| From left to right: 391, 329, 342, 330, 351. |
I’ve been thinking about making my own Inglot palette for a while. I’ve been searching for a good small matte neutral palette akin to Urban Decay Naked Basics but neither the shades of Naked Basics nor Naked2 Basics really caught my eye. My skin is a little too tan for either of those palettes.
I am lucky to live somewhere (for school) that happens to have a plethora of Inglot locations. I finally stopped by a couple days ago with my boyfriend and picked out a palette. I used Beautylish’s website to figure out which colors I’d like most prior to arriving, and the Inglot sales associate helped me match the numbers to the colors I wanted. My boyfriend purchased the palette for me as a belated gift. :)
| Taken in natural light, no base. (Sloppy tape job. My bad.) |
The freedom system eyeshadows are sold separately at $7 for 2.7 grams. The 5-pan palette is also sold separately at $11. Inglot’s palette selection ranges from 2 to 20 pans. I find that Inglot is much more cost efficient than MAC, who sells their eyeshadow pro refills at approximately $11 for 1.5 g. The quality of their matte eyeshadows, upon swatching, seems to be on par if not better than MAC. They were incredibly smooth and creamy to swatch on my arm. Minimal building was required to get that kind of color vibrancy. I’m really impressed that I didn’t have to use NYX Milk underneath to make the mattes pop! (Then again, my only other fully matte palette is the Sonia Kashuk Eye on Neutral palette, and it’s not the greatest quality out there.) I’m really looking forward to trying out my Inglot palette in the next couple of days.
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