The Scottish Mail on Sunday - You

Why it’s time to rethink blush

-

To say ‘blush is back’ is one of those statements that makes beauty sound faintly ridiculous, like in the Ab Fab episode in which the magazine team decrees ‘skin is in’. I get it. And yet, there is a bit of a re-focus on blush at the moment that has made even me start to experiment with it again after having long settled down with my cream Clarins Multi Blush (alas it’s discontinu­ed and I have no idea how old my pot of it actually is).

Recently I was chatting to Mac’s director of make-up artistry Terry Barber, and he mentioned that he’s ‘loving blush again. It never went out of fashion but it’s having a moment.’ It’s a pendulum swing from the omnipresen­ce of contour, which is, he said, ‘a great technique to master but makes everybody’s face looks the same. Whereas blush, depending on where you choose to put it, can feel very different.’ I’ve reached an age where the only place I want to put it is on the apples of my cheeks and blended along the cheekbone, but you could go all-out 80s pop band with it if the mood strikes you – personally I’d leave that to anyone whose age means they weren’t there the first time around. But this general blush re-focus means that brands have been pushing formulas to make it all extra-interestin­g. My favourite among them is the new Laura Mercier Blush Colour Infusion (£24, spacenk.com). I normally steer clear of powder blush as I often find it’s too pigmented and sits too obviously on the skin. This Mercier stuff is a revelation. It’s super-light in texture and gives a very sheer touch of colour that you can easily blend and build. It’s so weightless that I do actually take it up to my temples, and it gives such light to my face – a fresh and awake look – that it has garnered compliment­s from even the unlikelies­t sources. It has also totally changed how I feel about blush. The new Giorgio Armani Beauty Neo Nude A-Blush (£30, armanibeau­ty.co.uk) comes in five shades and is part of the brand’s approach to providing seamless make-up, the type that gives your complexion a gentle oomph. It’s another one of the water-based formulas currently ruling trends and delivers a light-but-dewy hue of colour that nobody can go wrong with. For a natural, vegan beauty option, Jillian Dempsey Cheek Tint Cream Blush (£24.50, thisisbeau­tymart.com) is good. I find you need to warm it up a little beforehand, and it can seem too pigmented when first applied, but it does blend easily to give a light, outdoorsy flush. An affordable option comes courtesy of Max Factor Miracle Touch Creamy Blush (£6.99, boots.com). It isn’t new, but it’s good. I switched to the Soft Copper shade as recommende­d by Caroline Barnes, the brand’s UK ambassador, as I have reddish undertones to my complexion. It’s like discoverin­g it all over again.

I NORMALLY STEER CLEAR OF POWDER BLUSH, BUT LAURA MERCIER’S IS A REVELATION ”

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Edwina Ings- Chambers
Edwina Ings- Chambers
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom