I make lipgloss for the fun of it. Please make sure the pigments are lip safe before doing this. Not all pigments are lip safe, or FDA approved in the US for lip use.
@@Pachadaddy What’s no fun is when someone sees this video, tries it, and gets an allergic reaction or a skin flare up. Not everyone is sensitive to eye shadow pigment, sure, but when it reaches such a large amount of people there’s bound to be someone who might have a dangerous reaction. Especially on such a soft and sensitive area such as the lips.
@@chloej2606 That’s not passive aggression. I literally directly called him out and mentioned him. Even he himself would cringe at his overreaction if he sees my comment. Just face the truth.
I’ve been doing this for years. When I have a dance performance on stage and my costume is a unique color, I do this to match my lipstick to my outfit. This also comes in handy when you run out of your fav lipgloss, etc. 💋 Just make sure you’re sanitary and use new eyeshadows to mix with NEW clear glosses. The bacteria from used makeup can cause irritation, or worse.
The fact that eye shadows have pigments that are considered unsafe for eyes let alone put it on your lips so might as well eat some of it and leave no chances of causing yourself a hazard. 👏👏
Get that out of here, does even mattter? The shower you shower inside is dirty and harmful because other people shower in it let alone the body products are also shared.
some stuffs just dont mix well together. it could be clumpy, drying or any other endless possibilities when mixing two different products. common sense
i have needed a new Lipstick colour so bad because the ones in other stores are too expensive this life hack changed my life thank god to james i dont have to buy lipstick with a colour when i can do this life hack
My James Charles pallet is literally my lifeeeee I lost it under my bed a long time ago and was really sad until I found it again. The reason I like it is because it has red and most pallets don’t have red
I like that he didn’t say something like “and my palette is only 20 dollars!” he genuinely just tried the hack and said you could do it with any palette
@@mxthi09thanks for saying that 😬 and I'm not trying to be rude but if she said*he*they also would have said she is rude 😐 so please just let them talk nonsense while you enjoy your life ❤
James you are the best makeup person I’ve ever seen and you are such a good and kind friend to the other in the whole world and you are just a wonderful person in the first place
I like how at the end he said “with all your makeup pallets “ instead of “on my makeup pallet” so it would benefit us more then him trying to get us to buy his product for this hack
TBF pigments are pretty universal. The only thing to be mindful of is if they're mixed with a certain type of binder to make sure they're compatible--you can't turn an oil-based makeup product into watercolor paint because oil and water don't mix. However, this is why eyeshadows can be used to make so many types of paint or have other similar coloring uses. I would rather just get a larger quantity of pigment if I'm gonna use the pigment it for something other than an eyeshadow where a tiny bit goes a long way, but using an old one to amke small amounts is a great way to recycle and upcycle products that would otherwise go to a landfill. The palettes can also be great as paint palettes too! I've recently experimented with using acrylic powders you mix with monomer for nails to make larger batches of really fancy paints. Imo they're better than the jars of pigment you can get in art supply stores because the prices and quantities are smaller, more to a size I am looking for (a jar that's like half the size of a jar of peanut butter for like 200 bucks vs. a jar the size of a bottle of ink for like 20 bucks--much more practical for making specialty paints that warrant buying specialty pigments), and that makes it worth it.