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08-15-2024 03:09 PM
I use both! If I feel I look "powdery", a quick spray with MAC Prep, Prime and Fix makes everything melt into my skin. All-Nighter does the same.
08-15-2024 03:50 PM
Ok. since we're talking powders. Know this has probably been talked about before but I'm confused - What is the difference between a setting powder and a finishing powder? Why would one want/need to use both? Do you apply one instead of the other or both? Applying both seems like it would be a lot of powder on one's face.
08-15-2024 03:58 PM
A setting spray and a setting powder are not the same kind of product and a setting powder, if you have dry skin, can result in an unflattering look...dry and cakey. A setting spray locks your makeup down. It will look better longer and if you don't wipe sweat off your face (just dab), your makeup should look about as good when your face dries as it did earlier. If I'm going to need a setting spray on a liquid foundation, I use UD's All Nighter. If I'm wearing a powder foundation, I use Charlotte Tilbury's setting spray. It helps to meld the powder foundation into my skin for a lasting and more natural look.
08-15-2024 04:01 PM
I've seen some wild video footage of the preteen crowd in Sephora. I'm sure your g-daughter isn't one but a lot of them are destroying the stores ![]()
08-15-2024 04:03 PM
miss her voice in the Beautyverse😔🌸
Soooooo much! She was one of a kind. I hope her babies are doing well.
08-15-2024 04:54 PM
@JudyL you can do both, but usually a oily type skin does best with both. Setting powders are a bit more matte, lock down foundation better. Finishing is usually milled finer and provides more blurring.
Newer powders on the scene are combining both now. The O/S powder is a popular one along with the Laura Mercier ultra Blur. Then there's foundation powders to add into the mix lol
I love powder, I'd use Borax if they said it was the next greatest thing🤣🤣🤣
08-15-2024 05:06 PM
@MalibuFox wrote:@JudyL you can do both, but usually a oily type skin does best with both. Setting powders are a bit more matte, lock down foundation better. Finishing is usually milled finer and provides more blurring.
Newer powders on the scene are combining both now. The O/S powder is a popular one along with the Laura Mercier ultra Blur. Then there's foundation powders to add into the mix lolI love powder, I'd use Borax if they said it was the next greatest thing🤣🤣🤣
@MalibuFox - Thank you! You Borax comment had me laughing out loud.
08-15-2024 05:12 PM - edited 08-15-2024 05:14 PM
I use both. I spray after foundation and concealer. Then again after blush and bronzer. Then I will use a powder lightly. Sometimes I will spray a third time after powder but isn't really needed.
08-16-2024 07:46 AM
@Janey2 wrote:Do you use either one? Or if you tried both which do you prefer? I was looking at the Givenchy setting powder but wondered if it is for mature skin. Would powder make skin look dry and get into wrinkles?
@Janey2 That's one of the setting powders I use along with Laura Mercier's Blurring Powder. Both are finely milled and if used with a large fluffy brush, I don't find any caking. I purchased the mini size of the Givenchy powders and other than the fragrance, I prefer that one.
I don't use a setting spray, but rather use a damp makeup sponge to go over any areas I feel needs setting.
08-16-2024 08:04 AM - edited 08-16-2024 08:05 AM
@monicakm wrote:
I've seen some wild video footage of the preteen crowd in Sephora. I'm sure your g-daughter isn't one but a lot of them are destroying the stores
No, she's defiinitely not...her mom is always with her and wouldn't stand for that for one second. And it was a cute moment...it's just wonderful constantly being "informed" and "corrected" on many things, by a 9 y.o., lolol. Humbling!
That said...I kind of hate the way corporate America, via Sephora, and Tik Tok has capitalized on too young girls, imo, (this started at 7/8 y.o!!) to wear makeup. Granted her mom only lets her use it all in the home, not out or to school, with the exception of some sheer lip gloss. And her mom's in the beauty/hair business so she'd "teaching her about skincare early", she tells me. But Sephora is making a bundle on kids buying creams with hyluronic acid, for example at age 9?! Yeah. No.
Too young imo. At that age, I was still only putting on my mom's blue eye shadow, and playing with her Avon lipstick samples at home, and that was it. I wasn't costing my mom $100's at the drugstore for my own makeup collection!
But...such is 2024 life.
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