
'Amazing' Liz Earle skincare set worth £99 now down to £59
'Amazing' Liz Earle skincare set worth £99 now down to £59
"I have been using this skin routine for several years, and I love it. My skin never feels tight or greasy. It's a perfect combination."
'Amazing' Liz Earle skincare set worth £99 now down to £59
(Image: Ridofranz/Getty Images )
Liz Earle fans can save 40% on a full skincare routine when buying the Uplifting Daily Essentials bundle on the Liz Earle website. The £59 routine contains £99 worth of products but has been reduced to £59.
Inside the set is the Cleanse & Polish Hot Cloth Cleanser 200ml, Instant Boost Skin Tonic Toner 200ml and Superskin Moisturiser with natural neroli 50ml. The brand doesn't believe in 'anti-ageing' and instead claims to be 'pro-age'.
Liz Earle isn't the only brand to start selling bundles of a full skincare routine, Nip+Fab has a wide selection of routine kits with targeted at different skincare routines from £39.95. There's also an Essentials Bundle from Nip+Fab for £28.20 at Boots, it includes a cleanser, two serums and a moisturising top layer.
READ MORE: Woman lost over six stone doing at-home workouts that only needed 'a wall'
READ MORE: Roman fans nab both shades of summer dress with 'very pretty' detail to 'cover upper arms'
On the Liz Earle website, the Uplifting Daily Essentials has an almost perfect average rating of 4.9 out of 5. One shopper said: "I have been using this skin care routine exclusively for about 25 years. People say that my skin is amazing for my age (73). I can't comment on that. But if it is, it is all thanks to Liz Earle's gentle, but effective skin care routine."
A second person wrote: "I have been using this skin routine for several years, and I love it. My skin never feels tight or greasy. It's a perfect combination."
A third wrote: "I've been buying Liz Earle for 10 years now and would never look back - Cleanse & Polish is best product ever and all the super skin items feeling and smell amazing. The price is reasonable so I would recommend to anyone so why not give it a try."
The set includes a full skincare routine
(Image: Liz Earle )
One of the lowest rated reviews reads: "I can't use your products anymore because you've put preservatives in that include panthenol and phenoxythanol. Bought for my step mum, she likes and doesn't have sensitive skin."
Article continues below
Another shopper said: "I have used Liz Earle for years. I use the Cleanse and Polish, both day and night moisturisers. I also like the exfoliator and the superskin overnight oil serum. I am a mature lady and my skin still feels soft and smooth. Hardly any wrinkles at 75. Will continue with this product."
The Uplifting Daily Essentials bundle is available for £59 on the Liz Earle website.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Scotsman
11 hours ago
- Scotsman
Tour de France: Edinburgh councillors told 'take back control' over £1.7m reserves spend on cycling event
Edinburgh council officials have recommended a £1.7 million spend on the Tour de France. Sign up to our daily newsletter – Regular news stories and round-ups from around Scotland direct to your inbox Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to The Scotsman, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... Edinburgh councillors need to 'take back control' from officials, one has claimed, amid a row over calls to spend £1.7 million of council reserves on the Tour de France. In a report published before Thursday's full council meeting, officers had asked councillors to sign off on £1.7m for the Tour de France, saying council political group leaders had agreed to it. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Britain's Mark Cavendish (centre) celebrates as he crosses the finish line during the third Tour de France Singapore Criterium race in Singapore. The Tour de France will start from Edinburgh in 2027. | AFP via Getty Images However, at the full council meeting, several group leaders spoke out to say that they had not approved the spend, and the last they had heard of Tour de France planning was in October. The row has emerged with the Tour de France - the world's biggest cycling race - to start in Edinburgh in 2027. One councillor said the planned spend on the tour was 'unacceptable', while another admitted they did not yet know how the spend would benefit the city. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad The decision on approving the £1.7m Tour de France spend – and £2m in other reserve use for related issues – has now been pushed back to a committee meeting on Tuesday. Race Director Christian Prudhomme presents The Duchess of Edinburgh with a yellow jersey at the 2027 Tour de France launch event, at Edinburgh Castle The event will mark the third time Britain has hosted the start of the world-famous race after cyclists set off from Leeds in 2014 - when the West Yorkshire city overcame an earlier bid by Edinburgh - and London in 2007. Conservative group leader, councillor Iain Whyte, said of the allocated spend: 'We were given some information. We were not given all the information. We agreed that officers should keep working on it, but I would have expected that to come to committee.' SNP group leader, Councillor Simita Kumar, said: 'On the 7th of October 2024, group leaders were confidentially informed about discussions with Scottish Government and VisitScotland about the Tour de France leaving from Edinburgh in 2027. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad 'Group leaders were happy for officers to explore this with a decision to rightfully take place in an executive committee. There was no agreement from group leaders to authorise any funding – we simply do not have the power to do so within this forum. 'The governance of this decision has been wholly absent especially when there has been adequate time to bring this decision to committee.' The report for councillors said they intended for the £1.7m spend to be replenished from income from the city's coming visitor levy, which comes into effect in the summer next year. Former Liberal Democrat leader Kevin Lang shared the confusion of the other group leaders. But he also clarified that in October, officers had explained the use of visitor levy money to backfill the £1.7m was intended to be extra income brought in by the event. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad The 2027 edition of the Tour will be the first time that both the men's and women's races have started in the same country besides France. SNP councillor Kate Campbell said: 'There is very little explanation really of why we're making those allocations. Group leaders I've spoken to do not have recollection of making a decision on this. 'We've had no reports to councillors, no notes to committee, about the value we're getting from £1.7m for the Tour de France. It's a huge amount of money. We really don't know what the benefit to the city is.' Conservative councillor Phil Doggart said: 'This is unacceptable. We are the council. So let's take back control of the council from the officers. We make decisions.'


The Herald Scotland
a day ago
- The Herald Scotland
New £25m landmark Scottish whisky distillery opens
Ardgowan Distillery in Inverkip has been formally opened today by Kate Forbes, Scotland's Deputy First Minister, as its first casks are filled since building concluded earlier this month. Founded in 2017, the firm is led by Roland Grain, whisky entrepreneur, and Laura Davies, distillery manager, who together spearhead an expert team with a combined experience spanning over seven decades in the whisky industry. Kate Forbes said it was a 'significant moment'. (Image: Getty Images) Featuring a sweeping Scandinavian longhouse design and 97 per cent recycled aluminium roof, the distillery has its sights set on producing top quality whisky and striving for carbon neutrality. Ms Forbes said: 'This is a significant moment for the region's economy, with investment and job opportunities set to boost local communities. 'Scotland's whisky industry is a pivotal contributor to our positive global standing and provides great economic benefit, adding over £7 billion to the UK economy and generating £5.4bn in exports alone. 'I congratulate the team at Ardgowan for the dedication they have shown on this journey and I wish them every success as they enter the next phase of their operations.' Following eight years of development, planning and construction, it is the first new distillery to open in Inverclyde for over a century. The firm said that, until now, the last distillery to operate in the region was destroyed in the Greenock Blitz. The first casks are filled. (Image: Ardgowan Distillery) Mr Grain said: 'After a lengthy build, the team and I are thrilled to now be in full production and filling casks with our own distillate, including private casks for our Clan Ardgowan members. Ardgowan's ultimate goal is to revive the golden age of Scotch whisky with long Sherry cask maturation in European oak. 'Our commitment to quality is demonstrated by investing millions of pounds in our bespoke Infinity Casks years before the distillery was built. Producing whisky is all about time and patience, so, as we fill our first casks and the Deputy First Minister opens the site to the public, we look forward to steadily perfecting our Single Malt in the years to come.' The Ardgowan Distillery's visitor centre is planned to open later this summer 'with various experiences on offer, catering for whisky novices and connoisseurs alike'. 8,000 new jobs to be created Around 8,000 jobs could be created in an Aberdeenshire town over the next decade as £1 billion is set to be invested into energy transition projects.


Scotsman
2 days ago
- Scotsman
Edinburgh council agrees to explore possibility of trialling four-day week for staff
Edinburgh Council is to explore running a trial of a four day week on the back of a successful study in an English council. Sign up to our daily newsletter Sign up Thank you for signing up! Did you know with a Digital Subscription to Edinburgh News, you can get unlimited access to the website including our premium content, as well as benefiting from fewer ads, loyalty rewards and much more. Learn More Sorry, there seem to be some issues. Please try again later. Submitting... After a decision by city councillors on Thursday, council officers will study four day working week trials in other parts of the country, and determine if and how a trial could be run in Edinburgh. They will also explore the state of recruitment, staff retention, productivity and health of council staff. The council is to explore trialling a four-day week for staff | Getty Images/iStockphoto Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Officers will present the report at a future meeting of the city's finance and resources committee. Green councillor Claire Miller, who put forward the motion asking for a trial to be explored, said: 'When faced with the need for budget cuts every year, it's a joy to find a proposal which helps to save money while also being beneficial rather than detrimental. 'And the four day week is just that. The four day week is one where services remain as-is – there are no changes as far as residents are concerned, either in opening hours or what's provided – but our workers deliver in a reduced working week. 'Studies of four day weeks show that productivity remains the same, or in some cases even improves, when the number of hours worked is reduced down and a greater proportion of the week is given back to people for their other responsibilities, for rest and for leisure.' Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Cllr Miller's motion comes off the back of a 15-month four day week trial for some staff at South Cambridgeshire District Council, which found it offered significant benefits. An academic study of the trial found that it reduced turnover by 39 per cent and saved the council over £300,000 in agency worker fees. Additionally, it found that a range of council services either saw no change or improvements in delivery. Further, less council staff were found to be going on benefits. However, not all councillors held firm support for the motion. Advertisement Hide Ad Advertisement Hide Ad Conservative councillor Chris Cowdy said: 'At a time when our own council continues to face budgetary pressures, rising demand of core services and persistent performance issues, now may not be the time for a speculative experiment.'