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Makeup Tools

The Sonia Kashuk Diamond in the Brush Kabuki Brush Really Is a Diamond in the Rough

December 18th, 2011 by Karen 5 Comments

Sonia Kashuk Diamond in the Brush Kabuki Brush (3)

I have a love/hate relationship with Sonia Kashuk’s new Diamond in the Brush Kabuki Brush ($12.99). In the love corner, it couldn’t be any cuter. I mean, just look at that sparkly handle, and I think the brush head is all kinds of fabulous.

But just like the similarly blingy brushes in the Prepping for the Party Lip & Eye Palette ($19.99), I don’t know if this one’s very well constructed. As a matter of fact, the bottom fell off the first time I used it.

Um…what’s up with that?

And then there’s the overall attention to detail, which just seems to be lacking here. Despite the blinding bling, I can’t help but notice the stray bits of glue peeking out from between the gaps where the metal bands wrap around the handle.

Annoying — because I like this limited edition brush’s swagger, size and how hefty it feels in my hand. It’s like a bigger, wider, slightly fluffier version of Sonia’s classic Flat Top Brush but with a shorter handle. The soft bristles feel good, too, neither scratching nor shedding, and the head applies face powder, blush and bronzer perfectly.

My issues with the brush are isolated to its handle, but that’s, ya know, a rather important part.

Sonia Kashuk Diamond in the Brush Kabuki Brush (1)

Sonia Kashuk Diamond in the Brush Kabuki Brush (2)
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There are 5 comments on this post. Leave yours.

Categories: Drugstore Beauty Finds, Makeup Tools, Product Reviews Keywords: sonia kashuk

Sonia Kashuk Went All Out Glam on Her Latest 6-Piece Brush Set

December 14th, 2011 by Karen 30 Comments

Sonia Kashuk Holiday 2011

Neat! Now here’s a brush kit that caught my eye. Of course, it’s hard to miss something with so many sparkles. 🙂

What an interesting selection of brushes in Sonia’s new All Out Glam 6-Piece Brush Set ($24.99) for faces, cheeks and eyes! I see a few brushes here that I can’t recall ever seeing before in a holiday brush kit, like the synthetic-fiber domed face brush, which I like for applying under-eye concealer, and the synthetic-fiber eye/concealer brush, which looks to me like a skinnier, stretched out version of the MAC 219.
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There are 30 comments on this post. Leave yours.

Categories: Drugstore Beauty Finds, Makeup Tools, Product Reviews Keywords: sonia kashuk

Sonia Kashuk’s Scarlet Starlet 4-Piece Purse Brush Set Speaks to My Inner Geek

December 8th, 2011 by Karen 11 Comments

sonia kashuk scarlet starlet 4-piece purse brush set

There’s something about the black and red metal brushes in Sonia Kashuk’s new Scarlet Starlet 4-Piece Brush Set ($14.99) that reminds me of gadgets. The four travel-ready brushes, and the black and silver clutch in which they live, look almost like something that could have been made by Apple.

With the set, you get three eye brushes — an eyeshadow brush, a fluffy domed brush and a short shader — and one smaller blush/face brush.

sonia kashuk holiday 2011 (3)
Scarlet Starlet 4-Piece Brush Set, $14.99
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There are 11 comments on this post. Leave yours.

Categories: Drugstore Beauty Finds, Makeup Tools, Product Reviews Keywords: sonia kashuk

How I Finally Managed To Deep Clean the Sigma F80 Flat Top Kabuki Brush

October 30th, 2011 by Karen 59 Comments

Juli

Written by Juli

What happens when a brush with destiny meets an unstoppable force? I’m not sure, but we’re about to find out thanks to today’s guest post from Juli.

Deep Clean the Sigma F80 Flat Top Kabuki Brush

Good things should be shared amongst friends, but great things must be shared with the world!

Dirty makeup brushes and tools are some of the many things that can cause breakouts and otherwise irritate the skin. I know that mine reacts violently whenever I subject it to a foundation brush that hasn’t been cleaned for more than two weeks, so I always try to keep the things in my kit as clean as possible.

But sometimes that’s easier said than done.

For instance, when I couldn’t get the muck off of my Sigma F80 Flat Top Synthetic Kabuki Brush, I became a very frustrated girl.

The regular shampoo method wasn’t doing the job at all…and olive oil didn’t work much better.

Deep Clean the Sigma F80 Flat Top Kabuki Brush

As a matter of fact, olive oil probably did my Sigma F80 more harm than good. I spent more than 45 minutes one day trying to remove all of the oil from the bristles. It had mixed with the remaining liquid foundation in the brush, and no matter how hard I scrubbed with shampoo and detergent, the olive oil and dried foundation flakes wouldn’t budge.

It looked pretty disgusting too…

Deep Clean the Sigma F80 Flat Top Kabuki Brush

I’d subjected the brush to extremely vehement abuse, scrubbing the bristles like I would an elephant’s hide, and letting water flow from the tip into the ferrule in an attempt to dislodge the stubborn oil. I even threw it on the floor once hoping it would miraculously learn its lesson and self-clean (sorry).

I hated cleaning the Sigma F80 brush so much that I started to dread the weekends, because that’s when I deep clean my brushes every week.

After considering its rave reviews, I tried MAC Brush Cleanser, hoping that a high-end brand would perform a miracle, but repeatedly dunking the F80 into a cup of MAC’s cleanser only removed a teeny bit of gunk, and the dense bristles soaked up a lot of product…

Hey, hey! Expensive product there, don’t drink it up so quickly, yo! I even tried to dilute the MAC brush cleanser with water, but that also didn’t help much.

Then, one day I was just reading blogs and chanced upon a product that would change my life — okie, more like cut my brush-washing time tremendously.

Jang! Jang! Presenting the Daiso Detergent for Puff and Sponge!

Deep Clean the Sigma F80 Flat Top Kabuki Brush

Before taking these pics, I made sure to get the bristles really brown and dirty to give you that “OMGIGOTTAHAVETHIS!!” effect when you see the brush returned to its pristine white condition. Hoho.

So, here’s my dirty Sigma F80 Brush. For the purposes of showing how the cleanser works, you can replace it with any brush you like.

Deep Clean the Sigma F80 Flat Top Kabuki Brush
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There are 59 comments on this post. Leave yours.

Categories: Guest Post, Makeup Tools Keywords: guest post

I’d Be Lost Without Shu, But Sonia Kashuk’s Curl Up Lash Curler Would Ease My Pain

September 15th, 2011 by Karen 44 Comments

I still have no proof that Tabs was involved in the disappearance of my Shu Uemura lash curler earlier this year, but he’s still the number one suspect.

Every time I ask him about it, he gets all evasive, all nonchalant like, “doopdadoo. Weather’s nice.”

Yeah…well I’m on to you, Tabs. I’ll figure it out.

The day it disappeared, I nearly lost my mind. I was crushed. It took me 20 years and probably a dozen different brands to find a curler as great as Shu, and no device had ever curled my lashes that well.

That is, no device until now. 🙂

Ever since Shu Uemura pulled out of U.S. stores, the line has gotten tougher to find. Sure, there’s still their website, but if/when the replacement Shu lash curler I picked up after its predecessor’s disappearance ever mysteriously vanishes, too (I know it was you, Tabs!), at least I now know of a worthy replacement.

And it lives at Target stores.

New for fall, the $12.99 limited edition Sonia Kashuk Curl Up Eyelash Curler has a few great traits in common with my beloved $19 Shu.

Like Shu’s curler, Sonia’s fits the shape of my eye like a glove, and it doesn’t pinch the outer edges of my fringe (something that many other lash curlers do).


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There are 44 comments on this post. Leave yours.

Categories: Drugstore Beauty Finds, Makeup Tools, Product Reviews Keywords: bargain, sonia kashuk

Be a Good Student of Travel Makeup with a Clear Pencil Case

August 9th, 2011 by Karen 18 Comments

A clear pencil case for travel makeup

Stop letting lost tubes of lipgloss languish at the bottom of your luggage on trips. Next time you travel, keep them and the rest of your makeup safe and sound (and organized) in a clear pencil case. With back-to-school season coming up, you might even be able to find them on sale. 🙂

I’d been using Urban Decay’s voluminous Quinceañera makeup bag to store my face paint on my last couple of trips because of how wonderfully cute and spacious it is (fits all of my foundation, eyeshadows, brushes AND the kitchen sink), but it was a little tricky locating specific products buried within the roomy bag.

I usually ended up just dumping the contents on the bed and sifting through the pile. Not a great system, and it was only matter of time before something rolled off the bed only to get accidentally left behind.

Enter the see-through zippered pencil case. It’s clear, so I can easily spot whatever I’m looking for, and it’s built for travel.

Well…it’s built for binders, but it works great for travel. 🙂
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There are 18 comments on this post. Leave yours.

Categories: Drugstore Beauty Finds, Makeup, Makeup Tips/How To, Makeup Tools

Target’s Little Up & Up Cosmetic Applicators Are Big Hits with Me

July 28th, 2011 by Karen 46 Comments

You know I’m all about cheap thrills…at the drugstore. 🙂

Like these neato mosquito Up & Up Cosmetic Applicators. I bumped into them at Target the other day, $1.99 for a pack of 75.

They’re basically custom, generic/Target-branded Q-tips made with makeup in mind. One side’s pointy, and the other is shaped like a flat paddle. Together, they’re designed to cover quite a few cosmetic tool needs, from applying and blending makeup, to fixing nail polish mistakes.


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There are 46 comments on this post. Leave yours.

Categories: Drugstore Beauty Finds, Makeup Tools, Product Reviews Keywords: bargain

How Effective Is Parian Spirit Professional Makeup Brush Cleaner as an Eco-Friendly Option?

July 23rd, 2011 by Karen 8 Comments

Sam

Written by Sam

I can’t say that cleaning makeup brushes is one of my favorite things to do, but it’s a necessary evil. Today makeup artist/blogger Sam puts a possible eco-friendly (and affordable) brush cleaner option through its paces and shares his results with us.

Parian Spirit Professional Makeup Brush Cleaner

If there’s one thing I hate about my job as a makeup artist, it’s cleaning (not that I much enjoy it in my more pedestrian life, either). Seriously, we’re always cleaning something. From wiping up spilled powder to disinfecting shared products to scraping off the top layer of pressed powders. And brushes are some of the worst, too, because they have to be cleaned between every client, every color, and every product.

It’s not just a matter of preventing contamination, either, but also of making sure the forest green I just used doesn’t mix with the snowy white I’m about to use. That’s why I’m constantly searching for brush cleansers able to remove all traces of color and pigment — ideally, ones that are kind to the clock (don’t take forever to dry), kind to my wallet, kind to my nose in that they don’t smell like pure isopropyl alcohol, and kind to my brushes.

Now, before I continue, let me just clarify that there are two types of professional brush cleaners.

Type 1: Fast change brush cleaners

These you literally dip brushes into, swirl them around a few times, wipe across a paper towel, and you’re good to go. They leave brushes completely dry, and devoid of color and bacteria. Most makeup artists use this variety of brush cleanser on jobs so that they’re able to transition brushes quickly between clients on the fly, without wasting an extra minute.

Type 2: Deep cleansing brush cleaners

These are designed to more thoroughly deep clean brushes, but usually require at least a few hours to dry. They’re typically easier on brush fibers than the swirl-and-go variety and occasionally contain ingredients to condition brush bristles as well.

What is Parian Spirit?

A while ago, I stumbled upon a brand called Parian Spirit. Their only widely available product is a brush cleaner of the same name, marketed as being environmentally safe and professional grade. Although it never explicitly stated whether it was a fast change or a deep cleaner, I assumed it was the latter due to it having a base of citrus spirits (which is a solvent) rather than alcohol (which is what most quick change cleaners contain, as the alcohol evaporates extremely quickly, allowing the brush to be ready for use in minutes). It was cheap (only $12 for 8 fl. oz.), so I decided to give it a whirl.

I wash the brushes I use on myself on a daily basis about once every five days. Mostly, I work with translucent powders and brow powders with these, so I figured that these rather weak products would be a good initial test of the cleaner’s ability.

How does it work?

For the most part, the directions sound pretty familiar. They say to pour enough of the liquid into a glass jar to cover the bristles of a brush to be cleaned. Then, dip the brush in and agitate it in the glass for about 15 seconds before removing it, drying with a paper towel or terry cloth, and then letting the brush air dry the rest of the way.

Interestingly, the directions also say that you can leave brushes immersed in the solution for up to a minute to completely disinfect. That’s a claim I don’t see many deep cleaners make.


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There are 8 comments on this post. Leave yours.

Categories: Guest Post, Makeup Tools Keywords: guest post

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