Minerals Mate Application & Mixing Tray

Love mineral makeup? Dislike the mess? 

Read on and see what I received to review.

The Minerals Mate Application & Mixing Tray is made of polished melamine. The one that I have is black-on-dark grey in color. There are three large wells, and four smaller wells. There are seven caps for the well. (Brushes not included.) Hand wash with soap and water, or put it in the top rack of your dishwasher!

 Minerals Mate Application & Mixing Tray ($19.95 US)

 

Pictured above is what is in the middle of the Tray. 

Your Tray can be used for more than just minerals. Minerals Mate has some ideas for you:about morethnminIt’s so ingenious; it really made me wonder why no one thought of it sooner! Molly, the creator of the Minerals Mate Application & Mixing Tray  thought of the concept soon after she started using mineral makeup.

Molly not only disliked using the lid of a container jar to apply it, but she also realized “it didn’t make any sense.”

As any fan of mineral makeup knows, Molly experienced this…

“If I poured too much powder into the lid, it was a mess when I was finished doing my makeup to pour leftover powder back into the container. I’m not too compulsive about it, but that just didn’t seem very sanitary to me. And cleanliness is important when it comes to your complexion.”

Do you use the lids to your mineral containers over and over again, “double dipping,” day after day? There’s a word for that: “Ewwww!” Unless you regularly wash the lids, bacteria can grow and hide between the threads along the inside. And, if you pour unused minerals back into the jar, you risk contaminating the entire container of minerals.

I love the Minerals Mate Application and Mixing Tray, and I do love my minerals even more!

Check back tomorrow, as there will be an opportunity for one lucky US resident to win a Minerals Mate Application Tray! The Tray the winner will receive is the same as the one reviewed, simply a different color: red!

Disclosure: I received the product to review. All links are for your convenience only!

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Moxie Reviews™ 2012. Content copyright. Unauthorized use and/or duplication of this material without express and written permission from this blog’s author/owner, Moxie, is strictly prohibited.

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Beauty Might Not Be Blind, but the Casting Call Was

I would like to give a huge thank you and shoutout to Ashley T., whom I follow on Twitter, for tweeting the link to this article.

Permalink: http://www.nytimes.com/2011/09/02/business/media/for-bare-escentuals-pretty-isnt-good-enough.html

September 1, 2011

Beauty Might Not Be Blind, but the Casting Call Was

By 

ARE you just another pretty face? Or are you truly beautiful? A new campaign from the mineral cosmetics company Bare Escentuals hopes women will realize that the former is not enough.

“Pretty,” says an actress in a commercial for the campaign, “is what you are. Beauty is what you do with it.” The theme for the campaign is “Be a Force of Beauty.”

“We can all be pretty, but beauty is an action,” said Leslie Blodgett, the executive chairman of Bare Escentuals. “Hopefully it’s a rally cry for ‘Don’t just be pretty and sit there and get your picture taken and do nothing.’ ”

Simon Cowell, the chief marketing officer of Bare Escentuals, said the company realized there was an audience it had not yet reached through its boutiques, wholesale partners or the use of home shopping networks like QVC. “We need to talk to them about our brand before they show up at one of our counters,” Mr. Cowell said.

To do that, the company hired an advertising agency of record — TBWA\Chiat\Day Los Angeles, part of TBWA Worldwide, a unit of the Omnicom Group — to create its first traditional ad campaign, which will appear in print, television and digital ads. “Its been a scary process for me personally,” said Ms. Blodgett. “Its really hard to get your message across with a one-liner.”

Models chosen for Bare Escentuals’ new campaign had to fill out a long questionnaire.

To find models that represented the elusive notion of beauty, the company held a blind casting call for women ages 20 to 60. Representatives from Bare Escentuals did not see the women who applied until they were selected for the campaign. Instead, they asked more than 270 women to complete a questionnaire about who they were and what they were like.

“My agent wouldn’t even tell me who the company was,” said Keri Shahidi, 42, one of the women chosen for the campaign, because the agent did not want the knowledge to affect her answers. The list was then whittled to 78 women, who were chosen based on their answers to the survey and brought in for interviews with casting agents. That list was reduced to 26 women, and after an a additional round of interviews, five women made the final cut.

Not seeing the women before they were chosen, Ms. Blodgett said, was a bit nerve-racking. “Do you know what a huge risk that is? What if all five of them were blonde, blue-eyed and 30?”

Xanthe Hohalek, a creative director at TBWA\Chiat\Day Los Angeles who worked on the campaign, said the company was looking for the women to embody qualities like inspiration, humility and humor. “We were looking for something that was much more personality-driven,” Ms. Hohalek said. The goal was to capture women who had compelling and interesting stories to tell.

One finalist is a volunteer firefighter and another is an environmental scientist. Ms. Shahidi, an actor and mother of three, says she has undergone multiple knee surgeries because of playing basketball, has an “irrational fear of dog poop” and used to ride a motorcycle in college. “They really got to know us,” Ms. Shahidi said. “It had nothing to do with the makeup.”

Ms. Blodgett said that with the exception of basic color correction, the company took pains not to retouch or airbrush photographs of the women. “We’re leaving in everything that they came with on their face. Every line, wrinkle, puffy bloodshot eye,” she said. “We have a responsibility as a beauty company to start changing the images that women see.”

Ms. Shahidi confirmed that notion: “Trust me. I saw my picture, they did not retouch me.”

The photographs, which were taken by John Rankin Waddell, were meant to show “women that had soul in their eye versus what you see in magazines, that blank dilated pupil stare,” said Ms. Hohalek of TBWA. “There was a sense of a self there.”

Bare Escentuals, which was acquired by the Japanese cosmetics company Shiseido in 2010, has sold $1 billion in cosmetic products globally so far this year, according to a company spokeswoman. The campaign, which is estimated to cost $16 million to $20 million, will be introduced in three phases over the next few months.

The first phase, which begins Tuesday , will focus on what the company is calling its “anthem” for women to be a force of beauty. Quick Response or Q.R. codes, a new type of bar code that can be read by smartphones, will be called “beauty marks” and will take consumers from print ads to biographical Web videos about the women.

The second phase will focus on the company’s signature foundation product, bareMinerals Original Foundation , with television commercials saying how “they’ll notice you, not your makeup.” The third phase will announce a new product for the brand called “Ready,” the first portable solid eye shadow product from Bare Escentuals.

Print ads will run in magazines like Allure, Elle, Health, Glamour, Lucky and Self. Fifteen- and 30-second television spots will run on cable and broadcast channels like the CW, ABC, MTV, Bravo and Oxygen. Other elements to the campaign include ads that can be seen on Android,iPhone and other smartphones. Search ads will run on sites like Google, Bing and Yahoo.

A Facebook application called “Share the Force” will let users post a message on a friend’s Facebook page saying the friend is a force of beauty. Those who use the app will then be invited to a complementary “make-under” at one of the company’s boutiques and given some foundation. A mobile site will let users watch videos, learn more about the makeup products and buy them.

Bare Escentuals is not the only company that sells mineral makeup. Companies like Everyday Minerals, Iredale Mineral Cosmetics and even traditional cosmetics brands like L’Oréal carry similar products. But Mr. Cowell said the competition was not a factor in choosing to go with an advertising campaign.

“We knew there was an audience out there that we weren’t talking to,” Mr. Cowell said. “We feel like we’ve got something to say.”

Oh My Cupcake—Youngevity Mineral Makeup!

 

You are beautiful ~ Always

I had the opportunity to talk to Kim Terreson, who not only has that lovely motto you see written above, but also is an authorized distributor of Youngevity Mineral Makeup. Although I have not used the products, I am very interested in trying them. I wanted to show my readers one of their releases in the makeup line, “Oh My Cupcake.” 

After using mineral makeup for years Michelle Wallach and Vanessa Hunter created Youngevity Mineral Makeup to reflect their philosophy of 100% pure and natural makeup ~ without unnecessary additives like those found in mass-produced brands. Their true passion is to make every woman look and feel as gorgeous as she should.

Jimmy Wolner is the Executive Manager of Youngevity Mineral Makeup, he decided to make a teen mineral makeup line after being inspired by a neighbor girl. She wanted to play in the makeup that he had at his house from his line, but he was quite concerned about the products she would be using on her young face. “Oh My Cupcake” he thought, and thus, was inspired to start a teen inspired line of Youngevity Mineral Makeup.

Fortunately, when the girl returned home and showed her father, he said, “That is something that I would let my daughter wear out of the house.”

Included in the Oh My Cupcake collection:

costom color match foundation tower

lolly pop eye shadow

lady bug eye shadow

sweetheart blush

sweet pea lip gloss

one shadow brush

one kabuki brush

and a coupon for a free full size custom match foundation.

Youngevity Mineral Makeup line is made from natural minerals with no harsh chemicals, dyes, preservatives, irritants, talc or bismuth. It is non-comedogenic, fragrance-free and hypo-allergenic. Youngevity loves furry friends too so NO animal testing, ever 

If you want to learn more about the Oh My Cupcake line, including ordering information, connect with Kim Terreson, an Authorized Distributor of Youngevity Mineral Makeup.

Additionally, Kim is currently looking for women who would like to represent Youngevity, the all natural mineral makeup line.
 Here is Kim’s phone # (360) 980-4781      
Follow” Y Mineral Makeup on Twitter 
        ”Like” Youngevity Mineral Makeup on Facebook
    
 
 
 
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DisclosureI have nothing to disclose. The links included simply bring you to the sites. I do not profit from any purchase you may make, and do not profit if you sign up to be a Representative of Youngevity. 

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