![]() I used a mixture of Full Zip & Note To Self all over the crease, then mixing Note to Self and French Kiss on the outer corner. Rich warm matte shade that’s perfect for the outer corner, rich in pigmentation and blends beautifully. Very velvety texture and highly pigmented.īright shimmery shade that sits somewhere between a yellow and an orange that’s very rich in tone, with very subtle gold flecks. Very slight satin finish, but mostly matte. ![]() Warm tan brown, good for the crease for an intense look, or outer corner for something softer. Opaque warm red with a orange undertone, very creamy and matte finish.Ī bright firey orange which applies more like a warm lovely terracotta, this looks matte in the pan, but has a soft subtle satin finish, Third Rowīright matte butter yellow shade, like just about every matte yellow I’ve ever tried this is kinda sheer and needs some building to get it opaque A little more powdery than the others, but still very blendable and no fall out. Warm golden yellow shade, very metallic finish but quite monotone compared to Bling and Louie. Again this has very intense pigmentation. ![]() ![]() In the pan, Louie doesn’t look hugely different to Bling, however swatches it’s a pink toned peach with a golden shimmer. Pale creamy beige shade, matte finish, very buttery and blends out wellīright warm orange/peach shade, matte finish, very creamy and quite loose so suffers with a bit of loosening in the pan.īright mid toned peach, matte finish, very soft and creamy and blends really well.Ī red toned copper shade, metallic finish, intense pigmentation, blends incredibly well. Most of these shades are unique to this palette and aren’t available individually, but there are a few which are (listed). If you’re wondering of how this stacks up value wise, the pressed pigments and shadows are $5 each at full price (often there’s some kind of deal on) which equates to $2.66 per gram, this palette retails at $16 with a total product weight of 10.2g, this works out at $1.56 per gram. These are 0.85g each, their usual pressed pans are 1.5g each – so over half a pan, but no where near to being full size either. I read an article somewhere when this first launched that this had twelve full size shadows into that and the dinky size of this palette immediately made me question that fact as unless the pans were deeper, they definitely weren’t as big as their usual pressed shadows. I’m not one to keep my outer cardboard packaging normally but I like it better than the actual palette so for now it’s to stay housed in that in my drawer. It’s like they had two different names for this palette and couldn’t make up their mind, personally I think this range of colours wouldn’t be described as Cute AF by most and they should have stuck with one slogan. The packaging is simple and fuss free, the one thing I don’t like about this palette is whilst it’s called the Yes, Please palette only the outer packaging says that – the inner packaging says CUTE AF (euch, hate that term), and the packaging is a bit dull in comparison. It definitely holds in the hand smaller than you’d expect a palette with that many shades to hold. The first thing that struck me about the palette was it’s size, it’s a lot smaller than I thought it was going to be, but it does make it a nice palette for travelling with a wide selection of shades. I finally got this off Sophie in the middle of August and after a really busy few weeks I finally had chance to photograph it, so I could start using it. Sophie and I decided we wanted to get it and missed out at it’s first flash sale having to wait for it’s restock (which was supposed to be in June, then they moved it to July, ultimately causing my first failure for No Buy July). The fact I couldn’t think of anything similar to this, and ColourPop’s almost unbeatable price-point (especially when we’re taking into account price-point/quality), meant that this was simply a must have for me. This summer they launched their first pre-made 12 colour palette and after being a bit disappointed by the shades in the Urban Decay Heat palette being a bit too samey, the ColourPop Yes Please palette looked like everything I wanted to see with a mixture of orange, yellow and gold toned shades being the type of heat that I was hoping to see from Urban Decay. It’s been no secret that in 2017 it’s been my discovery of ColourPop, leading to a borderline obsession with the brand brewing.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |