I've noticed that youtubers often endorse glossier products with a qualification like "I love it BUT [it's hard to apply, it's not very saturated, it dries out, the packaging is flimsy...]" it's like the pressure to like glossier is so strong that influencers force themselves to ignore clear design flaws and quality issues. there are so many makeup options these days, why settle for a less than perfect product? props to glossier's marketing machine
Kendall Elizabeth I couldn’t agree more. I bought the Brow Flick and it was USELESS. No colour came out whatsoever! They were great about me returning it but I do think there’s a bit of Emperor’s New Clothes with the brand as a whole. Your comment is spot on!
Also, how does one discern whether the person using predominantly Glossier in a video is paid by the brand? It seems all so unregulated and manipulative! I have noticed (and this is with the stylist on this channel using Everlane too) that they will use a couple of other brands but then it is really an ad for said brand.
Don't forget the design team for the packaging. Just think of it as made in China products. A lot of the cosmetics are made in China at least for sure, the packaging.
it's the whole "no make up" make up look...we're almost afraid of admitting we need to wear make up for it to look like make up on our faces. i purchased the glossier mascara after reading raving reviews....and it was lame for me, too sticky and too stiff for me. boughten better and cheaper mascara.
@@buhkangliwayway I think saying any products that made in China is automatically cheap and bad quality is misleading. Chinese manufacturing has different ranges from very low-end to hi-end quality, depends on how much the clients want to pay. A lot of hi-end fashion companies have their specific products manufactured in China without our knowledges. Many of them even 90% were made oversea (China, Vietnam, Bangladesh, India, Cambodia, etc.) yet still able to have it labeled Made in US or Canada (or any other Western countries). There's a regulation on how many percentage of the product was made in certain countries that you can label it made in that country. You can have products made in the US yet still with bad quality as well.
I absolutely LOVE this look. Emily, you have the sexiest eye shape. This glitter slightly "sculpted" or "traced" liner look accentuated your eyes beautifully.
I know almond eyes are the "perfect" shape (yes, They ARE so pretty) but I find monolids and hooded eyes so gorgeous idk why. They give me another kind of feel.
This is gorgeous! I've seen this look on her insta and some graphic liner on KJH's account but someone like me (a person that can't do make up well) needs instructions on such things. Thank you, Emily, for sharing! I have monolids so it's great to see someone do a tutorial that would work on my eyeshape as well, because a lot of graphic liner looks are centred around a crease and I'm too dumb to translate those to my eyes. I might attempt this look (without the winged liner because boy my monolids are just that complicated).
I got super excited when the notification came through...Violette_fr hooded eyes, then extremely disappointed to see that this tutorial didn't address true hooded eyes at all. Emily is lovely and her look beautiful but not for actual hooded eyes😞
This whole video was hilarious. Love how the youth are obsessed with covering their youth up. Some things never change. We all wish we slapped on less than half of what we slapped on. Now that's WOKE. Ps: not hating on the kid, just hating on a universal fact.