![]() We love how buildable the formula is and it’s one of the glowiest medium coverage foundations we’ve tried, without looking at all greasy. We can’t speak to its long-term skincare benefits but we’re certainly excited by the appeal of a foundation that offers healthy-looking coverage while working behind the scenes on improving skin health. Our heart still belongs to Nars’s natural radiant longwear formula (£37.50, .uk) but we’d definitely reach for this on minimal make-up days. This glowy offering is a great addition to Nars’s foundation roster, sitting nicely between its sheer formulas and heavier options. The verdict: Nars light reflecting foundation This formula is buildable though, so this might not be an issue if you don’t mind building up coverage in problem areas. However, we’d question the foundations’s skin-blurring claims, as our texture was still slightly visible with one coat. We didn’t experience any flashback with the latter, and natural light caught the skin naturally, living up to its luminous claims. ![]() Read more: Dior’s new foundation has reignited our love for full-coverage make-upĪs for the “photo-friendly” technology, we did some serious investigative journalism here by taking selfies both in natural light and using flash. With that said, we’d expect this sort of wear from a medium foundation on oily skin, and liked how it maintained its fresh, hydrated look throughout. The formula wore well throughout the day, without dulling down on the glow stakes, but we did notice some slight fading around our oiler areas including our chin and around our nose, and texture on our cheeks began to peek through. Instead, it feels weightless on the skin, and we love how light bounced off it, adding a subtle radiance that looks natural. Read more: We tried Lancôme’s new waterproof lash idôle mascaraīoth cream and powder products sat well on top of this foundation, and despite setting this formula with a powder (as we normally would) the radiance shone through without looking overly shiny, or greasy.Īs someone who has a fair amount of texture and blemishes, we usually prefer a full coverage finish, but we weren’t put off by this medium formula, as it offers the best of both worlds: delivering coverage without being cakey or heavy. It certainly gives a healthy-looking luminosity that adds dimension, but we’d like that feeling of plump-ness from a skincare-led formula. It buffs in with ease and covers imperfections with one coat, but we had hoped for a bouncier finish to the skin, much like Charlotte Tilbury’s new “beautiful skin” foundation (£34, ). ![]() On application, the foundation feels lightweight, but not watery, gliding across the skin with an immediate glow. Priced at £37.50, it costs the same as Nars’s natural radiant longwear formula, but is pricier than the rest of the brand’s foundations, which may be down to its skincare ingredients. Packaging wise, the brand has stuck to its roots, with a glass bottle embossed with the signature logo, a sleek black lid and a slimline pump for easy dispensing. The brand takes this dynamic formula further with a complex that reflects light “like a prism”, giving the skin that lit-from-within radiance and aiding the natural finish. The formula includes “photochromic” technology, which in laymen’s terms, means a powder that shifts in tone depending on the intensity of light.Īccording to Nars, this results in your skin never being washed out, making it an impressively reactive complexion product. We were surprised to see the omission of hyaluronic acid – a favourite ingredient in the radiant foundation stakes – but were impressed by its innovative-sounding features elsewhere. Read more: 14 best tinted moisturisers for a natural, glowy look Plus, the formula is vegan and claims to be suited to all skin types. There’s skin barrier-strengthening properties that come via Japanese lilyturf too (we’d never head of it either). With 81 per cent of the ingredients being naturally derived, Nars says that this formula improves your skin with every wear.īiomimetic oat works to calm and clarify the skin, while peptides and milk thistle tackle the effects of blue light and protect against environmental damage. Available in 36 shades (which is decent enough, but could be improved), it claims to deliver “make-up that looks like skin”.Īside from its coverage and glow-giving finish, the main selling-point here is the skincare-led formulation. If you’re not, that translates to a medium coverage formula that’s buildable, but natural-looking. If you’re familiar with Nars’s foundations, we’d describe this as the glowy cousin of the natural radiant longwear (£37.50, .uk), and with a dash more coverage than the sheer glow formula (£28, ). ![]()
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