MAC Spellbinder Shadow: This Shine Has Powerful Pull - Makeup and Beauty Blog
This is probably as close every bit I'grand going to get to sci-fi makeup this week. They're the new MAC Spellbinder Shadows, and they accept magnetized particles — which is weird and freaky and cool.
I held a paper clip above one of the pots, and you can come across the particles cling to information technology…
Ooh, science. 🙂
These eight new $22 express edition loose powder shadows look kind of like cream shadows in their pots, but they aren't. They're loose, but they're ionized and spring together past a magnetic charge.
The shades are all on the darker end of the spectrum, like nighttime blue, brown and plum — so they're very moody and very fall. They're also very bling-worthy and shiny.
MAC Spellbinder Shadow
$22 each, bachelor now online in viii shades
Available in-store Oct 20 through December 1, 2016
#MACSpellbinder
I gotta say, though…I expected these to be easier to work with than MAC'due south other loose pigments because of the whole magnetic action, but they aren't. When I did this expect, I got shadow all over the place — all over my desk, all over my easily, all over my confront.
I should not have done my foundation kickoff; it took a while to clean everything upward…
But you do get high-wattage, super dramatic, super frosty drama with these, and incredibly enough, they don't highlight my fine lines. If you lot want your eyes to sparkle from a mile away, these are peachy for that.
"A shadow fabricated of ionized, magnetically charged pigments that cling to lids like velvet. Black, ionized pigments are magnetically charged, fusing the loose pulverisation together so it magically maintains its form and dimension. Features 8 shades in a metal finish.
"Apply using fingers, brush or sponge. Works best after application of Prep + Prime number 24-Hr Extend Eye Base."
—maccosmetics.com
Interestingly, and I'thou not sure why this is, these are easy to blend into each other but hard to blend and buff apart. Like, in the look I'chiliad wearing here with multiple shades, getting one of the colors to merge into the next hardly required any blending work, but when I tried another wait with just one of the shades, I couldn't successfully buff out the edges.
MAC does recommend that you use a primer nether these, and I totally agree. I tried them both with and without, and with a primer, the shadows applied smoothly. Primer definitely makes them easier to work with.
If you don't use a primer with them and have any unevenness or dry out patches on your lids, brace yourself, considering these could become skippy.
Likewise, I have this h2o line sensitivity issue… I don't know if "sensitivity" is the right give-and-take, only sometimes when I habiliment certain eye products, my h2o lines experience dry out.
My optics don't water, experience itchy or turn red, only I tin feel when the pare is dry. Unfortunately, these do that with me. I don't know if it's but something with my eyes, just I feel it when I vesture these shadows, and I don't always experience information technology when I habiliment eyeshadow in general.
It's non a deal-breaker, though. I yet love how these wait and how they don't highlight my fine lines (yay!). I just have to be careful how long I wear them.
Your friendly neighborhood beauty addict,
Karen
Source: https://makeupandbeautyblog.com/mac-makeup/mac-spellbinder-shadow-review/
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