Oil vs. Water

14 Feb

I’m talking about foundations, concealers, cream products.  We all want to know how we can recognize oil based products over water based products.

Let me give you some information right off the start:

  • Water based products with little or no oil content must be high quality, otherwise, it will just run off your face, even after setting.
  • If a product says “oil free”, there may still be some oil in it. Companies are allowed to call their products “oil free” if they have 3% or less oil.
  • Oil based products are good for dry skin, but should be kept away from oily skin.
  • Water based products are good for oily skin.

So how do you tell what you’re looking for?  If you’re looking for an oil based product, look for these signs:

  • If it comes in a stick or a pot
  • If it’s not runny
  • If you have to apply with your fingers for heat
  • If the coverage is more opaque

If you’re looking for a water based product, look for these signs:

  • If it is runny
  • If it comes in a tube
  • If you have to apply it with a sponge
  • If it gives light/sheer coverage

There are acceptions to the very tell-tale signs though.  Loose powders and pressed powders.  Loose powders have no binding agent, and therefore are dusty.  But pressed powders have to be held together somehow – and that is with some oil content.  With pressed powders, they can go both ways – to act as a loose powder or to act as an oil based product.  When applying a pressed powder with a sponge, you get a more creamy and opaque finish.  When applying it with a brush, you get a dusting just like a loose powder.

Check back in a little while, because I’ll have a foundation video for you soon!!

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Face Shapes

27 Jan

Finally, in my new class, Makeup Artistry 1, we’re getting into some of the course meat, and so I have more things to share with you.  This week we talked about face shapes.

Probably, you don’t know what your face shape is. And if you do, you’re probably wondering about some tricks to cheat your face shape into a shape you actually like. So let me first define the face shapes so you can get a sense of what shape you have:

  • Oval – all face shapes want to be this shape. If you have a normal forehead, and a tapered chin, you have an oval face shape, and there is no need to use any corrective methods.
  • Round – is just that. The face is a complete circle.
  • Square – The jaw is very angular, and the overall face is very equal in proportions.
  • Heart – Often the telltale sign to distinguish the heart shape from the oval is the widow’s peak. The forehead is also broad, and sometimes the chin will be pointy.
  • Diamond – the cheek bones are the main event, and protrude.  The hairline will make the forehead seem narrow, and the chin will taper.
  • Pear – The jowls will be the largest part of the face, and everything else will taper upwards.
  • Oblong – The face is long, and there is no real definition or tapering.
  • Hexagonal – The face consists of a boxy shape with many angles at the temples, forehead, and chin.

If you like your face shape, you don’t feel the need to correct any shapes in it at all. If you do want to correct it, makeup and even hairstyle can help. I’m going to tell you how to correct these shapes with makeup, but I must warn you that if you heavily contour with daytime makeup, your face will probably just end up looking dirty.  Instead, for daytime makeup, focus on the highlights, and save the heavy contouring for nighttime.

  • Oval – no correction needed here. All other face shapes want aim to be oval.
  • Round – contour the hollows of the cheeks (this is normal and can be done with daytime makeup), and highlight the chin to make it appear lower.
  • Square – minimize the jawline with contouring at the corners (not something you want to do with daytime), and also contour the temples. Highlight the nose to bring it forward.
  • Heart – contour the temples to reduce the look of the forehead. If the chin is pointy, contour some of that away as well. Highlight the cheekbones and nose to take away from the forehead.
  • Diamond – highlight those cheekbones, because you know everyone wants them!  Also highlight the temples to bring them out and look more full.  Contour away a pointy chin.
  • Pear – highlight the forehead, and contour the jawline to minimize jowls.
  • Oblong – highlight the cheekbones to bring out some shape, and contour the temples and hollows of the cheeks.
  • Hexagonal – simply contour away angles in the forehead, temples, and cheeks.

Remember!  Highlighting is used to bring features forward, and contouring is used to push features back.  In any face shape, focus on the best qualities, and use those first and foremost to distract from other shape corrections.

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Recently Tattooed….Again.

10 Jan

Would you like to know all about my new tattoo experience?  You can read all about it on my Superman Disposition blog.

Hair Colouring

4 Jan

As you guys probably know, I have some funky coloured hair, and have had a lot of it in the past. I started out with blue way back in grade 9 when I was 15 – more than 10 years ago now. And after a 10 year run with black hair, I was interested in a change again. That started about a year and a half ago, and I wanted to take you through the methods I used to tell you what worked and what didn’t.

To start off with, I simply started growing my black hair out. My natural colour, however, is a very light blond, and you know the stark contrast there made no sense. I was interested in growing out my black hair so that I could put other colours into it, and so naturally, I started dying my blond roots purple.

After a while of that, I was getting anxious, and so I tried a hair colour remover. The one I tried was by L’oreal, and I think they do not make it anymore, because I was lucky enough to find one box of it shoved off to the side in the store, and I haven’t seen anything like it anywhere since then. It didn’t do the best job anyway. It took the colour out of the bottom and underneath parts of my hair, but nothing else. And not only that, but it did turn those parts orange. I have to admit, I knew it was going to turn orange, because of the nature of black hair dye. Blacks are made from layers and layers and layers of red, so there is really no way to get a true blond out of them.

So, as you can see, a mess of orange, black, and purple.  From there, I let it rest for a few months, and then got really sick of waiting, and resorted to the bleach. The bleach I used was Manic Panic’s Flash Lightening, and since I wasn’t lifting any harsh colour, it worked really well for me.

However, for my husband, who had dyed black hair, it didn’t work at all. It only barely lifted the colour and he was left with this dark pumpkin orange that we couldn’t do anything with at all. Manic Panic’s bleach is a white based bleach, and therefore is not going to knock out any orange or yellow that bleaching will cause. For that to happen, you have to resort to a blue based bleach, such as Inebrya by Ice Cream.

This blue based bleach comes in a packet of powder which you must then mix with a separate developer. The developer shown here is volume 40%, since we were lifting black.

As you can see, this blue completely knocked out the orange brassiness that could have resulted from my husband’s dyed black hair, and we got a beautiful light blond colour out of it. The problem with this stuff is that it is strong, and it caused a lot of damage. So if you’re going to go with this method, I wouldn’t suggest taking black out with it, I wouldn’t suggest using a 40% volume, and I would suggest reading the directions very carefully. We underestimated just how strong this stuff was. But it wasn’t a disaster, and we got the desired results in the end. So now me and my husband have matching red hair.

By the way – the hair colour we use is called Special Effects. It is a demi-permanent, so it does not wash out (but does fade after a month), and is completely cruelty free.

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Sirius Beauty

29 Dec

I had been doing some research into the Clarisonic skin care system after hearing about it in my skin care class.  For those of you not sure what exactly the concept is, here we are:

  • Cleans with a vibrating brush
  • Uses sonic waves to bounce the dirt off your skin and out of your pores
  • Skin actually feels clean, as it removes 6x the amount of dirt that manual cleansing does.
  • Uses your own skin cleanser and exfoliator with the brush
  • Can be used in the shower or tub, on face and body.

So, the Clarisonic is quite pricey, and can be up to $255 for the brush and an array of brush heads. Enter SIRIUS Beauty Skinsonic.  It cost only 50$ CND, and is the exact same idea as any other sonic cleansing system.  I received one for christmas, after telling my mom about it, and so far I am loving mine.

  • I have sensitive skin in the winter, and using the sensitive skin brush head for my face, I’m experiencing a beautiful cleanse, no irritated at all, no redness, a reduction of oil buildup throughout the day, and a reduction of comedones in my congested areas.
  • I am using the normal skin brush head with body wash on my neck, chest, and back in the shower, and I am having some wonderful results.
  • It is really quick to use, and I think I spend less time washing my face with this brush in the mornings than I did washing it manually. So if you think that using a brush every morning and night would be too much of a hassle for you, it’s actually proven to be very convenient.

The Sirius Skinsonic comes with:

  • The brush (obviously)
  • Sensitive skin brush head
  • Normal skin brush head
  • Massage brush head (very nice)
  • 2 Exfoliation brush heads
  • All for only 50$. Pretty good.
  • Replacement brush heads can be purchased for only 14$ for a 2 pack.
  • https://www.siriusbeauty.com/skinsonic/order/

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Cruelty Free

15 Dec

My final exam for my skin care class was last night, and went by so quickly.  As far as I know for now, I have 100% in that class, a pretty good start to my January semester of Makeup Artistry 1. So while I’m not going to have any more amazing skin tips for a few weeks, I wanted to make my post about animal testing in the cosmetics industry, as it is a very important thing for me.

 

The thing that really made me aware of animal testing in cosmetics was this picture:

I saw it randomly on a Facebook ad from PETA, and I have to admit that before I saw this picture, I was blissfully unaware of anything to do with animal testing at all.  But this picture hit home so hard with me, that I immediately made a change.  I did some research about what actually goes on with animal testing, and some of the horrors are not limited to bunnies getting hair dye smeared in their eyes (as this picture above), and guinea pigs having soaps pumped into their stomaches. Just these two things alone was enough for me, and I didn’t have to read any more before I was completely converted.

On PETA’s  website, you can download and print lists of companies that are cruelty free, and also lists of companies that still use animal testing, which is a handy tool that you can keep in your wallet and refer to when you are buying new products.

If you are a new recruit into the world of cruelty free products, there are a few things that you should look for on products to be sure that you are supporting the right people.

  • The cruelty free bunny from PETA’s website, which is proudly displayed on the websites of companies who do not test on animals.
  • This guy is present on products.  You will sometimes only see the bunny, sometimes only see the writing, and sometimes see them both together.

So, for a quick reference, I want to say that the majority of drugstore makeup IS tested on animals. There are a few acceptions:

  • Hard Candy – exclusive to Walmart, it is a really great product and value.
  • Nivea
  • Physician’s Formula
  • Live Clean
  • Revlon
  • St. Ives (however, St. Ives is the only division of Unilever that is cruelty free).
  • GOSH – exclusive to Shopper’s Drug Mart.

Sorry to burst your bubble, but most of the drugstore brands you know and love DO test on animals. Steer clear of:

  • L’Oreal
  • Garnier
  • Gilette
  • Unilever
  • P&G Beauty (that means Cover Girl is cruel)
  • Rimmel, Maybelline, and practically every other drugstore makeup brand.
  • To name a few.

What can you do to avoid buying from cruel companies and still not have to go out of your way/budget?

  • Buy organic.  Mainly organic companies are not going to be doing any animal testing.
  • Print the list from PETA, carry it around, and avoid mistakes.
  • Do not buy drugstore hair dye, go to a salon (it’ll last longer anyway so it’ll save you money).
  • Stick to drugstore products that you know are safe, according to my quick reference. I use these products, and I would endorse them any day.

Please, get active, get aware, and make this world a less cruel place.

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What is PH

8 Dec

Let me start off by saying – I received my very first facial last night. It was free, and was done by my aesthetics teacher as a demonstration to my class (of only 5 other students). I learned some things about my skin that otherwise I’d never have known:

  • Living in Canada, we a prone to change skin types according to the seasons, because our seasons are so radical. Don’t get me wrong – we are still born with those skin types, but just different sides of them come out in the different seasons.
  • In the winter, I have very dry, very sensitive skin.
  • Extra moisture and products for dry/sensitive skin in the winter will actually seriously even out my skin tone, because the inflammation will be taken away.

An experiment all in the name of beauty.  Now, I enjoyed the facial, and my skin feels great, but I wouldn’t pay to have one done again. I guess I’m just not that kind of girl.

So onto Fun Fact of the Week Dec 8

You’ve heard about PH – Potential Hydrogen – most likely when it comes to hair care.  But the same principles apply to your skin as well. A PH scale goes from 0 (acidic) to 14 (alkaline), where 7 is neutral, characterized by water. The skin falls at 5.5, which is a normal neutral for the acid mantle (the protective barrier), and ranges from 4.5 (dry skin) to 6 (oily skin).

The products that we use are very important to maintain the PH balance of the skin. If the balance is not maintained, bacteria and other pathogens can get inside and cause problems, because the barrier is compromised. While we are cleansing, toning, and moisturizing our faces, our PH balance goes all over the scale, but it is the job of the products to always bring us back to 5.5. If you skin a step in the process, you are at risk of leaving your skin’s acid mantle compromised, and therefore leaving yourself at risk for breakouts or other problems.

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