‘My Face’
I was in Cork, Ireland this weekend for a friend’s wedding. It was beautiful and great fun!
I did the brides make up and she looked amazing, if I may say so myself.
This is what I used:
1) Put on Myface foundation and Estee Lauder Maxi Cover Concealer on the skin. Finished off with a bit of Mac Blot powder, only where needed and Mac Dainty Blusher on the cheeks.
2) On the eye’s I used Mac eye pencil’s in Teddy and Coffee, draw a line next to the lashes on both upper lid and under the eye. Blend the eye pencil with Myface A Whole lot of Latte eyeshadow. Finish of with Lancome Hypnose Waterproof Mascara on the upper eyelashes.
3) Fill in eyebrows with Mac’s eyebrow pencils Lingering and Fling and last brush through the eyebrows with Lancome eyebrow gel.
4) Put Mac Amplified lipstick in Vega Volt on the lips.

I am totally in love with MyFace eyeshadows. Myface is the make up brand created by Charlotte Tilbury for Boots in associations with John Frieda. The pigment in the eyeshadows are amazing and really easy to work with, you can easy apply with your fingers or if you prefer with a brush and there is no need for layering the colors since the pigment is so high it gets amazing color straight away. The best thing are that these products are not dead expensive, you find them in selected Boots stores or on www.myfacecosmetics.com and the prices starts from around 9 pounds, amazing. Also try MyFace foundations, they are really good as well.

I been trying out “budget” mascaras in the search for one that gives my lashes more volume, but still good separation and length. The results are so far:

Charlotte Tilbury launched her first make up range (MYFACE) in association with John Frieda for Boots early this year, and I love the foundations, Mymix. The hole make up range are divided into three sections based on skin tones (fair, medium and dark). That means easy shopping! Like for example if you are fair (like me) there is a hole section with lip-glosses, eye-shadows, blushers that is suitable for your skin color.







