Latest news with #Tint


Metro
3 days ago
- Lifestyle
- Metro
St. Tropez' new Express Face Tint hailed the summer essential for glowing skin
Metro journalists select and curate the products that feature on our site. If you make a purchase via links on this page we will earn commission – learn more We have trialled and tested a whole host of fake tans for the body, including instant and gradual tans, as well as fake tans for the face. We have also sampled numerous bronzing drops, as well as bronzers, contours – any beauty product that will give our skin a sunkissed bronzed glow. But we think we have found the cream of the crop – St. Tropez' Express Sunlit Face Tint. The St. Tropez Express Sunlit Face Tint has got our golden seal of approval because it is a hybrid of a fake tan for the face, bronzing drops, contour stick, bronzer, and freckle pen, all in one. It has even been coined a 'TT cream', meaning a tint to tan solution, which may just change how we apply tan forever more. Formulated with DHA this no-rinse Face Tint is a one of a kind face tan that leaves your skin naturally sunkissed. It develops within one hour, but reaches its maximum at three hours. It doesn't need to be washed off, does not smell, and features a narrow nozzle for controlled application. Buy Now FOR £29 The Express Sunlit Face Tint is the first of its kind because it offers a longer lasting bronzed glow than bronzing drops, or even some face tan drops and mists we have tried. Unlike bronzing drops, like Drunk Elephants bestselling D-Bronzi Drops, the St. Tropez creation has been formulated with DHA, which is the key to developing the sunkissed complexion achieved with fake tans. As you may know, bronzing drops easily wash off after use, but this Face Tint doesn't. Yes there are face tan mists, serums, drops, but this tan is different as it is fast acting and helps achieve instant bronze, which is also longlasting. In just one hour you will notice a medium natural-looking tan, though you can leave on for a maximum of three hours to fully develop. Another rare feature is this hero glow stops developing after those three hours and it is a no-rinse formula. So, while some may prefer to wash off when you're ready you don't have to, which is great for those who forget to rinse off your tan as you won't be left with a two-tone face and body, or suffer a Ross from Friends moment. The dream! This formulation is quick drying, which is another pull factor for those on the go as you can slip your clothes on straight away without fear of any stains on your clothes or bedsheets. You can wear the Face Tint on its own, or under make-up, which is another reason why it's perfect for the summer months and on holiday so you don't sweat off your make-up. More Trending The tan lasts for a number of days, though this can depend on how thoroughly (or aggressive) you cleanse your skin. Of course, an abrasive cleanser, harsh flannel and exfoliant could cause this product to rub off quicker. The list of features we love about this Face Tint is endless. The applicator is a narrow funnel which makes it easy to manage the product and application, while also avoiding any waste. The narrowness also means you can apply precisely to certain areas of the face, or on a brush and buff into the skin. While some apply all over the face and neck, it can also be used on the hands, feet too. Plus, it can be applied on specific areas to act as a semi-permanent contour. Simply apply on a brush and sweep under the cheekbones, forehead, chin and jawline, leave for an hour (or longer), and you will look chiselled in an instant, and all day long. The same hack can be applied if you want to achieve faux freckles. It's a genius, multi-purpose and affordable product we love, and think you will too. It's unknown how long the discount price will last for, but we urge you to shop quickly, especially now summer is here this hero buy will fly off the shelves. Follow Metro across our social channels, on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram Share your views in the comments below MORE: Caudalie launches its first ever tanning drops – here are our honest thoughts MORE: These are the best gradual tanners for a sunkissed glow this summer MORE: This skincare product completely transformed my skin – I get everyone to use it! Your free newsletter guide to the best London has on offer, from drinks deals to restaurant reviews.


Daily Mirror
11-06-2025
- Lifestyle
- Daily Mirror
Best viral skin tints from NYX to Kylie Cosmetics for the easiest summer glow
Beauty buffs have been hailing skin tints online, with many swapping their foundations for these viral products. We've rounded up some of the most talked about tints on the internet right now With the arrival of summer, you may start to swap out your knitted jumper for light jackets and vests, but it also means swapping out some of your favourite makeup products too. A thick and heavy foundation might feel like too much for your skin on a hot day, hence why many people will reach for a lighter skin tint instead. A skin tint can be applied with your hands, a brush or sponge to give a natural look with a lightweight feel and decent coverage. Perfect for warm sunny days, skin tints give that 'no makeup look' while offering an even complexion. They have slowly become a firm favourite for makeup lovers as they leave your skin looking healthy without the need of a heavy, full coverage foundation - no wonder they are going viral online. So if you're in the market for a new skin tint, we've rounded up a few of the most viral ones out there... Kylie Cosmetics Skin Tint Blurring Elixir Foundation - £27 People have been loving the K ylie Cosmetics Skin Tint Blurring Elixir Foundation since it hit UK shelves as it's perfect for those who want to achieve a more natural and fresh-faced look. It helps even out skin tone and blur pores and fine lines, all while keeping your skin hydrated. Ilia Beauty Super Serum Skin Tint SPF 30 - £42 This Ilia Beauty Skin Tint is a lightweight serum which promises to give your skin a dewy and natural tint, while working to even out blemishes and fine lines. It offers buildable coverage and works as the perfect base for bronzer and blusher, should you wish to add these for the ideal minimal makeup look. Help us improve our content by completing the survey below. We'd love to hear from you! NYX Professional Makeup Buttermelt Glaze Skin Tint + SPF30 Foundation - £13.99 Infused with shea butter, mango butter and niacinimide, the NYX Buttermelt Glaze Skin Tint definitely lives up to it's name. Offering a non-greasy glaze that leaves skin smooth and perfected - and perfect for the viral 'donut skin' trend. Transforming dull skin to radiant and hydrated as well as protecting from the sun with added SPF. Milk Makeup Hydro Grip Gel Tint - £27.20 was £34 For those who dream of dewy and hydrated skin, the Milk Hydro Grip Gel Tint is an innovative gel-based skin tint, making it stand out from the rest. It's lightweight yet has a buildable coverage giving a natural and radiant look. It helps boost hydration without clogging pores or feeling heavy and greasy. Glossier Perfecting Skin Tint - £28 The Glossier Perfecting Skin Tint should be your go-to if you want dewy sheer coverage that will help to even out skintone and minimises pores. You can also expect a seriously smooth finish, thanks to its breathable formula, which helps to provide an ultra-thin layer for the perfect, barely-there everyday makeup look. Maybelline Super Stay Skin Tint Foundation - £13.99 Maybelline Super Stay Skin Tint Foundation has a vitamin C-infused formula that helps to brighten your skin while offering a skin-like coverage that promises to last all day. It leaves the skin looking natural and glowy while helping to hydrate the skin even on hot days.


USA Today
29-05-2025
- Entertainment
- USA Today
E.l.f. acquires Hailey Bieber's Rhode Skincare: 5 must-try products
E.l.f. acquires Hailey Bieber's Rhode Skincare: 5 must-try products Beauty powerhouse alert: E.l.f. welcomes Hailey Bieber's Rhode Skincare line! E.l.f. Cosmetics is wellknown for its accessible prices and impressive "dupes". And now, E.l.f. has acquired Rhode, Hailey Bieber's popular skincare line. This landmark deal is valued at up to $1 billion, comprising an initial $800 million in cash and stock, with an additional $200 million contingent on Rhode's performance over the next three years, according to FactSet. This acquisition marks the second major headline for Hailey Bieber this month, following her appearance on the May cover of Vogue. Beyond her famous family, Hailey has carved out a considerable reputation in the fashion and beauty world. Her seemingly flawless skin and influential presence have undeniably propelled Rhode Skincare to remarkable success in recent years. So, if you're aspiring for that coveted 'It-girl glow' this summer, here are a few Rhode products worth exploring Shop these Rhode Skincare products for a summer glow: 1. Glazing Milk for skin prep More: TikTok is obsessed with ColourPop: Save 25% sitewide + get the viral mystery box today 2. Peptide Lip Treatment 3. Pineapple Refresh Cleanser 4. Peptide Lip Tint MOER SKINCARE: The deals aren't over! Shop extended MDW clothing sales at Free People, Madewell 5. The Travel Set


New York Times
21-04-2025
- Entertainment
- New York Times
Francine Tint Is Finally ‘Having Her Time'
A visitor to Francine Tint's Greenwich Village studio could be forgiven for wondering if the woman before them is about to embark on a passage through turbulent seas. In her yellow wet suit, rubber clogs and shower cap, Tint resembles a cross between the Gorton's Fisherman and a hazmat suit-wearing Karen Silkwood. But as the pigments splashed all over her 'painting garb,' as Tint calls her attire, attest, the journey is here, in this workshop, before canvases the size of standard school buses and colors so luscious you want to ingest them. This work — her work — is 'my travel, my marriage and my children,' Tint said. And now, at 82, some 50 years after launching a career as an Abstract Expressionist painter in New York City, Tint is finally receiving the recognition she craved as a youngster growing up in the Williamsburg section of Brooklyn, longing for an artist's life on the other side of the river. She's had successes — her paintings, which range in size from 10 inches to 20 feet, have been exhibited in more than 30 solo shows in the United States and Europe, and housed in permanent collections including the Krannert Art Museum in Champaign, Ill., and the Clement Greenberg Collection at the Portland Museum of Art. She received a Pollock-Krasner award in 2004, 2017 and 2023, along with a $25,000 grant from the Gottlieb Foundation in 2003. Still, her dance card has never been as full as it is now. To wit: A solo show in November at the Upsilon Gallery in Manhattan, which featured eight of her pieces along with works from Helen Frankenthaler, one of Tint's inspirations. Not long after, Snap Collective published a monograph of her work from 1975 to the present. 'The book provides valuable context for her role as a key figure in the third generation of American postwar abstract colorist painters,' said Beatrice Caprioli, the book's editor and Tint's studio manager. In February, Upsilon's London outpost held a show of Tint's work; a forthcoming short film about her, 'Panoramic View,' by the filmmaker Pola Rapaport, will be released later this spring. Then there is her show at 68 Prince Street, a new gallery in Kingston, N.Y., from April 26 to June 26. 'I was looking for an artist that really was going to make a statement for our inaugural show,' said the gallery's curator, Alan Goolman. Tint came to mind. 'This woman is having her time right this very minute.' Tint is not sure why her time did not come sooner, though she suspects it might have something to do with being a woman in a male-dominated field. 'It was very, very sexist,' she said of the 1960s art scene and beyond. 'I can toot my horn now, 52 years later: I was better than most of them. If I was ever in a group show, my work would shine. But I was kept down. There was jealousy.' Tint came to Manhattan at 16, crashing with a friend in the Village. In the early 1960s, she married a painter, and she moved into his enormous Soho loft for which they paid $90 a month. The relationship was tumultuous; they competed, literally, for space. 'Men couldn't deal with women's talent; there was only room for theirs,' she said. 'A friend told me to 'Take his work down and put yours up instead.'' So she did. The marriage failed, but her confidence flourished. She did freelance work as a stylist and costume designer for the likes of David Bowie, Andy Warhol and Ridley Scott, and for 'Saturday Night Live.' 'I decided to make my own money in fashion and costume so I would not be dependent on the men, or any man,' she said. At night, she took classes at the Brooklyn Museum and the Pratt Institute. She painted nonstop. She hung out at Max's Kansas City, the famed night spot on Park Avenue South in Manhattan, where she befriended artists like Larry Poons, Brice Marden and Dan Christensen. The critic Clement Greenberg became a pal. For the next 13 years, the two spent hours in her studio analyzing her work, which also included figurative sculpture. Around the same time, she began experimenting more with color, which 'should be a delicious shock to the eye,' she said. 'I wanted colors to layer, melt and dissolve into each other, to do unpredictable things.' 'Her sense of color is very, very strong,' said Robert S. Mattison, an art historian and professor emeritus of art history at Lafayette College in Easton, Pa. 'It's based on her sense of light, and that's really one of the characteristics and spatial qualities of the work. 'They suggest a kind of infinite space, which is quite interesting. In my view, she's making some of the best paintings of her career.' Tint typically works on four or five canvases of various sizes at a time, wrapping them across her studio's walls and ceiling or plopping them on the floor for a bird's-eye view. Brushes are not her only tool of choice: She stains, sponges, splashes, smears, streaks, drips, drizzles and glops paint onto the canvas, often adding sand, mesh or gel for texture. It's a messy business (hence, the hazmat suit). She has no idea why certain colors or textures speak to her; she lets her intuition guide her. The ultimate goal is for the viewer to interpret the work through their own lens. David Ebony, a curator and former managing editor of Art in America, got to know Tint's work through Poons, a mutual friend. Ebony considers her work a bridge between Abstract Expressionism and Color Field painting, which entails throwing diluted paint onto an unprimed canvas. 'Chance is a very important essential theme for the Color Field painters,' he said. 'She'll throw paint on a canvas, and that's the moment of chance. But then she manipulates that chance and creates forms and unites colors without those chance moments.' The accolades Tint has received are welcome, but she has been taking it in stride — or in as much stride as she can. 'Artists are pretty crazy, and I am,' Tint said. She meditates daily, has been in a healthy relationship for the last decade and takes great solace in her work. Getting older isn't fun. 'It's hard opening the cans of paint,' she said. 'But I do it. I'm OK. I'm happy. I'm a product of doing what I want to do in life.'