06 May 2014

Review: Beauteque Asian Beauty Store

Because my skin gets dry, irritated and pimply from all-nighters I've been pulling for midterms, I've been getting into Asian skincare as of very late.

Beauteque is an online store that sells primarily Korean make-up and skincare products, as well as a few Japanese (Koji), Taiwanese (My Beauty Diary) and other (Bioderma; random manufacturer-unspecified jewellerey) items. Being US-based, their shipping prices are low to free within the US; but they ship internationally.

I found out about Beauteque from a promotional post in the Asian Beauty subreddit. They had a $2 off $13.90 promotion (ongoing as of this post) and free shipping on any purchase (no longer), so I ordered a $14.60 box of ten My Beauty Diary face masks, and one individual $2 sheet mask. Then I figured I should take advantage of the last days of the free shipping, and grabbed another box.
(Note: They seem to track customers by IP + email address, so you could easily re-use the same promo code on multiple orders. Not that I condone being a douche to small businesses.)

The relatively new company is operated out of New Jersey; I'm across the country, in California. The turnaround timeline looked like this for me:

  • Monday, 28 Apr, evening: Place order #1.
  • Tuesday, 29 Apr, afternoon: Receive two e-mails at the same time, one saying that order #1 status is now 'Completed', and the other saying that it is now 'Shipped'. Place order #2 soon after.
  • Wednesday, 30 Apr, afternoon: Receive the same two e-mails for order #2.
  • Saturday, 3 May, evening: Receive two e-mails at the same time, for both order #1 and #2, saying that order status is now 'Awaiting Fulfillment'. (These ones confused me; I wasn't sure if they were intended to have been sent.)
  • Tuesday, 6 May: Receive both packages in the mail.
This puts total turn-around time at one week. Not as fast as ordering the masks off Amazon with Prime, which generally costs about the same as Beauteque (with Beauteque being a little cheaper with use of a promo code); but definitely faster than ordering from sellers abroad.

Left: order #2; right: order #2. Even the right one contained less--just one box of masks, it came in a proportionally huge box.
Contents, with packing material shown above. Adequately packaged with bubble bags or wrap. The gilded sash bags are the samples they sent me. (They are also offering sample bags for only the shipping costs--$3 in the US--here.) I got a 10% discount code with order #2, but not #1.
Purchased items: My Beauty Diary 10-count natto masks box ($14.60), My Beauty Diary 10-count arbutin whitening masks box ($13.60), and My Beauty Diary cooling mask ($1.99).

The sample bags I got were different, aside from a couple of repeat products. You can choose the contents of their 'free' (minus shipping) sample bags, however.

Overall, I'm satisfied with my experience with them. I would definitely buy from them again with a coupon--which, since they always seem to have 10% discount codes floating around, could be a problem for me--for face masks especially. I might stick to buying from international online stores, or from brick-and-mortar Asian shops in my area, during sales for colour cosmetics and bottled products, though.

27 April 2014

EOTD: Stacked Teal Eyeliner

The drudgery of classes and interviews--and the boring, subdued makeup looks that are expected along with them--have really gotten me on a colour kick recently.

Last weekend, I pulled out a bright T-shirt, bright bandana and teal Urban Decay Flipside eyeliner.

Flipside, a bright blue-teal, has been discontinued, but Urban Decay's Deep End (in the Ocho Loco 2 set, which is now on sale) is close. Some other dupes are listed here.

Stacked liner looks are a good way to bring in colour, without getting too crazy (like with eyeshadows), and without stealing normal liner definition by completely swapping out the black/brown liner. These looks are a little better/cleaner with a liquid colour liner on top; but pencil liners, like the one I used, work fine, if you put in a little more effort.

Here's what I used:

  • Light layer of e.l.f. Studio Cream Eyeshadow in Bronzed, set/contoured with an even lighter layer of My Pretty Zombie eyeshadow in Cookie Pants. This coppery-brown lid base warms up, and adds depth and contrast to, the eye. After application, I used a blending brush until the shadow was sheer; again, I wanted it light--not for it to get in the way of the colourful eyeliners on top of and below it.
  • Black gel eyeliner, in a clean-edged thin-to-medium strip along the upper lashline, with an angled brush.
  • Urban Decay Flipside pencil eyeliner directly above this, in a clean strip of equal to lesser thickness than the black line; ending in a diagonal wing extending slightly past the tail of the black eyeliner. Because it was a pencil rather than an opaque liquid liner, I had to go over the liner several times to build intensity, and had to be careful to keep the line clean-edged and even. I went back a couple times with the black gel liner when I accidentally brought the teal down too far.
  • Urban Decay Ransom (also discontinued, but also dupeable) on the bottom lashline.
As usual, I didn't bother with mascara, though most other people would continue with that step.

27 August 2013

Cherry Culture Haul - Jordana & NYX

Cherry Culture had a 20%-off promotion this month. They also had the new Jordana products in stock.

A list of products follows below. Left to right, top to bottom. Links to reviews/swatches will be added as I complete them.

  • Jordana Liquid Foundation - Buff, Natural, Tan
  • Jordana Matte Lipstick - 47 Nude, 37 Matte 5th Ave
  • Jordana Lipstick - 126 Mystery
  • NYX Round Lipstick - Tea
  • NYX Eyeshadow - Dark Brown
  • NYX Blush - Taupe
  • Jordana 12 Hr Made to Last Liquid Eyeliner Pencil - Jade Jewel, Black Point
  • Jordana 12 Hr Made to Last Liquid Eyeshadow Pencil - Tenacious Brown
  • Milani Naturally Chic Shadow Eyez - Cafe Au Lait
  • NYX Jumbo Eye Pencil - Cottage Cheese
  • Cherry Culture Lip Balm - Coffee
  • Jordana Twist & Shine Moisturizing Balm Stain - Honey Love, Terra Crave (x2)

The total, with shipping, came out to under $50.

11 June 2013

Discount Alert: Urban Decay 24/7 Eyeliner Pencils

Alert: The discontinued shades for Urban Decay's 24/7 Glide-On Eye Pencils are now discounted by 50%, from US$19.00 to $9.50, here on the brand's site.

Note that they did take down the free-shipping-on-$35 and deluxe-samples-on-$50 promotion that they were running just a few days before. However, they do still have stock of some of the good sale items that they had before, and also added Urban Defense. (I have two different shades of Urban Defense in the old packaging; I liked it, and would definitely recommend it over their BB cream.)

Also, if you need help moving on from the discontinuation of one of your favourite liners, see my list of (cheaper!) dupes here.

I ordered Hautelook's spring beauty bag. I wouldn't do it again.

Hautelook was offering a bag of various cosmetic and other personal care products in April, for US$25 + $7 shipping. I ordered it, but didn't have a great experience, which I rant about below.
I know this is late, but perhaps this post will help if you're ordering a similar bag from them in the future.

It looked just like this when it came in the mail. Large-ish cheap plasticine bag, in a box of about the same width and length, except with a whole lot of extra volume and NO packing peanuts or other cushioning. If this didn't cause a few of the problems (mentioned later), then I guess all of the problem products were just rejects/used.


Inside:

Here's everything laid out nicely:


Accidentally left out the Urban Decay mini-sized pencil in this shot.

The card with a list of contents:


Not really sure why they think it's useful at all to print icons of different social networking sites, with no QR codes or other bullshit, on this. It's a piece of paper, not a website; I can't click on the little logos of sites where you make half-assed attempts at customer interaction.


Complaints...

Some of the stuff is complete crap.

The Smile Sciences 'gift certificate' is just a non-unique discount code for overpriced teeth whitening products. Completely useless. (The other discount cards are just generic promotional cards, also with non-unique discount codes.)

I couldn't give less of a damn about Jessica Simpson's generic-celebrity-branded perfume; and I could've gotten the sample free elsewhere.
Likewise, one could get the Stila shimmer packet samples for free, too.

The Crown brush is a $5.50 knock-off of the MAC 217. It works fine; it just doesn't contribute much to the '$200 value' that Hautelook claims (though, to be fair, it does much better at that than the aforementioned Smile Sciences 'certificate').


The worst part, though, is that most of the featured products were apparently defective or previously opened/used.

For one, the Lorac mascara came in a box that looked like this:

The seal was broken, with someone's fingerprint and various debris stuck underneath. The box was also bent around here, as it would if someone had opened it before, and one of the edges of the cardboard was split. I don't know if someone had simply opened the box to see the tube inside before, or if it'd actually been used somehow; I'm hoping it was just the former.

The Lorac shadow in Celebutante, a light aqua-blue colour that the company was probably trying to clear stock of, was very dusty. Chunks of shadow were broken off in the container, and the pan holding the shadow itself was misaligned and partially detached from the black plastic case housing it:


The angle of the shadow pan looks off because the product was either old, and the glue at the bottom was starting to lose its strength; someone had attempted to de-pot the product; the product was defective; or it had come loose during shipping.

Looking online, it seems that a lot of customers had their shadows arrive completely broken and powdered. So this could just be due to their failure to use any protective shipping material.

The mirror had completely broken off inside the mini Laura Geller blush:


The Suki face scrub had VERY obviously already been opened/used. The foil seal had been taken off, and was left in the lid of the jar. There was product all over the inside rim of the jar. Also, the contents looked like this:


Looks like some of the product had already been used up.

One other customer had had her facial scrub completely dried out inside.

Basically, if it was something with a high retail value, it was probably pre-opened or otherwise problematic.

I contacted Hautelook customer service on the same day it arrived. It took five days for a representative to get back to me--which shouldn't surprise me; it took three weeks for the bag to ship out, and four weeks before it was actually delivered, despite the high shipping costs. (My previous orders through Hautelook had also taken a while.) I was offered the choice to either return the bag, or to take a 20% discount.
This was the same discount that they gave to every other person who complained--even for those who had only had problems with one of their items. The costs of shipping it back, and likely also forfeiting the significant $7 of the initial shipping price, though, meant that the discount was basically my only option.

My previous experiences with Hautelook had been largely mediocre--second worst after PLNDR. Don't even get me started on PLNDR; I've had multiple terrible customer and ordering experiences with them that still remain unresolved.


It seems that Hautelook did less of the work when they partnered with another company for this promotion, though. My box shipped from a 'Renee Welch'. Who's that?

'Axiz Group'. The final 'z' in their name makes me think they're a reputable company.

A quick Google search reveals their site, which has an extremely professional title tag of '+++++ AXIZ GROUP +++++', and other great aesthetic touches.
Their 'Product Catalog' simply links to PromoDealer.com; which has, among many other IFrames, a monthly drawing form that registers to Promomart, that uses ESP Web (that site has even more fun stuff). So their store is just selling the same stuff from the same suppliers that everyone buying into ESP Web sells.


Anyway. The Hautelook bag was disappointing. With all the old product, it was far from worth the $200 that they claim to be the value of the bundle--even at a cumulative $32, it wasn't a particularly great value. So, I don't plan on purchasing one of their bags again. In fact, I doubt I'll be ordering anything from them again anytime soon.