Wednesday, July 31, 2013

Swatch Post! Fyrinnae : Digital Faerie, Fire Opal, Freya, and Hypercool!




From the website: Brilliant turquoise shimmer on black. Great as a liner.

Eye Shadow Ingredients: Mica, Styrene/PVP Copolymer, Myristyl Myristate, Cyclopentasiloxane, Isododecane. May contain: Iron Oxides, Titanium Dioxide, Manganese Violet, Tin Oxide, Ultramarines, Chromium Oxide, Copper Powder, Bronze Powder, Calcium Aluminum Borosilicate, FD&C Blue #1, FD&C Red #40, FD&C Yellow #5, Synthetic Fluorphlogopite, Ferric Ferrocyanide, Silica.

Personal Comments: This is another one that I definitely haven't given justice to with these pictures. Hypercool is a gorgeous darker blue-green with a great deal of depth to it. It's a lot more green than it appears in the jar. Applied over Urban Decay Primer Potion and Fyrinnae Pixie Epoxy. This picture was taken outside in natural light.


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Fyrinnae Freya

From the website: Glowing warm purple shimmer on black.

Eye Shadow Ingredients: Mica, Styrene/PVP Copolymer, Myristyl Myristate, Cyclopentasiloxane, Isododecane. May contain: Iron Oxides, Titanium Dioxide, Manganese Violet, Tin Oxide, Ultramarines, Chromium Oxide, Copper Powder, Bronze Powder, Calcium Aluminum Borosilicate, FD&C Blue #1, FD&C Red #40, FD&C Yellow #5, Synthetic Fluorphlogopite, Ferric Ferrocyanide, Silica.

Personal Comments: Freya is a cool toned purple with hints of red and a tiny bit of gold shine in the right light. It's more violet than I would have guess from the jar but it's still beautiful. Applied over Urban Decay Primer Potion and Fyrinnae Pixie Epoxy. These pictures were taken indoors under a bright daylight bulb.


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Fyrinnae Fire Opal

From the website: Shimmery, metallic coppery bronze with hints of red on a charcoal base to boost the colour.

Eye Shadow Ingredients: Mica, Styrene/PVP Copolymer, Myristyl Myristate, Cyclopentasiloxane, Isododecane. May contain: Iron Oxides, Titanium Dioxide, Manganese Violet, Tin Oxide, Ultramarines, Chromium Oxide, Copper Powder, Bronze Powder, Calcium Aluminum Borosilicate, FD&C Blue #1, FD&C Red #40, FD&C Yellow #5, Synthetic Fluorphlogopite, Ferric Ferrocyanide, Silica.

Personal Comments: Oh geeze. I can't even begin to describe how much I love this shadow. It's like looking into a fire but just catching the light in the corner of your eye or it's like the flush of a candlelight glow. Hints of red and gold and brown make this shadow just so complex and lovely. Applied over Urban Decay Primer Potion and Fyrinnae Pixie Epoxy. These pictures were taken indoors under a bright daylight bulb. 

Purchase Link

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Fyrinnae Digital Faerie

From the website: Stunning deep sky blue with green shimmer.

Eye Shadow Ingredients: Mica, Styrene/PVP Copolymer, Myristyl Myristate, Cyclopentasiloxane, Isododecane. May contain: Iron Oxides, Titanium Dioxide, Manganese Violet, Tin Oxide, Ultramarines, Chromium Oxide, Copper Powder, Bronze Powder, Calcium Aluminum Borosilicate, FD&C Blue #1, FD&C Red #40, FD&C Yellow #5, Synthetic Fluorphlogopite, Ferric Ferrocyanide, Silica.

Not lip-safe.

Personal Comments: At first it's just a shimmery pale blue but then up close, it's just an explosion of different shades of blue and green. Applied over Urban Decay Primer Potion and Fyrinnae Pixie Epoxy. This picture was taken outside in natural light.


Tuesday, July 30, 2013

Review: Two Coraline perfumes from Black Phoenix Alchemy Lab



All items mentioned in the review were purchased with my own funds.

Black Phoenix Alchemy Lab has a series of officially licensed perfumes based on the works of Neil Gaiman. The perfumes based on the book and movie Coraline have had three groups of scents released so far--here are the two perfumes from the first group of scents in the series, Mouse Circus and Butterscotch Balls and Black Beetles.

Price: $26 for 5 mL of perfume oil in an amber glass bottle. The Coraline perfumes are charity, not-for-profit fundraisers--the proceeds go to the Comic Book Legal Defense Fund.
Samples: Not available for these scents.

Warning: review may contain spoilers for the book and/or movie.

Mouse Circus
Description from website:
"In the flat above Coraline’s, under the roof, was a crazy old man with a big mustache. He told Coraline that he was training a mouse circus. He wouldn’t let anyone see it.

“One day, little Caroline, when they are all ready, everyone in the whole world will see the wonders of my mouse circus. You ask me why you cannot see it now. Is that what you asked me?”

“No,” said Coraline quietly, “I asked you not to call me Caroline. It’s Coraline.”

“The reason you cannot see the mouse circus,” said the man upstairs, “is that the mice are not yet ready and rehearsed. Also, they refuse to play the songs I have written for them. All the songs I have written for the mice to play go oompah oompah. But the white mice will only play toodle oodle, like that. I am thinking of trying them on different types of cheese.”

A toodle oodle of pink cotton candy noses, vanilla spun sugar fur, scattered kernels of popcorn, and a touch of polished golden wood."

This smells very much like popcorn flavoring when first applied. Not exactly like real popcorn, but like buttered popcorn-flavored Jelly Bellies, for instance: an unmistakable, rather evocative smell with hints of salt and plastic. As it starts to dry, it goes from smelling purely like popcorn to smelling like caramel corn, or possibly kettle corn: a sweet, rich, vanilla-tinged note rises from the buttery, grainy popcorn background.

The scent thins out a bit as it dries down. If it's possible to have an airy perfume that smells like popcorn, I suppose this would be it; it doesn't feel very substantial or strong. It gets less sweet as it wears, too, smelling more like butter and wood, as odd as that sounds.

A strangely bitter, almost celery-like undertone comes out of the perfume about an hour into its drydown on my skin. I get this with certain musks sometimes, and it may be something specific to my skin.

It's not a strong or long-lasting perfume; my skin seems to drink it up, leaving behind just a vague creamy vanilla sweetness with that odd, bitter undertone after a few hours.

This is a very kid-friendly perfume: sweet, happy, innocent, foodie. On the other hand, though, it does smell a bit like a novelty scent you could buy at Claire's alongside the rhinestone headbands and 12-packs of cheap earrings. If it didn't have the $26 price tag and fancy nerd branding, would I be reviewing it to this level of detail? A comparison with Demeter Popcorn might be interesting, but I don't enjoy smelling like popcorn enough to add another popcorn perfume to my arsenal.

Butterscotch Balls and Black Beetles ([sic]: the label spells "black beetles" as two words, while the copy spells it as a single word, "blackbeetles")
Description from website:
“The other mother sat down on the big sofa. She picked up a shopping bag from beside the sofa and took out a white, rustling, paper bag from inside it.

She extended the hand with it to Coraline. “Would you like one?” she asked politely.

Expecting it to be a toffee or a butterscotch ball, Coraline looked down. The bag was half filled with large shiny blackbeetles, crawling over each other in their efforts to get out of the bag.

“No,” said Coraline. “I don’t want one.”

“Suit yourself,” said her other mother. She carefully picked out a particularly large and black beetle, pulled off its legs (which she dropped, neatly, into a big glass ashtray on the small table beside the sofa), and popped the beetle into her mouth. She crunched it happily.

“Yum,” she said, and took another.

“You’re sick,” said Coraline. “Sick and evil and weird.”

“Is that any way to talk to your mother?” her other mother asked, with her mouth full of blackbeetles.

Butterscotch candies flecked with dirt, encased in a shiny black shell of myrrh, patchouli, and anise seed."

Note: there was a limited number of bottles of BB&BB produced, and this scent has sold out and been removed from the website, but may be available second-hand on sites such as eBay.

This scent blasts you in the face with butterscotch when wet. It smells like the shiny yellow Brach's Butterscotch Disks my grandma used to keep in a candy dish, incredibly sweet and buttery rich.

As it dries on the skin, a weird, herbal, woodsy bitterness comes out from behind the sweetness, making it an apt characterization of Coraline's Other Mother, the main antagonist of the book. Although vetiver isn't listed in the notes, the bitter notes smell strongly of vetiver to me (a dry, woodsy, almost peanut buttery or nutty smell) with myrrh, just a slight hint of patchouli, and cedarwood. Anise gives it an herbal coolness without it smelling explicitly of licorice.

By the time it's dried down for perhaps 20 minutes, the scent has morphed from cloying, caramelized candy to a dark, dirty, mysterious, almost smokey concoction with a smear of velvety-soft butterscotch and myrrh sweetness behind the dirt. I think it would be a great unisex scent at this point (well, I think anyone can really wear any perfume they want, but I guess my point is that it could be construed as "traditionally" masculine) and although I'm not usually a huge fan of patchouli or resins like myrrh, I really enjoy the earthy, sinister aspects of the perfume because of how they're softened and smoothed out by the sweeter notes.

It is strong, with great sillage and great lasting power. I'm not sure I'd want to wear it every day, but it feels perfect as a scent to dab on in autumn, around Halloween: a gust of dark but sweet incense you might wear to stroll through the cool air, under the changing leaves.

Monday, July 29, 2013

Swatch Post! Dawn Eyes Cosmetics : Artifact, Jaded, Lily of the Valley, and Wild Turkey!



Description from website: Dark deep brown with strong shifts in green and pink, dripping with color-shifting glitter that goes aqua to blue to purple/pink.

Ingredients:  Mica, Silica, Iron Oxides, Titanium Dioxide, Magnesium Myristrate, Magnesium Stearate, Boron Nitride, Tin Oxide, Synthetic Fluorophylogopite, Myristic Acid, Silicon, Dimethicone 350, Dimethicone 100, Magnesium Hydroxide, Polymethylhydrogen Siloxane, Lauroyl Lysine

VEGAN! SAFE FOR EYES, LIPS, FACE, NAILS!

Personal Comments: Part of the Pastel Kisses Collection. Wild Turkey is a bit of a weird one. It's definitely one of the more unique brown shades that I've come across but I'm not sure if that's a good thing. There's a little too much going on in this shadow for my tastes but I could see it looking well for some bolder folks. Applied over Urban Decay Primer Potion and Fyrinnae Pixie Epoxy. Pictures taken indoors under a bright daylight bulb.

Purchase Link

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Dawn Lily of the Valley


Description from the website: A bright, pearly, and opaque white loaded with color-shifting sparkles that range from aqua/blue to pink/purple. This one is a great lid or inner corner shade, or, used sparingly, could be a higligher.

Ingredients: Mica, Titanium Dioxide, Boron Nitride, Magnesium Stearate, Magnesium Myristrate, Synthetic Fluorophylogopite, Silica, Tin Oxide, Synthetic Wax

VEGAN! SAFE FOR EYES, LIPS, FACE, NAILS!

Personal Comments: Part of the Spring 2012 Flora & Fauna Collection. Lily of the Valley reminds me of weddings. It looks like a bridal veil and though it's a bit sheerer than some of the other Dawn Eyes shadows, it's still very pretty. I didn't see a lot of the pink/purple shifts in the glitter but I really liked the blue tints. Applied over Urban Decay Primer Potion and Fyrinnae Pixie Epoxy. Pictures taken indoors under a bright daylight bulb.

Purchase Link

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Dawn Jaded


Description from the website: Grassy green base dripping with color-shifting glitter that makes it look like pink, gold, or coral! Unusual and intriguing!

Ingredients: Mica, Chromium Oxide Green, Titanium Dioxide, Boron Nitride, Titanium Dioxide, Magnesium Myristrate, Magnesium Stearate, Zinc Oxide, Synthetic Fluorophylogopite, Tin Oxide, Silica, Synthetic Wax

VEGAN! SAFE FOR EYES, FACE, NAILS, NOT LIPS!

Personal Comments: Part of the Lip-Sync for Your Life 2013 Spring Collection. Jaded is one of those shades that's beautiful but so glitter heavy that you'll stand no chance without a glitter glue. Even with the glitter glue, there's bit of fallout. That said, I really love this green shade. It's looks really fresh. You can see the coral glitter color more in the swatch but I thought the pink stood out a lot more. Applied over Urban Decay Primer Potion and Fyrinnae Pixie Epoxy. Pictures taken indoors under a bright daylight bulb.

Purchase Link

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Dawn Artifact

From the website: Pretty champagne lit with tiny sparks of silver, blue, and violet!

Ingredients: Mica, Titanium Dioxide, Calcium Sodium Borosilicate, Calcium Aluminum Borosilicate, Tin Oxide, Ferric Ferrocyanide, Carmine, Silica, Boron Nitride, Magnesium Stearate, Magnesium Myristrate, Synthetic Wax, Triethoxycaprylylsilane

NOT VEGAN! SAFE FOR EYES, FACE, NAILS, NOT LIPS

Personal Comments: Artifact is a part of the Sunrise Valley Collection released in 2013. Applied over Urban Decay Primer Potion and Fyrinnae Pixie Epoxy. It has an almost foiled look to it even though it was applied dry. I'm not sure I would call this a champagne color but it's a really nice coppery brown. Pictures taken indoors under a bright daylight bulb.

Purchase Link

Friday, July 26, 2013

Swatch Post! Detrivore Cosmetics : Arachnid, Mushroom, Omen, and Sacred!




Description from the website: Arachnid is a metallic pink satin with white shimmer. This pink eyeshadow contains aluminum powder and should not be used on the lips.

Ingredients: Sericite Mica(77019) Titanium Dioxide (77891), May Contain: Carmine, Manganese Violet (77742) Ferric Ferrocyanide 77510, Iron Oxide (77491, 77492, 77499, 77288, 77742,) Ultramarines, Tin Oxide 778161, Calcium
Aluminum Borosilicate, and Silica.
Metallics may contain: Bronze powder 77400, Copper Powder 77400, Iron Oxide Fe203.

NOT SAFE FOR LIPS

Personal Comments: Detrivore's eyeshadows in general don't have a ton of glitter in them and I appreciate that. Arachnid is one of these. The shadow itself doesn't look like a satin to me and closer to being a matte with some glitter in it. Applied over Urban Decay Primer Potion and Fyrinnae Pixie Epoxy. Pictures taken indoors under a bright daylight bulb.

Purchase Link

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Detrivore Omen

Description from the website: Omen is a medium purple satin eye shadow. Color 137.

Ingredients: Sericite Mica(77019) Titanium Dioxide (77891), May Contain: Carmine, Manganese Violet (77742) Ferric Ferrocyanide 77510, Iron Oxide (77491, 77492, 77499, 77288, 77742,) Ultramarines, Tin Oxide 778161, Calcium
Aluminum Borosilicate, and Silica.
Metallics may contain: Bronze powder 77400, Copper Powder 77400, Iron Oxide Fe203.

Personal Comments: A brighter purple with a bit of red and rainbow glitter. Applied over Urban Decay Primer Potion and Fyrinnae Pixie Epoxy. Pictures taken indoors under a bright daylight bulb.

Purchase Link

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Detrivore Sacred

Description from the website: Sacred is a violet eye shadow with a black base.

Ingredients: Sericite Mica(77019) Titanium Dioxide (77891), May Contain: Carmine, Manganese Violet (77742) Ferric Ferrocyanide 77510, Iron Oxide (77491, 77492, 77499, 77288, 77742,) Ultramarines, Tin Oxide 778161, Calcium
Aluminum Borosilicate, and Silica.
Metallics may contain: Bronze powder 77400, Copper Powder 77400, Iron Oxide Fe203.

Personal Comments: A "muddy" purple with a bit of glitter. There's Applied over Urban Decay Primer Potion and Fyrinnae Pixie Epoxy. Pictures taken indoors under a bright daylight bulb.

Purchase Link

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Detrivore Mushroom

Description from the website: Mushroom blue is a shimmery dark blue eye shadow.

Ingredients: Sericite Mica(77019) Titanium Dioxide (77891), May Contain: Carmine, Manganese Violet (77742) Ferric Ferrocyanide 77510, Iron Oxide (77491, 77492, 77499, 77288, 77742,) Ultramarines, Tin Oxide 778161, Calcium
Aluminum Borosilicate, and Silica.
Metallics may contain: Bronze powder 77400, Copper Powder 77400, Iron Oxide Fe203.

Personal Comments: Slightly glittery but not overly so. Mushroom is more of a navy blue from farther away but there's definitely a bit of green in it. Applied over Urban Decay Primer Potion and Fyrinnae Pixie Epoxy. Pictures taken indoors under a bright daylight bulb.

Purchase Link

Thursday, July 25, 2013

Company Overview: Chinovi Cosmetics




Have you heard of Chinovi Cosmetics? I definitely hadn't until a couple months back but I'm really glad that I stumbled upon them.

Chinovi Cosmetics (pronounced shin-o-vee according to their header) is a relatively new indie. chinovicosmetics.com and their associated Store Envy shop were both opened in June 2012 (has it really been a full year since then??). The store envy shop is usually updated with new products before the main website but eventually, all products are listed in both places.

They are based in Nevada, USA and sell mostly eyeshadows but they've recently (as of May 2013) expanded their offerings to a few blushes as well.

Packaging: Jars are packaged together in plastic baggies to prevent anything sliding around. Everything is wrapped in tissue paper and depending on the size of your order, it either comes in a small box or a padded envelope.



Products come plastic sealed - something I really appreciate because it prevents any leakage during travel - and the labels have the full ingredients list as well as a notation as to whether it's a vegan product or not.



Selection: Being a smaller indie, Chinovi has a bit of limited selection of products, with only 64 permanent eyeshadows, 12 in an LE collection and 3 blushes. That being said, I appreciate quality over quantity and the eyeshadows that I've tested so far are excellent. They're also coming out with a line of matte shadows.

Samples: Samples are offered in both baggie ($1 USD) or in jars ($2 USD) and they both contain 1/4 tsp of product. I personally prefer samples in jars but I know others that prefer baggies. The ability to choose is definitely appreciated.

Cost: Eyeshadows are $5 USD for 1-2 grams in a 5g jar. Discounts are offered if you purchase an entire LE collection at once. Blushes are $6 USD for 2-3 grams in a 10g jar. Jars do not come with sifters. Chinovi does offer frequent sales on through their Story Envy and they're announced on their Facebook page. I placed my order during a sale of 40% off any purchase over $10.

Customer Service: I placed a couple orders within a day of each other and I emailed Chinovi to ask if they could just combine the orders. I received an email within 24 hours with a refund for the shipping cost for my second order. :) I appreciated the promptness and the refund without even asking for it!

TAT: Currently listed as 10-14 days. In a recent order, I got the "your order has been shipped" email 11 days after placing it and the package was in my hands 2 days after that.

Jeannie adds (Feb 2014) - I placed an order during the Superbowl sale and I got the "your order has been shipped email" 3 days later. What is truly amazing is that it reached Western Australia 8 business days after I placed my order. I think that's the fastest shipping I've received from any indie brand!  

Personal Thoughts: Chinovi has what is quickly becoming one of my favorite eyeshadow formulas! I've been incredibly impressed by how smooth and blendable they are despite being so new. I've also found some lovely duo-chromes in their selection, though they're not labeled as such so it's a bit of a hunt if you want one. They have a good mixture of shimmer shadows and glitter-y shadows and I really like that they don't fill the glitter ones to the point where it's basically all glitter.

Make sure to check out the rest of our Chinovi reviews and swatches!

Easy neutral FOTD


While I love the bright and bold eyeshadows most indie brands offer, some days I want something more natural looking and subdued. In this look, I used a couple of brown eyeshadows with a soft pink blush and lipgloss. 

Swatches under a lamp L-R: FFC Archangel, FFC Heroic, Black Rose Minerals Jersey Girl, Pretty Serious Morning Java, FFC Velvet Cupcake, Pretty Serious CGA 

First I prepped my eyes with a layer of Urban Decay's Original Primer Potion to avoid creasing. Then I applied Femme Fatale Cosmetics' Heroic dry with a flat eyeshadow brush, and blended Black Rose Mineral's Jersey Girl in the crease area with a tapered crease brush. I lightly highlighted my browbone and inner tearduct area with Femme Fatale Cosmetics' Archangel. To line my eyes, I used Morning Java by Pretty Serious with a small angled eyeliner brush wet with Meow Cosmetics' Eyeliner Sealant. I filled in my eyebrows with Meow Cosmetics' Brow Beater in Soft Brown using an angled brush. I layered two mascaras, Multi Mega Lash for volume and Lash Length Extension for length (both are by Australis, an Australian brand).

Close up of eyes
For my face, I first applied sunscreen (Sunsense Daily Face SPF 30+, an Australian brand) followed by Meow Cosmetics' Pampered Puss Foundation in Frisky Siamese applied with a kabuki brush. I concealed my stubborn red spots with MAC's Pro Longwear Concealer in NW20. I used a blush brush to apply Femme Fatale Cosmetics' Velvet Cupcake to my cheeks. To finish the look off, I used Pretty Serious' Sparkle Gloss in CGA.



Product list:
not pictured - Meow Cosmetics' Eyeliner Sealant and MAC's Pro Longwear Concealer 



Photographed in indirect sunlight
Photographed under a lamp


Wednesday, July 24, 2013

Swatch Post! Black Rose Minerals : Coma Black, Glimmer, Nightingale, and Paradise Lost!




Description from Black Rose Minerals website: This darkly deep violet shimmers ever so slightly but smolders all the way. Wear it dry for a shimmer glower and wear it wet to deepen the shade and compliment every scab of your broken heart.

Ingredients: iron oxide, mica, titanium oxide, tin oxide, ferric ferrocyanide, carnauba wax, magnesium myristate, silicon dioxide, D&C black #2 and polyester 3.
SAFE FOR EYES, FACE AND NAILS.
NOT LIP SAFE.

Personal Comments: The name is a throwback to the song "Coma Black" by Marilyn Manson. It's a little confusing because from my eye, this shade definitely isn't a black at all. It reminds me of the "royal purple." The deep shade of purple worn by royals in the past. Applied over Urban Decay Primer Potion and Fyrinnae Pixie Epoxy. Pictures taken indoors under a bright daylight bulb.

Purchase Link

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BRM Nightingale

Description from the Black Rose Minerals website: A mysterious and dark duochrome. Do I see blue? Or is it......curiouser and curiouser. A blue black base gives way to multiple color highlights. Worn wet it gives opaque color coverage to bring out the iridescent sheen and dry for a very dark smokey appearance.

Ingredients: mica, titanium dioxide, tin oxide, iron oxide, magnesium myristate, copper powder, magnesium stearate and silicon dioxide

SAFE FOR EYES, LIPS, FACE AND NAILS

Personal Comments: The difference between the macro shot and the swatch really brings out the duochrome here. From farther away, Nightingale is a nice deep blue with purple undertones but you can really see the green in the macro. The swatches on the Black Rose Minerals website shows a more purple shade than I see here. Applied over Urban Decay Primer Potion and Fyrinnae Pixie Epoxy. Pictures taken indoors under a bright daylight bulb.


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BRM Glimmer

Description from Black Rose Minerals website: The career tribute from District 1 as mentioned in the Hunger Games, this golden hue is just as fierce and unforgettable. A bright golden sheen with a luminescent green flash. Sheer when dry, wear it wet to deepen the hue and bring the duochrome to the forefront.

Ingredients:mica, titanium dioxide, tin oxide, iron oxide, calcium carbonate, magnesium myristate, carnauba wax and silicon dioxide.

SAFE FOR EYES, LIPS, FACE AND NAILS.

Personal Comments: A very glittery orange/yellow shade. I didn't see any of the "green flash" mentioned in the description though. Applied over Urban Decay Primer Potion and Fyrinnae Pixie Epoxy. Pictures taken indoors under a bright daylight bulb.

Purchase Link

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BRM Paradise Lost

Description from Black Rose Minerals website: Though it might be better to reign in hell than serve in heaven, we think we’ll take our chances right here on earth. This shade glistens like a deep pool of water, the black base representing the depth below. Fairly true to color wet and dry, dry is slightly more sheer while wet accentuates the boldness of the blue.

Ingredients: iron oxide, mica, titanium dioxide, tin oxide, ultramarines, chromium oxide green, carnauba wax, silicon dioxide, magnesium myristate, calcium aluminum borosilicate and silica.

SAFE FOR EYES, FACE AND NAILS.
NOT LIP SAFE.

Personal Comments: A deep blue shade that reminds me of oil drops on water. I like the almost green shade that comes out in the macro but that's not something that you can see without being up this close. Applied over Urban Decay Primer Potion and Fyrinnae Pixie Epoxy. Pictures taken indoors under a bright daylight bulb.

Purchase Link

Tuesday, July 23, 2013

Review: Three Indie Vanilla-Oud Perfumes



All items mentioned in the review were purchased with my own funds.

Agarwood, also commonly known as oud, oudh, or aloeswood, is a popular ingredient in Oriental perfumes (a category of warm, resinous, spicy scents). It is a dark, fragrant, resinous heartwood produced in Aquilaria trees as a response to mold infections; expensive, controversial due to its rarity and possible sensitizing effects, but with a rich, complex, incensey smell and powerful fixative properties, it's prized for its uses in perfume, mainstream, niche, and indie alike.

The oud accord in Yves Saint Laurent's 2002 perfume M7--and the concurrent creation of several good synthetic oud accords--sparked a trend of oud notes in perfumes, according to Luca Turin and Tania Sanchez, who describe oud's scent as a "weird combination of honeyed sweetness and woody freshness" in their excellent book Perfumes: The A-Z Guide.

I have reviews for you of three indie perfumes based on oud and vanilla; although two of them are no longer available from the retailers, you may be able to track them down second-hand through perfume forums or eBay. I'm unsure of which of these use natural versus synthetic oud accords. Araña and Manor are definitely vegan; I believe Perpetual Motion Machine is vegan as well, and that all three are cruelty-free, but I couldn't find confirmation of this online.

Black Phoenix Alchemy Lab Araña (limited edition, no longer available)

"ARAÑA
Sharpie on copier paper, 2012
This is araña. That's spider in Spanish. She's big and has one thousand million babies.
Vanilla-infused agarwood, oak bark, and Laotian benzoin."


Araña is part of the April 2013 "A Tremulous Song" limited edition series of perfumes from Black Phoenix Alchemy Lab. The Pickman Gallery series of scents features perfumes inspired by specific pieces of artwork, with Cthulhu-mythos copy describing a mysterious art gallery in the Miskatonic Valley of Arkham, MA: "Founded in 1923 by interdimensionally renowned portrait artist Richard Upton Pickman, the Gallery offers the Miskatonic Valley community a dynamic roster of stimulating, dread-provoking exhibitions and enriching public programs."

This exhibition in the Pickman Gallery features scents inspired by the artwork of young Lilith Barrial, daughter of BPAL's owner Beth Barrial. Proceeds were donated to the charity First Book. The bottle art on the 5 mL amber glass bottle includes the namesake spider drawn in Sharpie on a pink background.

(A note on benzoin: it sounds synthetic, but in perfumery, the word usually refers to a vanillic-smelling resin produced from the bark of Styrax trees, and also known as gum benjamin.)

At first sniff, Araña smells quite similar to BPAL's non-limited edition, steampunk-themed scent The Antikythera Mechanism, though less sharp than that scent. The sharp oakwood dominates the scent when wet, with a certain harsh sharpness that I usually translate as a "perfumey" or "cologney" fragrance, odd and undescriptive as that may sound--think of the "perfumey" descriptor as the equivalent of the music you might overhear spilling out of a thumping car stereo turned up all the way; you can't ignore it, you can identify it as music, but it's just a sort of general noisy assault and you can't really make out specific notes or particularly enjoy it.

A sort of fruity smokiness starts to rise out as the scent dries down and the harshness fades a bit. I think this is the oud making its appearance. This woodsy sharp smokiness lingers for a long time, with the sharpness decreasing and the woodiness mellowing out over time.

Hours later, only the very base of the perfume remains, a warm, very creamy, almost rummy vanilla-benzoin scent.

This is the most masculine of the three scents, and the most complex, but I also find it the least approachable, and hardest to enjoy in the wet phase. I like it best once it has dried down to the vanilla base and the sharp, perfumey woodsiness has died down.

Solstice Scents Manor ($15 for 0.35 oz in a blue glass rollerball or $2.50 for a sample)
"Woody-Vanilla Musk, Vanilla Accord, Glorious Black Agarwood & Exquisite Aloeswood

Manor is the scent of a once grand estate, now disheveled, forgotten and left exposed to the elements. The faint scent of previous owners and their esteemed guests - exquisitely perfumed ladies mingling with the intense rich and musky scent of smartly dressed gentlemen - meets rich wood floors and heavy wooden doors long since opened, decaying beadboard and Wainscot topped off with a thin layer of dust. It is very sophisticated and absolutely intoxicating."

Manor was originally a limited edition/seasonal scent from Solstice Scents, but was so popular it was first added to their general catalog and then used as inspiration for "The Manor Collection," with a set of perfumes inspired by each room in the fictional crumbling manor--Attic, Kitchen, Cellar, etc.

Manor opens with a mild black vanilla scent. It's creamy but woodsy and dry--not an overt sharp wood like the oak in Araña, but more as if you were eating a French vanilla ice cream cone on another planet where it wasn't actually sweet. Vanilla musk anchors it to the skin and becomes more obvious as the scent dries down. It stays subtle and close to the skin, and doesn't morph much (it's quite linear)--a definite vanilla scent, but with the musk and oud dirtying it up, keeping it out of the realm of gourmand, desserty vanillas. The longer it wears, the more the incense-smoke quality of the oud rises out of the vanilla.

I've seen it described as "soft" and "cuddly," but I find it cool and a bit impersonal, not warm and cozy.

Soft, musky, quite sexy and easily wearable, it seems like it would be a fantastic signature perfume for someone--the type of addictive perfume that you might smell on someone's skin and be ever unsure of where the perfume ended and their natural skin scent began. My main complaint is about its linearity--it's lovely, but not complex.

It comes in the standard Solstice Scents bottle--a cobalt blue frosted glass rollerball with a sepia-toned label with the name of the perfume hand-written on the side.

Possets Perpetual Motion Machine (discontinued, no longer available)
"Smooth action makes you think it can go on forever, sweet and non medicinal, this is the seductive side of science. Deeply buffed wood and suave vanilla, a secret emollient and something wonderfully perfumy. Perpetual Motion will get your attention. Unisex and perpetually moving. The icon is a real perpetual motion machine, Perpetuum Mobile of Villard de Honnecourt (about 1230). Vanilla, foody, gourmand, woody, brass-like."

This was my favorite scent from Possets and the one I would always recommend to people looking to try scents from this perfumer, but it was discontinued a year or two back due to issues with the perfumer no longer being able to source one of the components.

It comes in a 5 mL amber glass bottle with a Da Vinci-esque sketch on the label and the name written in a fairly tacky, squiggly, vaguely medieval font. (The label says 6 mL, but it's the same size as the bottles that most indie perfumers label as 5 mL.)

The funny thing about Perpetual Motion Machine was that when I first read the description of the scent, it sounded like a blatant ripoff of The Antikythera Mechanism, described as "Bronze gears spin inside a polished wooden case, and an entire universe dances within: Teakwood, oak, black vanilla, and tobacco." Once I tried it, though, I realized it was an entirely different perfume, not similar to The Antikythera Mechanism at all. It comes full circle now, though, with Araña both smelling similar to The Antikythera Mechanism and sharing notes with Perpetual Motion Machine.

The description of this scent would imply metallic notes, but I don't find Perpetual Motion Machine metallic or masculine at all. The first sniff of Perpetual Motion Machine is an alarming, overwhelmingly sweet buttercream or custard scent, almost unbearably cupcake-like, like a perfume for preteens. It passes through a baby-powdery, somewhat plastic doll head-like French vanilla phase and winds up quite similar to Manor in the drydown--a musky vanilla underpinned with incensey, resinous oud.

It's warmer than Manor, sweeter and rounder than Araña, but once it has dried down, it shares the quality with those other scents of being definitely vanilla without being particularly gourmand. It is perhaps the most approachable and edible of the three, though, with a very "moreish" vanilla extract note at drydown that demands deep sniffs from any vanilla perfume fan. Smelling it is like eating marshmallows and vanilla ice cream in a room where smoldering incense smoke lingers.

All three perfumes have very good lasting power due to their components--they all share a heavy dose of basenotes like wood and vanilla that stay on the skin for ages, and a general lack of brighter/lighter topnotes. While they'd be acceptable year-round, they all feel like autumn scents to me, the type of slightly mysterious scent you'd wear with a wool turtleneck while cool winds blow changing leaves around you.

The sad conclusion to these reviews is that my husband hates the scent of oud, so whenever I wear Manor or Perpetual Motion Machine, he complains that I smell like a musty attic. The vanilla doesn't seem to sweeten or temper it; the smoky animalic quality of the oud comes through and ruins the scent for him. I love these perfumes, but hardly ever wear them out of courtesy to him. I haven't had Araña very long, and have avoided any "musty attic" remarks so far, so it's possible the oud doesn't bother him in that scent.

Have you tried any oud perfumes? Are you a fan? Does the note make you think of musty attics or incense smoke? Are they too heavy for the summer, or a refreshing change from the expected light aquatics and fruity citrus splashes?

Monday, July 22, 2013

Swatch Post : Chinovi Cosmetics





From the website: Freedom is a light silver based sky blue. It was created as a trio with Declaration and Independence.

Not lip-safe.

Eye Shadow Ingredients: mica, titanium dioxide, ferric ferrocyanide, magnesium stearate, carnauba wax

Personal Comments:  I think this is one of my favorite patrotic themed eyeshadows. It's a pretty sky blue but has that hint of silver that gives it the nice dark-ish, almost grey, sheen. Applied over Urban Decay Primer Potion and Fyrinnae Pixie Epoxy. This picture was taken outside in natural light.


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Chinovi Desert Rain

From the website: Desert Rain is a pink toned brown with a slight teal interference.

Eye Shadow Ingredients: mica, titanium dioxide, iron oxide, magnesium stearate, carnauba wax

Personal Comments: A gorgeous red-bronze, rust shade. You can see tiny tiny hints of green up close but without an angle like this, I didn't see any of the teal mentioned in the description. Applied over Urban Decay Primer Potion and Fyrinnae Pixie Epoxy. This picture was taken outside in natural light.


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Chinovi Cake Pop

From the website: Cake Pop is an iridescent purple with turquoise sparkles

Not lip-safe.

Eye Shadow Ingredients: mica, titanium dioxide, tin oxide, ferric ferrocyanide, calcium sodium borosilicate, magnesium stearate, carnauba wax

Personal Comments: DUOCHROME!! I was so excited when I opened this shadow and saw the purple inside the lid. Just look at how awesome that is! Chinovi definitely needs better descriptions because that blurb doesn't do this shade justice at all. When applied without a base, Cake Pop is a sheer - almost glowing - pink. You don't really see any of the purple until you put it over a dark base. Applied over Urban Decay Primer Potion and Fyrinnae Pixie Epoxy. This picture was taken outside in natural light.


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Chinovi Mermaid

From the website: Mermaid is teal with a light silver cast.

Eye Shadow Ingredients: mica, titanium dioxide, iron oxide, tin oxide, boron nitride, carmine, magnesium stearate, carnauba wax

Not Vegan

Personal Comments: This shade just makes me think of The Little Mermaid and I swear it's not just because of the name. This color just reminds me so much of the ocean scenes of Ariel in her grotto. The shimmer effect is less silvery and more like a rainbow. Applied over Urban Decay Primer Potion and Fyrinnae Pixie Epoxy. This picture was taken outside in natural light.




Saturday, July 20, 2013

Collection Spotlight! Endless Rain by innocent + twisted alchemy


Endless Rain Collection plus included artwork and samples!

Endless Rain is my absolute favorite innocent+twisted collection. Everything from the artwork on the cap to the individual shades is just beautiful. It was also my first indie purchase so it has a special place in my heart. ;)

Purchase link

Warning! Very picture heavy!

Friday, July 19, 2013

Swatch Post! Fyrinnae : Enchanting Otters, Feisty Fennec Fox, Ravishing Red Wolf, and Sloth Snuggles!




From the website: Lush shimmering emerald green, filled with a rainbow of sparkle, much like in Shenanigans and Scarlet Macaw. Otters are quite enchanting, are they not? Endangered 2012.

Not lip-safe.

Eye Shadow Ingredients: Mica, Styrene/PVP Copolymer, Myristyl Myristate, Cyclopentasiloxane, Isododecane. May contain: Iron Oxides, Titanium Dioxide, Manganese Violet, Tin Oxide, Ultramarines, Chromium Oxide, Copper Powder, Bronze Powder, Calcium Aluminum Borosilicate, FD&C Blue #1, FD&C Red #40, FD&C Yellow #5, Synthetic Fluorphlogopite, Ferric Ferrocyanide, Silica.

Personal Comments: This is a gorgeous sea green. It doesn't really make me think of otters but I love the shade anyway. It's part of Fyrinnae's Endangered collection. Applied over Urban Decay Primer Potion and Fyrinnae Pixie Epoxy. This picture was taken outside in natural light. 


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Fyrinnae Feisty Fennec Fox


From the website: Light cool taupe finished with a pale gold satiny highlight. Endangered 2012

Eye Shadow Ingredients: Mica, Styrene/PVP Copolymer, Myristyl Myristate, Cyclopentasiloxane, Isododecane. May contain: Iron Oxides, Titanium Dioxide, Manganese Violet, Tin Oxide, Ultramarines, Chromium Oxide, Copper Powder, Bronze Powder, Calcium Aluminum Borosilicate, FD&C Blue #1, FD&C Red #40, FD&C Yellow #5, Synthetic Fluorphlogopite, Ferric Ferrocyanide, Silica.

Personal Comments: This is a great neutral-ish shade by Fyrinnae. The gold sheen isn't overly obvious but if you catch the right light, it's a pale but still rich shine. It's another part of Fyrinnae's Endangered collection. Applied over Urban Decay Primer Potion and Fyrinnae Pixie Epoxy. These pictures were taken indoors under a bright daylight bulb.


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Fyrinnae Ravishing Red Wolf>

From the website: This shade is a cool pink-wine over soft black to enhance the color, but applied wet or over a sticky base (and many primers), will appear light, vibrant metallic purple. Endangered 2012.

Red Wolves were saved from extinction by our great nearby Point Defiance Zoo & Aquarium, so we had to fit them in here. 

Eye Shadow Ingredients: Mica, Styrene/PVP Copolymer, Myristyl Myristate, Cyclopentasiloxane, Isododecane. May contain: Iron Oxides, Titanium Dioxide, Manganese Violet, Tin Oxide, Ultramarines, Chromium Oxide, Copper Powder, Bronze Powder, Calcium Aluminum Borosilicate, FD&C Blue #1, FD&C Red #40, FD&C Yellow #5, Synthetic Fluorphlogopite, Ferric Ferrocyanide, Silica.

Personal Comments: This is a nice deep almost maroon but not quite red. It's not quite a shimmery as other Fyrinnae shadows (still shimmery but less so). It's another part of Fyrinnae's Endangered collection. Applied over Urban Decay Primer Potion and Fyrinnae Pixie Epoxy. These pictures were taken indoors under a bright daylight bulb.


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Fyrinnae Sloth Snuggles

From the website: Deep to medium chocolate brown graced with a satiny mauve highlight. Endangered 2012

Eye Shadow Ingredients: Mica, Styrene/PVP Copolymer, Myristyl Myristate, Cyclopentasiloxane, Isododecane. May contain: Iron Oxides, Titanium Dioxide, Manganese Violet, Tin Oxide, Ultramarines, Chromium Oxide, Copper Powder, Bronze Powder, Calcium Aluminum Borosilicate, FD&C Blue #1, FD&C Red #40, FD&C Yellow #5, Synthetic Fluorphlogopite, Ferric Ferrocyanide, Silica.

Personal Comments: Another great almost-neutral-esque shade. Kind of a red-brown, this shade reminds me of red clay. Definitely more muted than other Fyrinnae shadows.  It's another part of Fyrinnae's Endangered collection. Applied over Urban Decay Primer Potion and Fyrinnae Pixie Epoxy. These pictures were taken indoors under a bright daylight bulb.


Purchase Link

Thursday, July 18, 2013

Fyrinnae Pressed Eyeshadows: Review


All items mentioned in the review were purchased with my own funds.

Overview: 
Fyrinnae is one of the rare indie companies that offers both loose and pressed eyeshadows. The pressed shadows are a relatively new offering and don't have a lot of reviews out there, so I wanted to share my impressions and swatches with you for five shades: Rapunzel Had Extensions, Daemon’s Tail, Woolly Mammoth, Atomic Afterglow, and Work Safe Blue.

Top to bottom: Rapunzel Had Extensions, Daemon's Tail, Woolly Mammoth, Atomic Afterglow, and Work Safe Blue. Left side is on a base of Urban Decay Primer Potion; right side, UDPP + Fyrinnae Pixie Epoxy.

Price:
$8.25 per pressed eyeshadow.

Samples:
According to the website, "Samples are not available, but the solid shades are close to their loose shadow counterparts, when such exists."
The bottoms of the pans.

Ingredients:
Mica, Cyclopentasiloxane, Titanium Dioxide, Dimethicone, Zinc Stearate, Isododecane, Isopropyl Myristate. May contain: Iron Oxides, Manganese Violet, Tin Oxide, Ultramarines, Calcium Aluminum Borosilicate, Calcium Sodium Borosilicate, Synthetic Fluorphlogopite, Silica, Nylon-12, Cetearyl Ethylhexanoate,Blue #1, Red #40, Yellow #5, Ferric Ferrocyanide, Chromium Oxide, Sorbitan Olivate.





All Fyrinnae products are vegan and cruelty-free.

Alongside the pans for comparison. Top to bottom: Rapunzel Had Extensions, Daemon's Tail, Woolly Mammoth, Atomic Afterglow, and Work Safe Blue. Left side:Urban Decay Primer Potion; right side, UDPP + Fyrinnae Pixie Epoxy. 

Packaging:
Fyrinnae pressed eyeshadows come in a pleasing, lightweight round (26 mm) aluminum flip-top container with 2 grams of product. The top is clear and the bottom has a silver sticker with the color name and ingredients. All of the shades I swatched here have a soft shimmer or sheen, no glitter. I like the containers, and they open and close smoothly, but they’re very bulky compared to the actual contents. I haven’t tried depotting them.

General notes: 
The texture of all the shadows was smooth and buttery, easy to pick up with a brush. They’re very pigmented, and I found it a little hard to blend them over primer; a skin-colored shadow as a base might help with blending.  


In the swatches, the top half of each swatch was done on a base of Urban Decay Primer Potion; below the line, the swatch is on a combination of UDPP and Fyrinnae Pixie Epoxy. All swatches were patted on with a flat eyeshadow brush. Photos were taken in natural light--I've included one brightly lit outdoor photo and one outdoor photo with indirect light for each color.


I was surprised at how little difference the Pixie Epoxy made with the colors, since typically it grabs and emphasizes sparkly colors and can make a distinct difference in the way a shimmery shadow looks. There was barely any difference for most of these shades, with Daemon’s Tail and Work Safe Blue having the most noticeable difference--not much of a difference in color, but they looked more dense and saturated over the Pixie Epoxy rather than the UDPP. However, the wear time was significantly increased by using Pixie Epoxy over UDPP.


Rapunzel Had Extensions (top: UDPP, bottom: UDPP + Pixie Epoxy):

I apologize for the pans looking so ratty--these were purchased and used well before starting this blog, so I unfortunately have no pictures of pristine eyeshadow pans.

From the website: “Pale warm pink with a stunning brilliant light gold highlight. One of our most popular shadows since 2007. New pressed version released 9/2012.”
Personal Comments: Rapunzel Had Extensions is similar to MAC Expensive Pink or Urban Decay X--peachy pink with a distinct, strong golden duochrome effect. Because I finger-swatched it and got oils on the surface, the pan looks a bit hardened on the surface, but I can still pick up color with a brush without a problem. Although it’s the lightest shade out of all the Fyrinnae pressed shadows I own, it’s also the least subtle! The golden shimmer is flashy, bright, and metallic, catching the light as you move. The yellow tones in my skin tend to cancel out the peachy tones of the shadow so it comes across as a more rosy, almost bubblegum pink on my skin where it looks a bit peachier in the pan.

Here are Woolly Mammoth and Daemon’s Tail side by side for comparison:
Woolly Mammoth on the left, Daemon's Tail on the right.



From the website: “A rich combination of light purple and metallic gold. Not purple with gold shimmer, or vice-versa, but a velvety mix of different shades, which adds a soft burgundy hue in as well. Must be seen in person to appreciate. Finish is somewhere between slightly metallic satin and soft shimmer. Originally a loose shadow, and brought back as pressed-only in 9/2012. Not as dark as the original, but buildable. No dyes. (yes we are aware the picture looks like Berber carpet)
*** July 8 2013: This shade may be at the end of its run once the current stock is exhausted. The hue differences didn't translate well to pressed, causing a muddy effect, rather than the separate hues of gold and purple. ***”

Personal Comments: Daemon’s Tail is a velvety amethyst purple with a metallic finish leaning slightly bronze-gold. It’s darker than mauve, lighter than plum, and has a bit of a pinkish flash on the lids. It reminds me a bit of Laura Mercier’s African Violet, though I think it’s darker, less golden, and more muted than that. It was a bit flakier than the other colors, so I noticed a slight amount of fallout if I didn’t tap off my brush before application. I would agree that this color doesn’t display separate gold and purple hues, although I wouldn’t call it “muddy” myself.


From the website: “A rich, warm mahogany brown with a slight coppery-gold shimmer. New 9/2012, and only available solid. Contains no dyes. New 9/2012.”
Personal Comments: Woolly Mammoth is a warm, very rich redwood brown that appears to have a satiny finish in low light, but still gives off a bit of shimmer in full sun. It’s a warmer color than I usually like for my brown eyes--if I’m wearing brown eyeshadow, I tend to prefer cooler browns and taupes--but I think the contrast would emphasize blue or green eyes beautifully.

Work Safe Blue and Atomic Afterglow look like very similar murky grays in the pan, but are clearly distinct shades when applied.
Work Safe Blue on the left, Atomic Afterglow on the right.


From the website: “Formerly "Damn Paladins". Slightly satiny taupe with a light blue highlight. Contains no dyes.”
Personal Comments: Work Safe Blue has a dark taupe base shade with a cool, luminous, slate blue sheen that appears when applied. It lights up the eye without being so shiny it’s metallic. Blended out, the blue shimmer fades away and the taupe base is more visible. It applied slightly patchier than the others, though it still had beautiful pigmentation and smooth texture. It’s the classiest blue eyeshadow I’ve ever seen, and is my favorite shadow out of my Fyrinnae collection. These swatches don't really do it justice--you'll get a more accurate overall impression of it from looking at it in the large overview photos at the top of the post.


From the website: “Cool silvery taupe filled with highlights of copper, gold, and light green. Satiny finish with subtle slight shimmer, no sparkle.
One of our most popular eye shadows from 2008-2010, discontinued due to manufacturer ingredient change, then reformulated and brought back as pressed on 12/21/2012. Slightly lighter than the original. Contains no dyes.”
Personal Comments: Atomic Afterglow is on a similar taupe base with a complex gray-toned sage green shimmer. In low light, the reflection takes on a brassy gold quality; in full sun, it has a very subtly iridescent sparkle, throwing off tiny rainbow shimmers.


These can be worn heavily to emphasize the blue or green overtones, or in a sheer, blended, smoky wash to emphasize the gray/brown undertones.

Conclusion: I highly recommend Fyrinnae pressed shadows--the quality is outstanding, the pressed shadows are very convenient compared to the loose shadows, and Pixie Epoxy doesn’t seem to be necessary to keep the color true, at least for the shades I’ve tried. I don’t find them to crease any more or less than average when worn over primer. The quality seems comparable to Urban Decay to me, but with a single eyeshadow costing only $8 as compared to Urban Decay’s $18.


The downsides I see are the bulky packaging, limited color selection, and the lack of matte shades to provide some contrast in the crease or outer V of the eye, or give a more natural look; it looks like every shade has some degree of shimmer or sheen.


I have my eye on Serendipity and Aztec Gold next!


Do you own any Fyrinnae pressed shadows? Do you like them? Pressed shadows are a rarity in the indie world compared to loose, and I have to say I greatly prefer them to loose eyeshadows--when I use loose, I always seem to end up with either not enough eyeshadow on my brush, or a huge mess with fallout everywhere, particularly if I’m dealing with sample baggies instead of sifter jars.