BEAUTY MONTHLY FAVOURITES – MAY 2015

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My favourite serums ATM (l-r): First Aid Beauty Uplifting Serum (£35); Vichy Aqualia Thermal Dynamic Hydration Serum (£17); Deciem Hylamide Serum

Deciem Hylamide Serum – £30
A serum so smart, it comes equipped with its own PhD. Well, it should.
To improve the look of your skin, I don’t think many other products get to work as quickly as serums. Layered under your moisturiser, choose the right one and it can take your skincare (and results) to the next level.
As a beauty product, serums are power-packed with ingredients –they can be firming, hydrating, soothing – there literally is one out there to meet every skincare demand imaginable. With such a crowded market, a new serum has to offer something pretty special to get noticed.
Hylamide is a newly-launched product – although it didn’t hit my radar until I read a review on skincare expert Caroline Hirons’ blog that convinced me to get purchasing. (See Caroline’s review here: http://www.carolinehirons.com/2015/05/deciem-hylamide-subq-anti-age.html)
To say that Hylamide is a sophisticated formula may be the beauty understatement of the year. Containing five forms of hyaluronic compounds to give your skin a serious boost of hydration, the serum also excels at resurfacing, with a next-generation Tripeptide which helps to ‘reduce the appearance fine lines, wrinkles and surface irregularities’.
What this roster of ingredients means for you is that the Hylamide serum hydrates, rejuvenates and strengthens your skin. My skin visibly improves each time I use it, and the effects accumulate: I get plumper, younger skin without irritation which is impressive for a product with so many ingredients. My skin also gets dehydrated quickly, so this serum pretty much ticks every box for me, performing at a level I’d expect from a product twice its price.
At £30, it’s not super-budget, but it definitely offers serious value for money. I’m already convinced after a few uses – and will be restocking once I’ve finished this bottle. This product’s a real winner; innovative, high performance and excellent value for money. You can’t say fairer than that.

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Cleansers galore (l-r): SBC Collagen 3-in-1 Cleanser; Vichy Cleansing Micellar Oil (£13.75); Sisley Cleansing Milk with Sage (£65)

 SBC Collagen 3-in-1 Cleanser – £12.50 (100ml)/ £25 (200ml)
This was a bit of a lucky dip purchase: I needed a new cleanser, but wasn’t ready to start using my lightweight, summer-only formulations. My skin needed a halfway house, and SBC have very kindly provided just that.
Their Collagen 3-in-1 Cleanser acts as a cleanser (obviously), a gentle exfoliator and make-up removal system. Designed for dry and dehydrated skin types, this product is a perfect balance of gentle cleansing and reviving exfoliation.
The cleanser is loaded up with plant oils, including Passion Flower Oil (anti-inflammatory); Kukui Seed Oil (moisturising); Papaya Seed Oil (conditioning). Combine that with a Shea Butter base, Vitamin E and collagen and you’ve got yourself a cleanser that only gets to grips with grime, but also tackles the visible signs of anti-ageing.
What I love about this product is that it quietly gets on with the job in hand, leaving your skin thoroughly cleansed, but without that pinched, tight feeling you can get with overzealous formulas. I find myself reaching for this cleanser when my skin feels a little out of sorts, and the cleanser always leaves it feeling soothed, comfortable and hydrated. SBC are more commonly known for their excellent face and body gels, but this cleanser highlights what else SBC has to offer. I’d say what better excuse is there to get acquainted?

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I do love a good scrub (l-r): Good Things Manuka Honey Refining Scrub (£4.99); Korres Wild Rose Exfoliating Cleanser; Burt’s Bees Peach and Willowbark Deep Pore Scrub (£10.99)

Korres Wild Rose Exfoliating Cleanser – £18
I do love a hybrid product, and the exfoliating cleanser has to be one of my favourites.
While Korres is by no means a budget brand, it certainly comes in a lot cheaper than my gorgeous Murad AHA / BHA exfoliating cleanser (£34) and certainly much cheaper than my beloved Tata Harper Regenerating Cleanser, which comes in at a hefty £60 RRP.
I always imagine the exfoliating cleanser as not taking the place of an exfoliator proper, but giving skin that needs it a bit of extra help. If you have skin with patches of roughened texture, or enlarged pores, adding an exfoliating cleanser into your routine can really nudge your skin into better condition.
I use mine once a week and it leaves my skin feeling smoother with pores visibly reduced. It’s not at all scratchy on the skin, but does have some grittiness to it. Overall, I think normal-combination skin would benefit most from using this, although I do think a light going-over once a week wouldn’t be the worst idea for dry skin either, as it would tackle sluggish cell renewal quite nicely. While it doesn’t match the peerless perfection of the Tata Harper cleanser, this Korres version is a nice alternative.

 

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Argan5+ Morrocan Rose bath soak – £5.99
There are times when a girl’s just got to say no to utility, and say ‘oui’ to a spot of indulgence.
Including a bevy of quality ingredients including Rose Otto oil, Avocado and Moringa oils, this bath soak goes far beyond your usual supermarket fare.
The beauty of this bath soak is not just the heavenly scent (although it’s frankly delicious), but the oil infused formula that leaves your skin feeling silky and beautifully hydrated. Perfect for a lazy weekend treat, (or a weekday treat if you feel so inclined), you can find this bath soak at Waitrose stores nationwide.

Revlon Ultra HD lipstick – £7.99
‘Ultra HD lipstick’ is quite a strange name for a product that’s all about ease of use. This is not, as you might expect, a mega-watt colour that imprints itself on the lips, but a smoother, lightweight formulation that takes the guesswork out of buying lip colour.
Created with a gel base for smoother application and wax-free formulation to give a ‘weightless’ feel, this lipstick is very different to other high-pigment lip colours currently available. When applied it literally feels as if you have nothing on your lips – without the wax, this lipstick becomes a whole different animal. Highly moisturising – it almost shifts into tinted balm territory if it weren’t for the punchy hit of colour.
The modern formula makes bold colour easy to wear – if you’re a bit colour-phobic, this formula is great for stepping up a shade. If you’re new to wearing colour, I’d definitely recommend this lipstick – it’s a comfortable, easy wear that doesn’t skimp on colour definition.
Revlon have been enjoying a real winners’ streak with regards to their lip products: their incredibly popular Colourburst Lip Butters and Balm Stains, the sophisticated Ultimate Suede Lipstick, and I think the Ultra HD Lipstick can added to this roll-call. Big-budget technology for a bargain price, Revlon’s Ultra HD lipstick is a perfect addition to your Spring make-up bag.
http://www.boots.com/en/Revlon-Ultra-HD-Lipstick_1669695/

Balance Me Rose Otto Face Oil – £32
I’ve only been using a trial size of this product, but so far, my first impressions have been excellent.
To get the maximum benefits, I press a small amount of this onto my face and neck after cleansing. I’ve found this to be particularly beneficial if my skin’s going through a reactive phase – it brings everything back into balance.
This oil boasts a wealth of ingredients including Rosehip and Starflower oils to comfort and soothe, and pure Rose Otto essential oil to improve moisture levels. Arctic Cloudberry may sound like a character from a Philip Pullman novel, but it is an excellent source of antioxidant which helps protect the skin from further damage.
I’d recommend this treatment oil for skin that’s prone to bouts of redness and reaction- it’s great at calming whilst encouraging your skin to be more resilient in the long-term. While £32 is not quite in budget territory, a treatment oil that not only tackles immediate problems but enables your skin to better protect itself in the future usually comes with a much higher price tag.
This is the third Balance Me product I’ve now tried, and to be honest, my only disappointment is that I didn’t get on board with this range before.
https://www.balanceme.co.uk/face/product-family/treatments/treatments-rose-otto-face-oil

HELEN TOPE

BEAUTY PICK OF THE DAY: MONDAY 18 MAY

Rimmel mascara

My perfect Monday morning three-step look: Chanel Les Beiges Powder (£39); Rimmel Wake Me Up Mascara (£7.99); Rimmel Provocalips Lip Colour (£6.99)

Rimmel Wonder’Full Wake Me Up Mascara – £7.99
I’ve had mixed results with Rimmel mascaras in the past – I wanted to love the Argan-infused one so much, I really did. I have however kept an open mind, as I’ve often found with budget mascaras that brilliance can appear out of nowhere.
Everything about the latest Rimmel launch, Wonder’Full Wake Me Up Mascara, has the potential to be a gimmick, from the zingy green tube, to the extract of cucumber added to reputedly perk up tired eyes.
But in creating mascara that doesn’t take itself too seriously, Rimmel have created a product of genius. The formula is gentle on the eyes and concentrates on lengthening the lashes, giving you a natural but wide-awake look. I’m someone who experiences the red, sore eyes lovingly associated with hayfever, and this mascara did not irritate me at all. The lightness of the formula is terrific – I have found budget mascaras to sit heavily on the lashes, and this is infinitely preferable. This is a comfortable, easy-to-wear mascara and best of all; it’s available for less than £8, making it a genuine bargain. Rimmel – you’ve finally converted me.

http://www.boots.com/en/Rimmel-London-WonderFull-Wake-Me-Up-Mascara_1684945/

BUDGET BEAUTY BUYS: £25 AND UNDER

I do appreciate that, after the £20 mark, the right to call yourself a budget product is null and void for a lot of people. What I have tried to do here is to find good value for money – skincare and beauty items that give you that little bit extra. There are old favourites here as well as new discoveries.

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REN Vita Mineral Omega 3 Optimum Skin Oil – £25 Otherwise known as the product that taught me ‘how to love treatment oils’.
Being the owner of skin that likes to sit somewhere between combination and dehydrated (so convenient), finding a pre-moisturiser treatment isn’t always easy. I don’t know if I’m quite ready for the hard-hitting, anti-ageing serums yet, but my skin definitely needed something extra.
The turning point was coming across Caroline Hirons’ blog (www.carolinehirons.com) A facialist with many years’ experience behind her, her advice is impartial, honest and trustworthy. I read Caroline’s thoughts on the REN Omega 3 Optimum Skin Oil, and decided to try it.
I followed Caroline’s instructions to the letter. Oils are best applied sparingly – a couple of drops per application are more than enough. Loaded with Omegas 3, 6 and 9, this oil is touted by REN as a means of ‘dramatically improving moisture levels’, whilst reducing the signs of premature ageing and sensitivity.
I found this oil to be perfect layered under moisturiser – the feel of the oil is effortlessly lightweight, even on the oilier parts of my skin. After just a few uses, I was hooked. This was the treatment oil for me.
Since then, I have used this before bed, first thing in the morning: this oil slots in effortlessly with other products, and you can rely on it to not block pores or cause sensitivity issues. It has been a brilliant introduction into the world of treatment oils, and a great insight into how just one item of quality skincare can lift your whole routine.
There are plenty of great treatment oils out there (Clarins Blue Orchid, Sisley Black Rose, Antipodes Avocado and Rosehip…I could go on), but the REN Vita Mineral Omega Skin Oil holds a very special place in my heart. I’ve just finished my first bottle (it took AGES to finish) and a second was ready, waiting in the wings. REN has changed my mind about a skincare product I assumed, for years, I couldn’t use, and that in itself is reason enough for it to be included in my Budget Buys. The value it offers is astounding; both in terms of longevity and the skincare experience it gives back to you. This is a forever kind of product – be warned.

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Nourish Relax Hydrating Peptide Serum – £20
Packed with hyaluronic acid and soothing, calming plant-derived ingredients (including lavender oil and ginger extract), this serum cools and calms irritated skin. It’s a great choice as a daily pre-moisturiser treatment for sensitive skin, but also works as a stand-by for skin that gets occasional issues with reaction and sensitivity. The serum is delivered in a medium weight gel texture, nice and light for quick application.
I bought this on a whim when I was experiencing a few allergic reactions after changing medications, and found this worked brilliantly at calming and soothing my highly confused skin.
The best part about the Nourish serum is the price – it performs exactly as promised, and does so for £20. A good serum under £30 is near impossible to find (and the really good ones aren’t available for less than £40) – this product defies the odds and I would recommend getting to know this range a little better.

Indeed Labs Eysilix Instant Eye Rescue – £24.99 You may have noticed how few eye creams have been featured in my Budget Buys series. If you’re after more results than a general plumping, hydrating effect – the ingredients list starts increasing, and eye creams tend to start getting expensive. There are some excellent ones around the £60 price mark (Sunday Riley, Elemis, Tata Harper) but if you’re on a budget, little gems can be found in the most surprising places.
Until recently, I had bypassed the corner in my local Boots where Indeed Labs were stocked. It was nothing personal, but I didn’t think the range really had anything to offer me that I wasn’t already getting from other brands.
However, a chance recommendation alerted me to the Indeed Labs eye cream. At just under £25, I was sceptical but gave it a go.
Within a few uses, it was clear I wasn’t using any old budget product. The Eysilix texture (firm but pliable) is identical to creams at double the price. For me, a good eye cream has to have a bit of life in it – there’s nothing worse than dabbing on a watery, non-committal cream. It goes everywhere, creating waste, whereas a firmer cream stays where it’s needed and does the most good.
Long-term, the effect of Eysilix on my skin was one of gentle firming and lifting. My eye area felt supported without that taut, tugging sensation that’s just uncomfortable and slightly strange.
The fine lines around my eyes were also plumped out, the eye area was nicely and evenly hydrated. The Eysilix, in terms of performance, reminded me a lot of the Elemis eye products – good all-rounders that get the job done. The reason Eysilix works so effectively is that it contains many of the same ingredients and properties as the more expensive products – if you’re looking for an introduction to eye care, this is would be pretty much perfect. There are cheaper options out there, but spending a little extra on something that actually works – totally worth it.
http://www.boots.com/en/Indeed-Labs-Eysilix-Instant-Eye-Rescue_1282805/

Bliss Grapefruit & Aloe Body Butter – £22 Good body products are fairly easy to find, but a great one? Going from good to great in body care means you have to offer something quite simply exceptional.
Luckily for us, Bliss does exceptional as a matter of course. Their skincare (especially their Triple Oxygen range) gets a lot of attention, but their body care also deserves to be lauded.
I have been a fan of their Body Butter for years now – the skin-smoothing formula is substantial but never greasy. I have used it in the height of summer and in the depths of winter without any problems – most body care items simply aren’t this versatile. Using a blend of coconut oil and vitamin E to lock in moisture, this nourishing formulation actually works harder on drier patches of skin, gliding over and gently hydrating the areas that need less help.
For those who don’t do fragrance, Bliss has created a ‘naked’ version of their body butter, but if you do love a bit of scent, the aromas are uplifting and invigorating, and refreshingly off the beaten track. From their iconic Lemon and Sage scent, to (my personal favourite) Blood Orange and White Pepper, these really are luxurious products from start to finish. You can get cheaper body products, but Bliss Body Butter is a beauty icon for a reason. It works beautifully every time, and who doesn’t want a bit of reliability in their life?
http://www.blissworld.co.uk/bath-body/shop-by-category/body-moisturisers/bliss-pink-grapefruit-aloe-body-butter/

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Lulu’s Time Bomb Complexion Cocktail B12 – £24 I know, I know – celebrity-backed skincare ranges don’t have the best reputation. But forget those dodgy commercials from the Nineties – this is a skincare range with serious clout.
Lulu has taken anti-ageing as the guiding principle of her collection, creating a range that really gets to grips with the issues of moisture loss, lack of firmness and fine lines. This skincare range did serious time in the lab before being launched to the public and it really shows. I had to narrow it down for my Budget Beauty Buys, but you can pretty much delve into the Time Bomb range at random and pick yourself a winner. The excellent Troubleshooter Neck and Jaw Cream, the Flashback Night Cream and Youth Juice Secret Oil are cult favourites, while the newly launched Powerball Moisturiser is winning rave reviews from beauty editors.
But for my Budget Buys, it had to be the Complexion Cocktail. A lotion that slots in after your cleanse and before you apply moisturiser, this is a gorgeous concoction that treats and revives your skin. Packed with hyaluronic acid plus Vitamins C and B12, this treatment lotion can be gently applied with cotton wool and left on the skin to get to work. Don’t be put off by the 100ml bottle – I thought it was tiny when I first bought it. I’ve been using it several times a week for months, and there’s still plenty left. The packaging allows you to decant the product drop by drop – a few drops on a cotton wool pad are ample for one application.
I have really noticed a difference on the days where I don’t use Complexion Cocktail – my skin looks dull, flat and tired. If you do the basics, but want to take your skincare to the next level – this treatment lotion is a great, no-nonsense step that yields real results.
There are other options too, if lack of brightness isn’t your primary skin concern. Complexion Cocktail also comes in two other formulations: H2Omega (suited to dehydrated, dry skin) and Chlorophyll (fighting the signs of ageing and sun damage). Like I said – this is a very different celebrity range.

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The Body Shop Drops of Youth Bouncy Sleeping Mask – £22
If you haven’t shopped at The Body Shop for a while, you may be surprised at the £22 price tag, but it’s safe to say that The Body Shop has undergone some changes.
Although I must admit to missing some of their discontinued products (please bring back Dewberry shower gel!), I have liked The Body Shop’s focus on creating high-performance skincare for the high-street. They’ve made some cracking products, from extending the Camomile cleansing range to developing the Nutriganics range into a force to be reckoned with.
The Drops of Youth Sleeping Mask is one of their newest, and most innovative, products to date. As the name suggests, it’s an overnight mask. Containing Edelweiss stem cells, this is a mask designed to smooth and re-hydrate the skin.
A unique, literally ‘bouncy’ texture, this lightweight method of imparting moisture into the skin has been introduced by companies such as Shu Uemura and Oskia. Used most commonly in moisturisers, it’s a perfect way of delivering hydration in high- humidity environments.
The texture of the mask, though, is where it gets really interesting. It will be quite unlike anything you’ve tried before. A cream-gel format, getting it out of the tub will take some getting used to.
Once this bouncy mask comes into contact with body temperature, it softens, becoming beautifully malleable. However, once you’ve got the hang of it, you realise how little you actually need to use in order to see results. The ‘memory foam’ texture is great for gently moulding to your face while you’re asleep – it won’t slide off during the night (tip: give it 5-10 minutes after application before hitting the hay). If you suffer from dry skin, dehydration, or just have been having one too many late nights, this mask will do a great job of hydrating without overloading. The texture of this mask, I will be honest, will be a Marmite issue: you will either come to love it or you won’t. But it’s worth trying because it’s real skincare innovation for just £22.

Liz Earle Skin Repair moisturiser (50ml) – £20.25 One my perennial favourites, while others wax lyrical about Cleanse and Polish (and rightly so), I’m a Skin Repair girl through and through.
Available in three different formulations, to suit every skin type from dry to oily, the Skin Repair moisturiser alters itself to suit you. The different formulations are individual in terms of their weight and texture: the dry/sensitive Skin Repair is dense and buttery (but never greasy); whereas its lightweight companion for oily skin is a fresh, smooth lotion that gives much-needed hydration without clogging pores.
Each type of Skin Repair is a feat of excellence in itself, and testament to the Liz Earle philosophy of paying attention to what your skin needs now, not following beauty trends or chasing the latest ingredients. This range wins award after award because it works by balancing your skin, no matter what its concerns are. It really is a skincare line you can use for life – there’s no optimum age range – I couldn’t pin down who the typical Liz Earle customer is. They are a brand I reach for time and again when my skin is out of sorts. Keeping customers loyal is no easy task, but it’s one that Liz Earle manages with aplomb.
http://uk.lizearle.com/cleanse-tone-moisturise/skin-repair-moisturiser-normal-combination.html

Chanel Rouge Coco Shine hydrating sheer lipstick – £25 If you want make-up and you want it luxurious, you can’t beat a bit of Chanel. Their foundations, bronzers and nail polishes all have the kind of reputation the average marketing budget just can’t touch. A combination of must-have shades and clever formulations have kept Chanel in the game, impressive when you consider how luxury beauty has become increasingly crowded with newer names such as Charlotte Tilbury and Tom Ford.
Recreating Chanel’s allure would be almost impossible for a new beauty brand – a lot of the brand’s magic is in its history. But while Chanel’s heritage does a lot of the work, the brand keeps fresh with new products. One of my favourite launches in recent years has to be their Rouge Coco Shine hydrating sheer lipstick.
Say ‘sheer lipstick’ and your first impressions can vary wildly. From gorgeous, easy-to-wear tints to pigment-starved, washed-out shades, my experience of sheer lipstick has been varied. Getting it right means getting the balance between colour pay-off and wearability: you should be able to apply a sheer lipstick in the dark. In a moving car. That has a dodgy suspension.
I’m pleased to say that Chanel passes the dodgy suspension test every time (now there’s a review!) – the texture of the lipstick is lightly creamy. Not so much so that it slides about, or melts into a big gooey mess, but there’s enough slip to make confident, no-mirror application a cinch, rather than a gamble.
The colour pay-off is excellent – each shade is clearly defined: reds are soft and dewy; pinks are rich and rosy. Designed to give you up to 8 hours of hydration, this hybrid of balm and lipstick leaves a gorgeous, gentle shine. My particular favourite is ‘Boy’ – named after Coco Chanel’s lover and muse, Arthur ‘Boy’ Capel. With each shade in this range taking inspiration from Coco’s formative years, this is a beautifully designed corner of the Chanel beauty experience, with history and innovation coming together.
http://www.chanel.com/en_SG/fragrance-beauty/Makeup—Lipsticks—ROUGE-COCO-SHINE-118787?sku=118796

Ole Henriksen Walnut Complexion Scrub – £26 I’m allowing myself one cheat – and the deceptively simple walnut face scrub from Ole Henriksen earns your extra £1. Using very finely milled walnut powder, this densely-textured scrub glides around the skin with ease, leaving you with a softly glowing complexion. Some scrubs play too rough, but the consistency of the Ole Henriksen is perfectly judged. I wouldn’t recommend a granular scrub for very acne-prone skin, but for everyone else (especially if you’re experiencing dull, sluggish skin), this is the ideal boost to get your skin feeling and looking younger.
http://www.feelunique.com/p/Ole_Henriksen_Walnut_Complexion_Scrub_50g

Dior Diorshow Backstage Mascara – £24.50 This is the beauty equivalent of my very own Proustian madeleine. The taste of the sweet pastry prompted Marcel Proust to recall his childhood and begin writing an almost endless series of novels. While Proust’s memory jog was thanks to a simple childhood treat –for me, it’s Dior mascara.
My first ever experience of luxury cosmetics happened when I was around 10. My mum loved (and still does) Dior’s Poison perfume. A staple of the Eighties, my mum once bought this scent at a beauty counter when they were doing a free gift with purchase. The gift? A very handsome Dior eyeshadow compact set and mascara. My mum’s not that keen on make-up, but I begged her to take the free gift.
We got the eyeshadow and mascara set home and I opened them with all the reverence you would give a priceless artefact. Imprinted with the Dior logo, I can still remember the eyeshadows: four in all –one a burnished gold, a deep purple, an emerald green and a shimmering black.
The eyeshadows themselves I remember being very velvety to the touch – but the colours were clearly designed to suit a woman in her 40’s who needed a make-up look to match her Armani suit and brick-like mobile phone. I was 10 years old with a pudding bowl haircut. The early experiments I instigated were largely unsuccessful.
But the mascara: it was a small size but generous. I applied it to my lashes and the effect was extraordinary. I do have naturally curly lashes but the Dior mascara made them spring to life. Looking back, I think the formulation must have been volumising, as I remember it separated my lashes brilliantly, without overloading them and causing the spider effect.
I was hooked after the first use, and practised my make-up skills using this set. I learned that less is definitely more, and barring a highly unfortunate incident with self-tan, I emerged from my teenage years largely unscathed by make-up horrors. Dior continues to hold a special place in my heart – then, as now, it stood for Parisian glamour and sophistication that may have seemed out of reach to a chubby little schoolgirl, but the fact it was a glamour I could apply to my own face made me feel included. Like Proust’s madeleine, Dior calls me back – and it’s a happy, familiar place.
http://www.boots.com/en/DIOR-DIORSHOW-Backstage-Mascara_12964/

HELEN TOPE

AUTUMN BEAUTY COLLECTIONS

There are many reasons to celebrate the arrival of Autumn: crisp mornings, pumpkin spice lattes and that unmistakable back-to-school feeling. But for my money, the arrival of the latest make-up collections has to be one of the best aspects of the season. Every beauty brand launches a colour collection that it hopes will capture the imagination of consumers – get it right, and your products become the stuff of urban beauty legend – and your profile goes through the roof. With stakes like these, it’s no wonder that beauty brands bring their A game.
CHANEL
One of the most anticipated beauty launches of the season has to be from Chanel. A traditional beauty brand with a substantial heritage behind it, Chanel can never be accused of resting on its laurels. Its colour collections invariably become beauty hits year in, year out with many products achieving cult status.
This season’s collection, ‘Etats Poetiques’, has been dubbed by Chanel PR as a ‘colourful game of opposites’. What this seems to mean is that Chanel have cleverly created a collection of products that play with texture. The eyeshadows, those famous velvet-to-the-touch shades, are etched out in metallic – both for the quad and single eyeshadow formats. With shimmering colours in copper, grey and espresso brown, this season, as far as Chanel is concerned, the eyes have it.
The metallic trend is returning with a bang this season: prepare to see it everywhere. Chanel has given it a wearable twist by utilising metallics in warm, complexion-enhancing shades.
Their emphasis on wearability has also seen Chanel’s Rouge Coco Shine lipsticks become the centrepiece of the collection – an unusual choice as Chanel normally opts for its classic formulas during Autumn – this year, the lightweight, summer favourite has moved into the new season.
Easy to apply and easy to wear, Rouge Coco Shine has become a bit of a success story in recent years. The formula sits neatly between barely-there and in-your-face: the colour payoff is perfectly judged. If you’re thinking of making your first Chanel beauty purchase, this would be an excellent product to start with.
While Coco Shine is an unusual choice for Chanel, what really surprises is the colour range: the traditional Autumn / Winter shades are there (Aura, a lovely rosy plum and Confident – a classic brown nude). But look out for Viva – an intense fuschia that’s crossed over from Summer right into your Autumn make-up bag. The idea of colours with strong seasonal associations (like fuschia and coral) crossing over into Autumn has been a trend across the board.
These aisle-crossing colours are shaking up the season – but this isn’t about mere shock value. These shades, when paired with the gorgeous metallic eyeshadows, and the multi-dimensional glow of the Chanel blushes, absolutely make sense. The combination of the new with the familiar makes for a beauty combination that’s bold and unique – but eminently wearable. Chanel’s known for boundary-pushing, and when it’s done this elegantly – who are we to resist?
http://www.chanel.com/en_GB/fragrance-beauty/COLLECTION-%C3%89TATS-PO%C3%89TIQUES-188462

TOM FORD BEAUTY
A brand that’s now giving the beauty big-hitters a serious run for their money, Tom Ford Beauty is fast becoming the last word in make-up luxury.
The Tom Ford Colour collection, available for a limited period from September, goes back to basics (well, the Tom Ford version of ‘basic’) with a return to the perfected, sculptural complexion. Yes, Tom Ford Beauty will convince you that supermodel bone-structure is achievable through the power of contouring.
Famous for his cheek contouring duos, these products may at first glance seem intimidating, but they are designed to help you create definition quickly and easily. The specially-adapted formula uses spherical powders and emollients which allow the product to blend into the skin flawlessly. The formulation means that your blush and contour will never look flat – even a light application will result in a beautifully blended, multi-dimensional, modern finish.
Other highlights from the Autumn / Winter range will include the eyeshadow quad ‘Nude Dip’. Not just another neutral-toned eye palette, Tom Ford’s take on neutrals is anything but ordinary. These incredible shades, running from a pale gold to a dusky, intense bronze, have a lot of technology behind them: using concentrated pigments, these eyeshadows offer a colour-true look which means minimal blending is required. If you’re requiring further ammo to justify purchasing a Tom Ford eye quad, just imagine the time you’ll save each morning…a sweep of the eyelids is all that’s required for a day-to-night wash of colour. You’re welcome.
At £56 for a Shade and Illuminate duo, and eyeshadow quads starting from £52, this range is certainly not marketed as a budget buy – but this is a brand where you really do get what you pay for – and perfection doesn’t come cheap.
http://www.tomford.com/women/fall-2014-color-collection/

TOPSHOP
You don’t have to be a big name to create a stir: Topshop’s make-up range has carved out a piece of the high-street beauty market by adopting the same strategy it uses to sell clothes; by dissecting the latest trends and adapting them for mass consumption. It’s a simple idea but one that Topshop has mastered over the years, and the lessons learned has been applied to their make-up range. With up-to-the-minute colours and finishes, Topshop has evolved its make-up collection and its latest launches are eagerly awaited.
Its collection for Autumn 2014 not only boasts new shades, but new products. A collection of face products, which took 18 months of development to get right, now launches in September. Primers, concealers and foundations take Topshop’s existing face make-up provision onto the next level. The primers feature a colour-corrective option and an airbrush-style primer that works on diminishing the appearance of pores and fine lines.
The other star product of Topshop’s face range will be a concealer palette. Featuring three shades of concealer and a translucent finishing powder, this palette allows you to create a finish that’s custom-blended for your skin. Taking their lead from prestige brands such as Laura Mercier and Bobbi Brown, whose custom concealers have become iconic products, Topshop’s concealer palette gives you the ability to create a flawless finish without breaking the bank.
But the strongest impression left by Topshop’s make-up range is its commitment to colour. Bold brights, cool neutrals and sumptuous pastels are Topshop’s calling card – its no-holds-barred approach to colour makes it a brilliant choice if you want to inject some fun into your make-up routine. The touch of genius is that Topshop deliver these colours in contemporary formulas that make application easy and create a sleek finish that you would expect from a much pricier brand.
For Autumn, Topshop has taken its inspiration from the catwalk. As well as the traditional autumn / winter colours (plums and dark berry reds), cross-over shades such as raspberry and coral take centre stage. On the catwalk, the idea of cross-over fashion, or fashion that can sit equally comfortably in Summer as well as Autumn, has become the defining concept of 2014. Fashion that can translate across the seasons has become increasingly popular, and this is now starting to spill over into the world of make-up.
The idea of summer brights such as raspberry and coral being featured in an autumn collection, even a few years ago, would have seemed ludicrous. But now, this idea feels new and fresh – and everyone’s at it. From the high-street to high-end brands, expect to see the unexpected.
Topshop’s colour range is translated here in two new products: lip polishes and cheek gels. The cheek gels, a special launch for October 2014, are a highly anticipated product. Designed to be multi-functional, these gels can be worn as the lightest flush of colour or built up to produce a more intense effect. From coral (Phenomenon) to a reddish-brown (Museum), Topshop have produced a skintone-friendly shade for everyone, defying expectations of a budget beauty brand.
While cross-over colours become one of the chief beauty headlines for Autumn / Winter 2014, the big story is make-up’s continuing obsession with texture and finish. As the science behind our favourite products becomes ever more sophisticated, we are seeing the development of multi-dimensional finishes that create a polished, professional look – all with minimal effort. Whether it’s glossy cheek gels from the high-street, or sleek lip colours that offer sophisticate shine, this year’s beauty trends have you covered from all angles.

Products available to view September / October 2014

HELEN TOPE