FRIDAY FIVE: NEW WARDROBE ADDITIONS

I’ve mentioned a few times how I’m trying to be a little more intentional in my clothes shopping and not get *too* carried away by the lure of online shopping. Here are five new additions to my wardrobe, all definitely come under the category of “wardrobe basics” but they’re all already getting some serious wear.

new wardrobe additions

  1. Black Ridley skinny jeans with ripped knees, ASOS, £30 here
  2. BDG grey Mia oocket pullover jumper, Urban Outfitters, £39 here
  3. Grey slouchy rib vest with side splits, ASOS, £10 here
  4. Black modal vest top, Next, £8.50 here
  5. Green longer length midi pencil skirt, ASOS, £16 here


THE STANDOUTS

  • It sounds insane to rave about a basic black vest top but this one from Next is amazing. The fabric is lovely and just sits really well. At £8.50 I think I might pick up another couple of these because I’m weirdly fussy about vest tops.
  • This Urban Outfitters jumper is fantastic, but definitely consider sizing down if you’re kind of between two sizes. I bought my usual size and I definitely think I could probably have gone a size smaller. Having said that this is just perfection! I wear this off one shoulder with the Ridley ripped jeans and a black vest top and love how it looks. It’s also beautifully soft and super cosy.

What have you been buying lately?

BEAUTY REVIEW: SLEEK BAREKISSED ILLUMINATOR

Sleek Barekissed Illuminator in Cuba
Sleek’s Barekissed Illuminators are a collection of liquid illuminators with light reflective particles in four shades – Monaco (a neutral silvery nude), Casablanca (a rosy pink), Cuba (a peachy coral) and Pompeii (a warm golden bronze) – designed to be used alone as a highlighter or bronzer or mixed with foundation and apparently you can even use them as an eyeshadow base.

Sleek Barekissed Illuminators

I picked one up in the shade Cuba on a whim whilst browsing in Boots at the weekend and I am obsessed with it. I wore it on Saturday evening, Sunday and Monday, each time at events with different groups of friends, and received so many compliments which I’m totally putting down to this little bottle of magic. This is probably the first time that I’ve ever actually liked a dewy look on myself and didn’t think I looked sweaty or greasy.

Cuba is one of the two warmer shades, along with Pompeii, and my way of using this was to apply my base as normal and then take a pump of the illuminator (and here is my only criticism – even when you press gently one pump is far more product than you’d need unless you were applying this all over the face) and then gently dab the end of a stipling brush into it, I use this Real Techniques one, before gently stippling on the apple of my cheek and then lightly sweeping any remaining product along my cheekbone.

This shade is so beautiful that it works really well at providing a subtle blush and leaves you with a true “lit from within” glow. For me this is the perfect product to use as it gives fantastic luminosity to the skin without looking overly sparkly (I obviously can’t speak for the other shades in the range as Cuba is the only one I currently have). You can definitely build it up if you’re wanting a higher impact glow or more colour but, for me, a tiny amount goes a long way and gives a fantastic end result.

The swatches above show, at the top, the amount of product I would typically use, blended in to give a beautiful, subtle glow with just a hint of colour and then the bottom three show one pump of the product and a generous quantity applied and then blended in to hopefully show just how gorgeous this shade really is and how you could use this for a more intense look.

The texture of this product is beautifully creamy and therefore incredibly easy to blend in to get the look you’re going for. It didn’t cause my foundation or concealer to move at all, which really impressed me as I often find cream blush / highlighter products can do that.

I’m undoubtedly going to swatch Pompeii the next time I’m at the shops as I imagine it would be fantastic for when I have more of a tan on holiday. I’m also intrigued by Monaco and might give it a try to see how it compares to the NIOD Photography Fluid (which is ace, but if this works as well, and I suspect it might, then it’s much more affordable).

If you have a chance to pick one up I’d highly recommend that you do. At £8.99 they’re incredibly well priced and, as you really don’t need to use much product, will last you ages. Anything that can make me look like I’m radiantly healthy when I’m fighting off a killer hangover gets a big thumbs up from me!

Sleek Barekissed Illuminators, £8.99, available at Boots, Superdrug or for £7.28 via Amazon here.

 

FRIDAY FIVE: DRUGSTORE MAKE-UP FAVOURITES

I talked about my five drugstore skincare favourites a couple of weeks ago so I thought that this week I’d listing my five favourite make up products from the drugstore – the items that I not only think are fantastic for their price but that I actually think outperform similar high-end products.
Drugstore makeup favourites
  1. Collection Lasting Perfection Concealer, £4.19 available here.
    I feel like everyone loves this concealer but it’s not hard to see why.  I love this for concealing blemishes and I find it gives better coverage than a lot of my more high end concealers.
  2. Maybelline Color Tattoo Cream Gel Eyeshadows, £4.99 available here.
    These eyeshadows are fantastic and super easy to grab for a quick wash of colour or for using as a base to layer shadows on top. Special shout out to the shades On And On Bronze and Permanent Taupe.
  3. Maybelline Age Rewind Eraser Eye Concealer, £7.99 available here.
    Another concealer but this is one I purely use for under eye concealing and highlighting my under eye area. I use the shade Light. I’m yet to find another product that would make me want to ditch this as a staple in my make-up routine.
  4. Sleek Contour Kit, £6.49 available here.
    Now I do still adore my Anastasia contour kit but this is a brilliant, affordable alternative that I picked up recently. A matte contour powder that’s pigmented and easy to blend plus an illuminating highlighter gives you a perfect handbag sized contour kit to keep with you on the go.
  5. Soap & Glory Archery 2 in 1 Brow Pencil, RRP £8 but currently £6 available here.
    I use the shade Hot Chocolate which is a perfect match for me. One of these lasts me ages and gives fantastic, natural definition to my brows. It’s more than a match for more expensive options like the Anastasia Beverley Hills.

What are your favourite highstreet / drugstore make-up products?

JUST READ ANOTHER BOOK: JANUARY/FEBRUARY REVIEW

Well, so far I’ve managed to stick to the challenge, as outlined here, and I’m feeling pretty proud of myself!

My books for the months were Elizabeth Is Missing by Emma Healey, The Boy In The Striped Pyjamas by John Boyne, The Tenant of Wildfell Hall by Anne Brontë and Gone Girl by Gillian Flynn.

I don’t want to give any spoilers away so I’ll attempt to be brief and vague enough about them to not spoil them for anyone who hasn’t read these books. Elizabeth Is Missing is an absolutely beautiful book but, not gonna lie, I had to take a break every few chapters because it made me so, so sad. Having a narrator / heroine of a book with dementia is definitely unusual but it works. If you’ve ever known someone who has experienced dementia / Alzheimer’s then you couldn’t fail to find this book tugging on the heart strings. Not only does it give a moving account of how it feels to experience dementia, it’s also a great detective story that you don’t want to put down.

Clearly I was aiming to really bum myself out with my book choices in January but The Boy In The Striped Pyjamas is definitely worth a read, once you get over the implausibility of the plot (as an early reviewer of the book said “Note to the reader: There were no 9-year-old Jewish boys in Auschwitz – the Nazis immediately gassed those not old enough to work.”). I can understand the frustration felt by some that the sense of censorship in the book detracts from the horrors of concentration camps however this *is* meant to be a children’s book and is written from the point of view of a nine year old child. But all of that to one kind and you’re left with a moving story of an unlikely friendship between two boys in truly horrendous circumstances and a reminder of man’s capacity for inhumanity.

My third book was picked at the insistence of a friend who has always been Team Brontë whilst I’ve been firmly in the Team Austen camp and she was right, this is a fantastic book. Power through the first chapter because the rest of the book becomes a definite page turner. Anne Brontë probably deserves to take the title of “first feminist novel” for this book – it’s far more kick-ass than I expected and without the guaranteed comfort of a happy ending.

Finally, I read Gone Girl as I’d bought the book around the time the film came out to read before watching it so expect the film to pop up on my watched list sometime soon. It’s hard to really touch on the plot of the book without giving anything away but if you haven’t read it, I’d really recommend it. Flynn is an excellent writer who manages to have you completely invested in the outcome of the story despite two phenomenally unlikable main characters.

As for films, I watched The Theory of Everything, Behind The CandelabraCinderellaInterstellar, A.C.O.D (Adult Children of Divorce), Fury, The Big Short and Dallas Buyers Club. A fairly mixed bag and I really enjoyed them all. Trailers are below if you fancy checking any out…

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