Dove True Tone Underarm Dark Mark Eraser

Dove

Seriously, some brands just can’t help themselves. I’m looking at Dove True Tone Underarm Dark Mark Eraser. On the one hand, Dove does some remarkable self-esteem work – they’ve recently produced some fascinating stats on how women feel about themselves in terms of beauty. But that work is rather unravelled, I feel, when they’re single-handedly responsible for bringing ‘beautiful underarms’ to the attention of most women who had previously not considered this a problem area in terms of beauty. Just while we’re all busy worrying about wrinkles, cellulite, the odd chin hair and all the other little beauty niggles, along comes another guest to the low self-esteem party. Your armpits.

A couple of years ago, I actually met the person who conceived that idea at a conference, and told them what I thought about it. I even took my top off and showed the room my (unshaven) armpits in front of 200 people to make the point that armpits are just places on our bodies that are the least of anyone’s worries. That wasn’t a planned thing – I’ve never done it before or since – but I felt strongly enough to make the point that brands who create insecurities and then come up with cures – we’re onto them!

It’s the sort of thing in beauty that I really mind about – there is a bigger picture behind the lipsticks and new products on BBB. If I get the chance to call out brands, I take it. And, I’m taking it now. Just stop it, Dove. Focus on the things you’re really good at – and there are many – and leave our armpits alone. There are better, happier and more positive things to spend £20 on.

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Chanel Foundations: Les Beiges vs Perfection Lumiere Velvet

Chanel Foundations: Les Beiges vs Lumiere Velvet

When Chanel launched their Perfection Lumiere Velvet foundation it very quickly became one of my all-time favourite face bases. Until then, I had been using By Terry’s Cover Expert or Densiliss very regularly, but Lumiere Velvet came in a gorgeously compact, travel-friendly bottle, was quick to apply and blend and gave me a non-chalky, demi-matte finish that provided a truly excellent base for powder bronzers and blushers. (You can read my original review of Velvet – complete with before-and-after photographs – here.)

Now Chanel have thrown a little cosmetic spanner in the works by introducing their Les Beiges Healthy Glow foundation, and I’m finding it very difficult to choose which one to wear. At first, I could see no real difference between the two, in terms of finish and coverage, but after spending days – days, I tell you – comparing them and doing close-up photographs and applying them using different tools and over various moisturisers, I have drawn some conclusions.

So, if you have been sitting on the fence as to whether or not to take the plunge with Les Beiges, here are my findings. If you already have – and use – Velvet, you might just decide to stay exactly (in makeup terms) where you are. If you are new to Chanel foundations, want a glowing finish, good coverage and something posh-looking to display on your dressing table then you will probably find yourself hot-footing it to the nearest Les Beiges counter display. Read on, read on…

Chanel Foundations: Les Beiges vs Lumiere Velvet

Chanel Les Beiges Healthy Glow Foundation comes in a heavy glass bottle with a black lid and – purely on appearance – looks far more luxurious than Perfection Lumiere Velvet. It’s the sort of packaging you want to show off, take pictures of, place lovingly on the bathroom shelf next to your mini-cactus and carefully washed oversized seashell. On the flip side, if you travel a lot or take your makeup with you to do on your commute, it’s far bulkier and heavier than the utterly brilliant packaging that houses Lumiere Velvet.

chanel perfection lumiere velvet review

That has a small, light plastic bottle and is simply one of the best makeup products I have ever found for the constant traveller. And, let’s face it, it doesn’t look half bad either – perhaps not so “lalala-lala ooh I’m in Paris and there’s sunlight streaming through my five-million-Euro apartment” as Les Beiges, but very smart and modern.

Chanel Foundations: Les Beiges vs Lumiere Velvet

And so on to application and texture; more important by far than packaging and appearance, though the packaging is the first thing you see and feel, so naturally a good place to start. Les Beiges is far creamier than Velvet, which has a shake-well-and-squeeze kind of consistency, not liquid but certainly not sumptuous and creamy. Interestingly, though, both foundations apply in a similar way, with a light fresh feel and easy-to-blend sweep across the skin. Both work well with brush or fingertips.

chanel les beiges vs chanel velvet

When it comes to shades I’m rather at a loss; I’m afraid I don’t have access to all of the Velvet shades to do comparisons, but in the photograph above I’ve swatched (from left to right) Velvet in 20, Beiges in 20 and then Beiges in 30. You can probably see that Velvet 20 is more similar to Beiges 30 than 20; Beiges 20 is far, far lighter than Velvet 20. Rather than launch into some crazy diatribe about shades and why they don’t match up and what this means, I’ll simply summarise by saying that if you’re in doubt, go to a counter and try. I would always recommend this anyway, with a new foundation, unless you’ve researched exhaustively online and are certain of your match.

So we know that Les Beiges (to me) feels reasonably similar to Velvet in application; light and fresh, easy and quick to blend. But how does the finish and coverage compare? In the below photos you can see a “before and after”; the before is with absolutely no makeup on, and in the after, I have Les Beiges on the left hand side of my face (as you see it) and Velvet on the right. There’s no way you can compare the two foundations at that distance, so these are just to kick things off!

ruth crilly

ruth crilly

I shot these in natural daylight (all of the photographs, actually) and haven’t messed with any brightness or exposure. There is really quite a lovely amount of radiance from both foundations, but if we zoom in then you might be able to make out subtle differences. (Or not. I mean, it’s almost impossible to replicate what I can see on my backlit screen, zoomed right in, so to a certain extent you’ll just have to trust my hours of obsessive research!)

Chanel Foundations: Les Beiges vs Lumiere Velvet

I think that Les Beiges (on the left side, remember) definitely has a tiny bit more “glow” than the almost-matte Velvet. Velvet is near-magical in the way it manages to be smooth and matte but still incredibly radiant; Les Beiges does the radiance thing but with an obvious surface sheen rather than that hidden kind of “glow from within”. Which on the one hand is great and it looks incredibly – incredibly – juicy and healthy, but if I zoom right in, I can definitely see that fine lines and pores are slightly highlighted.

Chanel Foundations: Les Beiges vs Lumiere Velvet

The youthful effect of the glow probably balances that out on many faces, but I would want to give it a good test at a counter if I had very large pores or fine, crepey skin with lots of lines. (I’m absolutely nit-picking, here, because who is going to be approaching you with a magnifying glass to look at your skin?)

On the flip-side, the Velvet (below) offers a smoother finish which is a little better on pores but if you have areas of dryness, it’s not ideal. I don’t find that it makes my skin any drier, but if you had severely flaky parts then it wouldn’t be quite as kind as Les Beiges.

Chanel Foundations: Les Beiges vs Lumiere Velvet

Again, you’d have to be using a magnifying glass to notice, so I’m splitting hairs. And Les Beiges (top close-up) offers a slightly more comprehensive coverage, don’t you think? Just slightly…

But as I said: splitting hairs. Both foundations are wonderful in my opinion. Easy to apply, radiant finishes and good, non-mask-like coverage. If you have oily or combination skin, my feeling would be to stick with Velvet – not because Les Beiges is rich or in any way greasy, but because Velvet does such a good job of keeping the skin looking matte but fresh. Dry skin might not get on so well with Velvet at all, but Les Beiges offers the same fresh feel with a more comfortable texture and finish. People with skin that’s unproblematic and steady have the pick of the bunch. My skin is on the dry side at the moment and I often wear Velvet but I must admit that Les Beiges feels like more of a treat. Choices, choices…

Browse more face base reviews….

More foundation reviews coming your way – if you want the same kind of “lit from within” finish but lightweight and with higher coverage then stay tuned for the YSL Touche Eclat foundation close-ups!

Chanel Perfection Lumiere Velvet is £33 here and the newly-launched Les Beiges is £36 here. Do tell me which you prefer, if you’ve tried both, as always I welcome your opinions.

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Post from the Pregnant Past / A Genius Cleanser

best luxury cleanser

I’ve just found an unpublished review of the Genius Ultimate Anti-Aging Melting Cleanser in my drafts folder. The only reason I can think of for this not making it into the wider world is that the date of last edit is the day before I went into labour with my baby – obviously I meant to polish the post up and schedule it but then got distracted!

(Re the image that goes with the post: do you remember my “beauty products on a grey background” photo phase? I used to sit for hours doing still-life pictures when I was heavily pregnant, dozens of products surrounding my chair and a large piece of grey board propped upright on the dining table in front of a studio light. I had a little conveyor system going on – bend to one side to pick up a new product, place it in front of the grey board, shoot it, bend to the other side to put it on the “done” pile. It was probably the most exercise I got, that summer…)

Anyway, the Genius Ultimate Anti-Aging Melting Cleanser from Algenist. I absolutely ploughed through this, which isn’t surprising because I do love a gentle-but-thorough cleansing balm, and the tube packaging was really handy because I was moving from one holiday let to another (we were having our entire house renovated, which is never wise when you’re about to have a baby, but you live and learn) and the bathrooms were all tiny. Nowhere to balance a heavy glass pot of cleanser, so the tube got chucked into my hanging toiletries organiser between uses.

Read more cleanser reviews…

Here are my original notes – I’d add that I really liked the smell of the Genius Melting Cleanser, though some might find it strange! I was quite hormonal, after all.

“There are so many gel-oil-milk cleansers on the market these days, but not many of them truly take you through the promised three stages – an easy to apply gel, a sumptuous oil to massage makeup away and then a light milk that can be quickly rinsed off. In terms of user experience, the Algenist version is top notch – the balm feels soft and comforting to apply, a little difficult to spread, perhaps, at first, but it soon melts into a beautiful oil. The formula feels nourishing but somehow very light at the same time; once it has reached the “milky” phase (just add a little water) it can almost be rinsed away without any need for a flannel or washcloth, yet as a balm it’s so sumptuous and thick.

My skin feels soft after rinsing, thoroughly cleansed but not stripped and with absolutely no greasy residue. I’d point out that it doesn’t do an exemplary job when it comes to mascara removal, but somehow I feel that’s the trade-off for getting a balm that’s so light and unfussy to remove. You’re given a luxury massagey balmy experience, but with a slightly quicker and more low-key finish. Fine by me, especially if I want something for the morning wash that isn’t foamy, soapy and tight.”

You can find the Genius cleanser for £32 at Space NK – I’d say that it’s a brilliant (high-end) option for combination/oily skin that feels easily stripped but finds many cleansing balms slightly too greasy. I had quite dry skin when I raced through my tube and it was also on the sensitive side, so I’d tentatively say that it would be alright on most skin types, though try and have a test in-store if you’re undecided.

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© 2016 A Model Recommends®: all opinions are my own and any sponsored or paid posts will always be very clearly marked. I accept press samples and receive product and services to review as part of my job. Outward links to retailers will usually be affiliate links. Please see here for full “about” section and disclaimer.  A Model Recommends and Ruth Crilly are registered trademarks.

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Guerlain’s New Lingerie de Peau Foundation

Guerlain Lingerie de Peau Foundation Review

It’s not often that I look at my reflection and catch myself out, thinking, who in God’s name is THAT? Actually, that’s an utter lie: I catch myself out on an almost daily basis, glancing in the mirror and wondering why my own face has been exchanged for that of an eight hundred year-old witch who has managed to survive multiple (harrowing) expeditions on the ducking stool and who lives in a mouldering shack made from twigs.

But it’s certainly not often that I catch myself out and think hey up! Who’s that flawless foxwhich is precisely what happened to me last week when I was sitting having my hair done by the brilliant Samantha Cusick. Usually I look like a blood-drained zombie when I have my hair done – there’s something about your face being framed by packets of foil and wads of cotton wool and bits of cling-film that just doesn’t present it in its best light – but I happened to glance up and check my visage in the mirror and…

…it was as though my skin had been put through one of those Snapchat filters that people use but pretend they don’t use. Do you know the ones I mean? The filters that sort of “melt” the skin into a weird, smooth, almost featureless stretch of perfectly-toned beige? That’s what my skin looked like. In a good way.

Guerlain Lingerie de Peau Foundation Review

I was wearing Lingerie de Peau, the new “second skin” “natural look” foundation from luxury beauty brand Guerlain. Guerlain say that “the formula offers the right balance between truth and idealisation, showcasing [skin] without transforming, creating the impression of naturally beautiful skin”.

I say “if anyone has skin this good naturally, I’ll eat my own newly-highlighted hair.” And also “if this isn’t transforming then I don’t know what is.”

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Dolce & Gabbana, Summer In Italy. Sizzle Sizzle…

summer in italy collection dolce & gabbana

I’ve been playing about with Dolce & Gabbana’s Summer In Italy collection, which includes a lemon yellow eyeshadow, a creamy gold shimmer pot for face and eyes and a bronzer with the most colourful packaging I’ve ever seen.

summer in italy collection dolce & gabbana

The matte eye monos are unbelievably pigmented, and I’m having great fun with the Turquoise one (though not quite ready to go out in it until I’ve honed the application technique), but it’s the lipstick and nail polish in Orange that I’ve found most instantly wearable.

Sizzle sizzle. I’m wearing NARS Tinted Moisturizer (Alaska Light 2) with about eight tonnes of D&G’s The Sicilian Bronzer over the top, Chanel mascara in Rouge Noir on my eyes and, on my lips, the Classic Cream Lipstick in Orange. (Find it here.) It’s a great holiday shade, slightly more flattering, I think, than the pinkier corals that always come out for the summer. Though I suppose that depends on your skin tone.

Stay tuned for more on this collection – you won’t believe how bright the turquoise eyeshadow is. It messes up my camera settings because (I think) the lens just goes “what the hell am I seeing here? It’s like nothing else on earth!”

You can find the Summer In Italy collection in its entirety at Harrods here – the nail polishes have particularly good wear and are smooth and easy to apply.

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