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    FOTD: for the love of cheeks!

    I almost always do matte rose/plum cheeks (literally; at least four days of the week,) but woke up sometime in January craving something a little different. (Yes, my photo turnover time is unbelievably long.) I can’t even remember anymore, but I’m fairly certain the above photo was taken after base products but before eye/lip products, and the photo below was taken at the end of my makeup routine.


    Either way, my face is pretty boring on a day-to-day basis. 


    Used: Senna Faded Rose (a gorgeous nude-rose, which despite what the Senna site claims, is not a new release but is rather an old item that has come back) on the cheekbone and Sateen (a darker brown-rose) to contour, with Marcelle‘s Rose Satin eyeshadow applied with a fan brush to hilight.

    Enlarge to see the gorgeous subtle glow
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    Miss Dior Cherie, though the eyes of Teen Vogue

    Miss Dior Cherie is easily one of my favourite fragrances — but that’s a topic for another day. What I wanted to show you today was the evolution of the Miss Dior Chrie advertisement! Which, coincidentally… is also one of my favourites. (How much do you just adore Maryna Linchuck and Sophia Copolla? Yah.)

    All images enlarge if you click on them. Just like in every other post.

    (Why do I even say this anymore? You’re all clever; I’m sure you figured it out on your own!)

    Anyhow, I’m impatient and spastic, so we’re going to jump right in with  my favourite of the MDC ads — the classic floating-girl-with-balloons, of course! This ad has changed slowly over the years, but it retians its wonderful being (the balloons, obvi.) I do still prefer the original, but I’m just glad they haven’t ruined the advertisement altogether.

    (How many chages did you notice? They slowly brightened the image, added more balloons, made her smaller, moved the “Miss Dior Cherie” ribbon, and changed the background. The most recent ad, on right, even switched out the perfume entirely!)

    Then there was the sultry print ad below, which I loved, until they changed it up a TINY BIT and switched out MDC for MDC L’Eau, which I hate as much as this damn third ear that I’ve started growing. I mean, really? You couldn’t have given your flanker its own ad? Did it have to be a less-gorgeous version of the orig–

    Wait.

    That’s actually perfect, seeing as L’Eau is related-to-but-siginificantly-less-awesome-than MDC.

    Carry on.

    And two more, neither of which I really care for. I mean, they’re not bad, they’re just not as wonderful as the others! The dress in the one on the right was at first a big turn-off for me, but after thinking about it for a bit: it’s actually very MDC, in a way! Sweet and without shame. And the bottom is similar enough to the dress in the ballon ad to maintain coherency. A wonderful choice, in the end, I believe!

    Lastly, the forty-five second commercial! (There’s a thirty-second one floating around too, hence the distinction.) I have to be honest, I was a little worried when I found out they’d be doing one of these — what if it turned out awfully? Thankfully, it didn’t, and it’s certainly my favourite fragrance advertisement. Ever. In any form.

    (SophiaCopollaIloveyouyoureagenius!)

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    Adieu, adieu, Teen Vogue!

    Don’t get what’s going on? See part one here.

    Three more things that we’re about to hit you with, superfast, behind the cut!

    Interesting eyeliner. Which was interesting… for the first spread. And maybe even the second. But by the time they had done it in THREE different spreads, it lost the “interesting” factor.

    Daria needing to eat (*sob*), Whitney needing some pants, and Kristen looking cute. (Oh my lord, the world is ending!!!)

    Open mouths. I only have one thing to say to this: CLOSE THEM, GODDAMMIT.

    And [drumroll, please] that’s our conclusion! I have to admit, I’m kinda glad that it’s over. I’m off to go read the mag I’m subscribing to instead of Teen VogueChâtelaine Quebec! Three words: so. much. better.

    Have a great Saturday, lovelies!

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