December 2015 GlossyBox Unboxing & Catch Up

Just a quick post, over Christmas I like to take a bit of a break from all things outside the house, and the internet, and just chill, and sadly that time has now past. Back to getting up early and braving the cold, and getting stuff done. As a catch up, here’s December 2015’s GlossyBox, the last of the year…

and the follow up video to it as well…

I hope you all have a lovely Christmas/holiday period/whatever. I’m looking forward to 2016’s first box! Until Next Time!

GlossyBox November 2015 Review

Our November GlossyBox focuses an awful lot this time on the make up side of things, with four of the five items in the box being… yep, make up items. It’s a great little set to make yourself look pretty over winter whether you’re going somewhere, or just want to doll yourself up anyway! While I personally like the even mix of items in each of these monthly boxes, this is still a really nice, affordable box.

boxThis is also the first month GlossyBox tried out letting us Glossies pick one of the products (or at least the shade of one of the products) before the boxes were sent out. It worked for me and I got my chosen shade, and I think this could be a great way to add more variety to the products, as I sensibly suspect we don’t get things like foundations because of colour picking. But maybe that’ll change?

revThe first item I’m going talk about is the ‘pick your shade product’ in question, and it’s Revlon’s Super Lustrous Lipstick. There were four shades to choose from, if I remember rightly the choices were; a nude, a pink, a red, or a dark red. Since I actually have quite a few red, pink, and coral shades of lip wear I thought I’d go bold and pick ‘477 – Cherry Red.’ This is a full size lipstick weighing in at 4.2 g, in a traditional twist up tube with a clear plastic top, and it costs £7.99. It has a really nice, creamy formula – thanks to being enriched with vitamin e and avocado oil – so you’re not only getting pretty colour, but these are going to moisturise the lips too. Great for winter! The lippy itself can actually be worn really shear, or as a more full on application, and another thing that’s made me really glad I picked it, is that I can blend this with other lip products to make more colours, or to do some real fancy lip contouring. Oh yeah.

undressed1Next up is the MUA (Make Up Academy) ‘Undressed’ Palette. Most people consider this a passable dupe for the Urban Decay Naked Palette (the first) – though I don’t actually own one of those to tell you outright. I do, however, have a few MUA palettes already, and they’re very nice, very affordable palettes – they’re really good for the money you’re paying specifically. In this full size palette you get 12 shades, with a total combined weight of 9.6 g, so assume 0.8 g per pan of colour there. This palette is valued at £4. So, you get some really light nudes and browns, different metallic tones, and some darker shades. Most of the colours are shimmery, with a few mattes – which is fine by me, as I love those shimmery ones. It’s a very user friendly palette, you can use most of these shades on their own for simple looks, and they all work together really well for some more dramatic ones. The only real downside I think you could say with these palettes is there aren’t that many different looks you can do – a lot of the shades are a bit samey, baring maybe the last two – but then if you love these tones on your eyes, who cares, right?

undressed2I also did some quick swatches here so you can see what you get, and it shows which are matte (fawn and Hazel) and which aren’t. ‘Fuel’ on the almost furthest right is a matte black powder with little bits of glitter in it, rather than a straight matte shade or a shimmery shade.

emiteNext up is our first travel or deluxe sample size item, and it’s the Emite Diamond Heart Primer, which is a brand we’ve had before. This is a cute little 15 ml tube of quite warm toned primer, the full size is valued at £29.90, however, I couldn’t reliably find out what the ml measurement is for the full size item to break down that price. Diamond Heart does refer to the shade – this primer comes in two shades, and this is actually the darker of the two annoyingly, as I would have prefered the lighter one. However, it is a very nice, light formula, and I can use just a little on my face along side moisturising and it blends right in. As such it does only really give a light priming feel – my skin does feel nice, soft, smooth, and matte after using this, but I don’t think it really offers any sort of coverage, beyond perhaps a tiny bit of colour correcting. It is nice enough, but like the blush/bronzer fiasco last time from Emite it’s just not the right shade – because one shade does not suit all, obviously.

apothicThe second travel size/deluxe sample is from Royal Apothic, another repeat brand for me, and it’s their Cutting Garden Cream Creme Body Lotion. This is a little metal tube of rich body lotion that is made with milk proteins and lactic acid to smooth, soften and hydrate without a greasy feel. And it does do all of those things – it’s a nice rich cream that smooths onto the skin well and leaves it feeling lovely, and has a nice ‘beauty product’ type smell. I would say that compared to the lip butter we received previously this is less exciting (it had cuter packaging and smelled amazing), but it is really lovely. This little travel size is 35 g, and is valued at $14 on their own websites (not the £14.50 the GB card states) which translates as around £9.37. I personally don’t buy moisturisers at this price point however – I prefer to spend around £10 and get a decent 200-400 ml, so I don’t think it’s for me.

eyeAnd last up in the box is a full size set of Eylure false eyelashes in the variety ‘Naturalites’ – these are a very pretty, natural looking pair – though not too natural looking to be not worth wearing. They come with the usual latex based lash adhesive, and some instructions. I haven’t used these yet, but I have used Eylure before, and they’re very nice, straight forward lashes that are readily available to buy. Like with most things putting on lashes takes practice to get right, and I usually find the important thing for me is to trim them down a little, as they’re usually too long, and they’ll either not stick on at the end or come off after a little while without a little trim. One of the neat things you can do is re-use that little trimming either stacked over the lashes or on their own at the outer end of the natural lashes. These are worth £5, and while you can get cheaper, they’re really nice quality, affordable enough anyway, and can be reused if cleaned.

card

So, that’s it for this month’s box – a really nice, affordable collection of make up items and some high end travel sized items. I like that they’ve put in a whole palette, though obviously if MUA isn’t a brand you like, you won’t feel this way. The total box value is £26.36 without counting the primer, as I don’t have a good price for it. And while this is a pretty low value box compared to others, I still actually really like this box and will use up all the items, as the content matters just as much as the pound value.

I’m really looking forward to the December box, it’s going to be a Limited Edition Rose Gold box, with six items instead of five. Yay!

Until Next Time.

GlossyBox Catch Up for October 2015

So, this is a new format I’m experimenting with, a short summary of my written review and follow up of last month’s GlossyBox.

I do really like the unboxing’s, but they are very much a first impression ‘oh this is nice and new, oh isn’t it nice to be sent a surprise each month?’ type of reaction.

Until Next Time.

GlossyBox October 2015 Review

So, October is our second autumnal GlossyBox of the year, and I’m not gonna lie – right off the bat I was hoping for a Halloween box, I think there’s lot of things they could have done with that, it would have been totes cool and fun, but sadly – it wasn’t a Halloween box. Ah well. So, to get right into it, this months box is a really nice, high value box. It has an interesting combination of items, with some new brands and all five items are full size. I didn’t get a product card this month, which was a minor annoyance/a bit weird, so I’ve found the prices and information for these items online – it also means if there was a sneak peak for November I didn’t get to see it.

talika

Our first item is the Talika Photo-Hyrda Day. This 30 ml tube is a made in France face specific moisturiser valued at £27 – there is another bigger version (50 ml) but you also can buy this smaller version, so it’s still full sized – the 50 ml version is just slightly better value, as a lower price per ml. It directs you to use it in the morning after cleansing as your regular daily moisturiser – and states that the cream itself uses the power of natural light to moisturise the skin. The cream is light, and a little on the watery side, but it does have a sort of pearly sheen to it – it melts into the skin as you rub it on and leaves it matte and soft. I’ve used it for a while now, and I do think it’s nice – my skin seemed to really agree with it, and it has an almost primer like quality as well, but it doesn’t moisturise enough, and I found my face getting dry and pink after midday, and needing more applied. So while my skin seemed to love it and really felt blemish free, with it costing so much and toting itself as a great moisturiser it really needed to last all day – and it doesn’t. On that alone I couldn’t really justify a repurchase. This item also had the same weird packaging feel that the Lollipops Lip Balm from the July 2015 box had – when it’s full, you can still squeeze the packaging a fair amount and just push out air – this makes it feel like you’re getting a half empty container, but really it’s just that the packaging is too big, and they need to stop trying to make it look like you’re getting loads.

lanolips

Next up is the Lanolips Golden Ointment – this is a 50 g tube of high grade lanolin ‘treatment gel/cream’ (this is the best name I can think of it) which is an Australian brand and valued at £17.99. It’s a blend of purest grade lanolin, manuka honey, and vitamin e – it has a really mild, yummy honey smell for a product high in lanolin and rubs on kind of slow and tacky (like using beeswax if you’ve ever used that), leaving a really light sheen afterwards. I say ‘treatment gel/cream’ because it isn’t being sold as a moisturiser, but as a very multi-purpose product – you can use it on all the areas you’re dry as you need – face, knees, hands, feet etc. but it also suggests using it in heated and air conditioned environments, and while travelling, as a way to combat the damage those do to your skin. I can see this being pretty useful – I have been using it around my mouth and nose while sleeping – as we now have the heating on since it’s getting pretty cold, but this sadly makes the air dry and painful. I can also see how the same thing can be used during a long flight – I have done a direct flight before from Amsterdam to Seattle (about 10 hours) – by the end you feel dry and shrivelled and like you’ve been sand blasted in the face because of the contained air – it was pretty bad. So while this is pricey, for that price you get a really dense, concentrated product that does work and will last since a little goes a long way – I’ll be using it up over the winter and it’ll be a good repurchase for next winter or any time I travel again.

sosusan

So, that’s the skincare, and next up are the make up items. First is the So Susan Haute Light – which is a multi-purpose highlighting pencil weighting in at 1.5 grams and valued at £14.95 – it’s also our first repeat brand of this box – we’ve had So Susan three times now (June 2014, October 2014, and February 2015)  . The pencil itself is cute and fuss free, the colour is light cream rather than white, and it has a nice soft consistency. You can use it to highlight wherever you need to highlight, whiten around the eyes and on the water line, as a concealer, and as an eyeshadow base. Just to quickly go through those, it’s probably a little light as a highlighter for me, which is a shame, but it does work really well to brighten up the water line more naturally than a white pencil (I have a white Rimmel pencil that I use like this too), and it lasts really well over the day. I’m not so convinced by using it as a concealer, for my light blue under eye areas it just made them a lighter blue, it didn’t conceal them – however it does work pretty well as an eyeshadow base, working a little bit like a primer. It gives the shadows a soft creamy product to cling to, makes the colours stand out more, and makes them last longer and smoother over the day as well. So, as an eyeliner and eyeshadow base this pencil works great, but whether this will be worth fifteen pound is more subjective – you could definitely get a cheaper cream pencil, but the So Susan brand also produces make up that is cruelty free, contains less know irritating ingredients, and things that are good for your skin too. I really like this pencil, and how well it works personally.

pongpong

Our second make up item is the Jelly Pong Pong Fairy Lashes Curl mascara, measuring in at 8 ml and valued at £17.95. We’ve had this brand before too in the January 2015 box – it’s just a sister brand/off shoot brand to So Susan. This is a nice, straight forward, black mascara – it has an old style bristle brush mascara wand, and like the So Susan brand is cruelty free, and contains ingredients that are good for your skin. In this case, it claims that Moringa seed is naturally setting and holding the curl of your lashes as you use it, though the ingredients still list the usual wax and beeswax that set and waterproof most mascaras anyway. It is a nice, easy to use mascara, and the effect it gives is really very pretty – the lashes are still thin and natural looking, but a little darker, curlier, and more defined – it would be great for a very pretty ‘no make up make up’ look. Again the price will feel worth it depending on how much you value the ingredients and the cruelty free ethos – it is a nice mascara, but it’s also nearly 20 pound. But like the Haute Light pencil, I also really like it. At some point I really need to buy some more So Susan and Jelly Pong Pong.

spong

Finally, our last item is a make up accessory. This is the Nicka K Airbrush FX Blending Sponge. This is a cute, pink, little, budget beauty sponge – it’s another repeat brand (from the July 2014 box, and the January 2015 box), and this time it’s American. This is the regular pink sponge they do, rather than their larger duo sponge, and it’s priced on their website at $5.99, which I’ve converted for the purposes of the final box value as £3.90 – though obviously exchange rates do vary. This is a pretty small sponge, suited for small areas like around the nose and the eyes, and will take longer to do a whole face than a more regular sized beauty sponge such as the Real Techniques or Beauty Blender. Like those, you’re directed to dampen the sponge, however for this sponge it didn’t really change the size, shape or feel of the sponge – and it is a pretty dense heavy feel. It’s a bit hard for repeatedly tapping on your face around your eyes at a reasonable pace, but at it’s size if you do slow and soft it’ll take a fair while to do everything. It’s so cheap that I probably will use it, but I wouldn’t rebuy this at all, the Real Techniques sponge is my go to make up sponge – it’s the perfect sponge at a reasonable price (unlike the Beauty Blender) and great results – so it’s seems crazy to buy anything else really.

unbox

So, that’s the box. We have five full size items, two skin care, two make up, and one accessory. It was a nice mix of items, new brands and repeat brands we know and love. It’s final box value was a crazy £81.79 – making this the highest value box I’ve ever had in the 17 months I’ve now had the subscriptions. These last few boxes have all been really high value, but as I’ve said whether this will feel worth it is more subjective – I know I personally don’t spend 30 pounds on a single moisturiser – but it is still nice to try a selection of interesting, nice things at a small monthly cost. You definitely get more than you pay. I don’t see how the values can keep going up and up after setting the bar so high, but as long as the box value is higher than the cost of the subscription that sounds good to me. Until Next Time.

GlossyBox September 2015 Review – The Style Edition

Our first autumnal box of the year is here, and it doesn’t disappoint. It’s a very high value box – the highest, in fact, that I’ve ever had over the 16 months I’ve now had a GlossyBox subscription. This box has a nice set of five full size items with some pampering products, an accessory, a brush, and some interesting new colours for our autumn make-up.

unbox

First off is the Bellapierre Shimmer Powder in the shade ‘Whesek’ – this is a cute, ‘loose foundation’ style container with small holes to tip and tap the product out of. It’s a shimmery silver with hints of greys, blues, and whites, and at 2.35 g in weight it’s valued at £12.99. We’ve had some Bellapierre before – in the form of a popping red lipstick, and a nifty multi use lip & cheek stain – and we’re getting what I’ve come to expect from the brand, a really nice, easy to use product with good colour pay off. You really only need a little to get a vibrant colour. Wear wise, since this is a loose powder it does have fallout i.e. the powder drops all over yoh face as you apply it, but it’s not the worse I’ve seen and you do pretty much expect it from this type of product. You can very easily apply it wet – either getting the product on the brush and then wetting the brush, or tipping some powder into the lid and spraying it in the lid, which is how I tend to prefer doing it if I can. Applying it wet removes the fallout problem entirely, and makes for a very different look. Either way it’s a really lovely eyeshadow/shimmer powder – more expensive for sure than a high street single eyeshadow, but it has a bold colour, it lasts well, and is pretty versatile.

whesek

Next up is the Marsk Eyeshadow Brush Pro. It’s a nice, pencil sized eye shadow brush, with a smooth, well made feel, and soft, dense, firm bristles in a packed together, rounded tip that’s great for carefully applying shadows, and can be used for blending – though other brushes are better for that job. Tip to end it measures about 14.5 cm, and the bristles measure about 1.5 cm long. It’s valued at £16.70. We’ve had some Marsk before – a nice single eyeshadow pot, similar to the shimmer powder above – and it’s a nice, premium brand. It’s probably not something I’d buy myself, but it’s solid brush that I will use.

marsk

The third item in our box, and this is the lovely pampering one – Maria Nila’s Luminous Colour Hair Masque. It’s another Swedish brand like we’ve seen featured in the last few month’s boxes, and it’s really neat to see these new brands and products in the box – they’re pretty exciting. So, this is a large twist lid tub with a plastic seal inside – full of genuinely lovely hair masque. You get 250 ml, which is a fair amount, and it feels heavy – it’s valued at £18.95, making it the highest value item in this box. It’s a really thick, cream consistency masque with a sweet smell which you’re directed to apply to towel dried hair for anything from three to ten minutes depending on how much pampering you need, after shampooing but before conditioning. And of course like most hair products you’re definitely recommended to use them with the rest in the series. It does really feel good, both as you’re using it, and after – my hair and scalp (’cause I can never be bothered with the whole ‘don’t get conditioning type stuff on the scalp thing’ – I just get it on and rub it through) feel nice and pampered, my scalp doesn’t feel dry, my hair feels really nice and soft. It is a bit of a pricier hair masque, but does seem to really work, so if you were looking for a bit of premium pampering I would recommend this – it’s pretty much my favourite item in this box (in close competition with the Nails Inc Polish), I have short enough hair that this large tub is going to last a good while, so I can see the long term effects, and probably talk about that in whatever empties it ends up in – but so far it’s been a much better experience than the August 2014’s Elasticizer – which wasn’t suitable at all for my fine hair.

mariania

Our accessory in this box is a set of Invisibobbles – these are described as traceless hair rings, which you can wear without damaging the hair, pulling at the scalp, or splitting ends but they still hold well. The traceless part I’m a bit confused by – I think it means you can wear it without it showing, but my hair is pretty much too small/too short/too fine to wear it like this, and I have to double wrap them anyway. It’s a shame I’ve gotten something that’s a bit unsuitable to use now that I’ve had all of my hair cut off, but I can see how it would work – it’s a squishy, flexible, telephone cord like material with no metals bits, or sharp, single edge to grip the hair – so these could be good to use if you have the hair for it. I can’t really tell you definitively since I can’t really use them but I will keep them to use when my hair grows out. You get three in a box, they seem pretty hard wearing, and are valued at £4.

invisibobble

Lastly, is the Nails Inc Nail Polish in the shade ‘Battersea Park’ – this month was a coin toss between getting this shade, a kind of grey/green Khaki, or a blush pink colour. I’m pretty glad I got the more interesting colour here, I have a lot of pink and red shade nail polishes already from GlossyBox so it is nice to get something more unusual and more seasonal – it’s a cool, bold, autumn colour. And again, it’s what you can expect from the trusted brand – it’s a rich colour that applies well, and dries fast, staying nice and shiny afterwards, and wearing well. You could get away with a single coat for day to day wear – since most people don’t really look that closely at nails – with the colour being so richly pigmented. With two coats you’re totes ‘Instagram close up of my nails’ ready. You get 10 ml, and it’s worth £11, both of which are the usual deal with Nails Inc – I really like the colour, and I’ve already worn it a few times so I’m pretty happy with this. I’d definitely consider buying it for reals.

nailsinc

So, that’s the whole box; five items with one brush, one eyeshadow, a hair masque, a set of hair bobbles, and a nail polish. In total the box was worth £63.64 – making this the highest value box ever, over taking October 2014 (so nearly a year’s previous) box value which was around £60. I really like this box, and all the stuff in it – though yeah, some of it is more useful than others – but it really is worth way more than the monthly cost of the subscription.

letter

We also have a sneak peak for the October 2015 box, our second autumn box – and it’s full size day cream from a luxury French brand – I’m looking forward to this since our French box we had in July has some really lovely skincare things. Until Next Time.

GlossyBox August 2015 Review

August is sadly over, and while we haven’t had that sunny or indeed summery a summer this year, it still feels like summer ends when August does. On the one hand I love the fall and winter for all the dark colours and winter clothes I can wear, but summer has it’s good points too, right? Anyway – here’s the last summer GlossyBox of the year, the August 2015 UK box. This one is just a regular pink box, with five items inside and you can see my un-boxing here.

unbox

It’s a nice understated box, with a high value and some nice items. The cards list it as having four full size items, but really it’s five, the fifth item has the same amount of product, but cheaper packaging, compared to the version you’d buy in-store. I think this totes counts, as we’re really here to try these things out – and more product means you can try it for longer and really see what it’s like (and it’s better for the box value).

mememe

First is MeMeMe’s LipGlide in the shade ‘Playful Peach’. This is another neat, pencil format, easy to use product (like the blue eyeshadow pencil received previously in May) this time for the lips, and in a relatively neutral coral shade. It has a creamy matte finish, and it’s about what you’d expect size wise from a lipstick pencil – it’s big enough that you get plenty compared to a lipstick but not so big you can’t carry it around easily. Like other chubby style lip pencils I have it’s not as dry as wearing just a traditional lip pencil or as wet and movable as a traditional lipstick (so you don’t have to blot, set, repeat apply if you want it to last) – I really like these pencils because of this happy medium. It does smell a bit like a crayon if that sort of thing bothers you, but I don’t mind it personally. And like with other MeMeMe items it’s really good value for money at just £6.95 – I’ll definitely be tempted to buy more in another colour, and it’s really nice to try this brand in GlossyBox since it’s an online only store.

manna

Next up is the Manna Kadar Lash Primer – a US brand which is a new type of product for me – it conditions and primes the lashes, and can be worn under mascara. I’ve taken the value of this item as £15.3, rather than the £14.55 listed on the card by converting the US price of $24, but currency rates change over time. You get 4 g in this little tube, which is smaller than your average mascara, but still a nice size. The ingredients it lists are going to be good for your eyelashes, but I’m not really sure if it makes mascara look better with it used alongside it, it just looks different. The lashes are perhaps a touch thicker because they’re already coated with something, but I think they can easily start to look clumpy – so the lash enhancing aspect works much the same way using multiple coats of mascara does. The white colour doesn’t fade right away in my experience but you can put mascara over it pretty much straight away. The other advantage it may have over simply using one product multiple times is the wax in the ingredients, as it could set the shape of your lashes in the same way a waterproof mascara will (the wax in waterproof mascara is what waterproofs it as well). But I can easily see giving lash primers a miss, especially since you can get conditioning mascaras anyway for less money (Sleek Makeup’s I’m Conditional Mascara at only £7.99). You can see some ‘in action’ shots of the Manna Kadar primer below and decide if it’s better or worse for yourself.

kadar

The third item in my box is the Emite Artist Colour Powder Blush in the shade ‘108’ – this is a Swedish brand and it’s a lovely big pan (10 g) of soft, smooth powder that is mostly matte, but does have some tiny sparkle in it – it would be a great find – if the colour was for me. The idea behind this from GlossyBox is to use it as a Blush/Bronzer hybrid, and it kind of works. It’s still probably a bit too dark for pale people – you can use it super sparingly but it’s very easy to use too much, and I think it looks almost bruise coloured on me when I do. I have seen some suggestions to use it as an eye colour, which I might try, otherwise it seems a shame that it’s such a big pan that won’t be used up before it expires. Again this is another one where the value changes with price conversion rates, the web price for this is 200 SEK or Swedish Krona, which converts to £15.20 – very different from the cards listed £20.59. Either way it’s a little pricey to justify a repurchase for me, when I tend to be quite light with blush.

emite

Next is the Naobay Calming Face Toner – a Spanish certified eco-brand with cute, fuss free packaging that we’ve had before on GlossyBox (March 2015’s box) – like everything else it’s full size at 200 ml and is worth £10.65. It’s ingredients are 99.13% natural and 12.16% organic – so it’s all about trying to put more things on your face that are good for it, and for the environment. This is a really simple toner which has a light smell, like apple juice, and contains calming ingredients such as camomile. It is a nice toner – cleaning the skin gently while not leaving a residue and I will use it all up, since I actually use toner – but it is more money than I would pay for a toner, and there are cheaper similar (and also eco friendly) products available.

toner

Finally, we have our fifth item, and this is the one that is full size at 100 ml, but comes in cheaper open top bottle – at retails it comes with a pump. It’s the SASS Purifying Cleanser – our third repeat brand this box (we first had SASS in May), and yep – it’s the stuff you put on your vagina. This time it’s a simple intimate wash to use when you bathe regularly. This stuff is interesting, certainly. It has a creamy consistency, and a clear sort of pearly look. My skin felt tingly when I used it, and sure it felt clean and nice, but no more so than regular washing. As other people have pointed out with this brand, a lot of this is stuff you really don’t need – washing with any mild soap is fine. It’s worth £7 and like last time isn’t really something I’d buy for myself at all – but it is interesting to try.

sass

So, that’s the whole box. It’s worth £55.10 – a nice high box value – not the highest ever, but comfortably over the box average over the year. I’m probably the most happy with the LipGlide, funnily enough the lowest value item in the box. Maybe I’m cheap? The rest of it is nice enough, and I’ve honestly never been that unhappy with any box yet – it’ll all get used up, just at different rates.

placecard

So our sneak peak for next month’s box – the first Autumnal box, I guess, is a full size hair mask from Maria Nila – which I’m looking forward to, we haven’t had a hair item in a while now.

Until Next Time!