Category: Foundations
Brand: Scott Barnes
Ingredients: paraffinum liquidum, zinc oxide, talc, polyglyceryl -4 oleate, parfum, peg-8 propylene glycol cocoate, dimethicone, triethoxycaprylylsilane, propylparaben, butylparaben, titamium dioxide, iron oxides
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adoringAbalone2
Best makeup I’ve ever used. Extra rich for dry skin, medium to full coverage, doesn’t settle in lines or accentuate texture, and evens skin tone like nobody’s business! The best way I’ve found to apply it is by inserting a stainless cosmetic spatula into bottle, gently stirring the oil and pigment, using the spatula to scoop a small amount of pigment from bottom, and placing the pigment on my Artis brush. It takes seconds to buff it in for a seamless, even, and full coverage. Blush and powder apply and blend very nicely over the foundation. I was using Cle de Peau The Foundation, but Scott Barnes’ Foundation is superior IMO. Because it’s very moisturizing, it may be too much for oily skin.
aboardUnicorn6
I have never tried the legendary Countess Isserlyn foundation, but throughout my life I have used theatre/film/photography makeup on others and myself, (Ben Nye, Graftobian, MUFE, Gerda Spillmann, Mehron, Tuttle, RCMA, Kryolan, Cinema Secrets, MAQ Pro, Temptu, OCC, Numeric Proof,…brands developed for “professional” rather than “consumer” use). Multi-Media foundation’s ingredients are almost exactly the same as Countess Isserlyn Liquid Makup. Even though I cannot make a comparison to Countess Isserlyn, I can say with complete confidence that MultiMedia foundation looks and wears like “professional” makeup, and it was, no doubt, formulated to be used as such. I’ve read reviews in other places that ravage this makeup because they expect it to be Armani or Lancome…but it’s not, and it’s not supposed to be. It has to be rated as a professional makeup, because consumer foundations are made to be used as “everyday” makeup, and they include skincare ingredients, sometimes sunscreens, and rarely contain mineral oil.
Professional makeup, on the other hand, almost always contains ingredients consumers have been programmed to fear like the plague: mineral oil, lanolin, parabens, talc. Why? Because these are the ingredients that work cosmetically to get the effects needed by “makeup”. They are designed to literally “cover” skin, like masks (think Blue Man Group with all their greasepaint). If you ever want to see the most beautiful finish you can get from your foundation, mix a drop of mineral oil (or argan or jojoba oil) before application. Your face will radiate like candlelight, and your skin will look otherworldly perfect.
Scott Barnes MultiMedia is brilliant, because it can be used as true “makeup” but it’s liquid, lightweight, and far more skinlike than pancake or cream foundation. It’s meant to be set with powder, and it’s likely only the dryest of skins could wear it without powder. It sets and stays put, though, and it doesn’t transfer. I love this foundation for the most special occasions or when I am getting seriously (not regular Selfie) photographed. It makes my skin look like I’m 25 (at least in my delusions), and it looks supple, even, and perfect. Cream ot liquid blush works best with this for subtle, gentle blending that can’t be detected.
Unlike some brands of pro foundations this is very lightly fragranced, but, aside from a bit of fragrance I could not use a mineral oil based foundation with talc every single day. I can feel the cysts popping out of my face just typing that sentence. That’s just me though! There are many people who have the kind of acne that benefits from the protection mineral oil provides, and talc is excellent for good coverage. I don’t “fear” parabens, because I’m not allergic to them, but, because I am strongly influenced by paranoia, I try not to use them in my everyday products. (I probably eat more of them than I ever want to know about, because they are so widely used in food, but I try to be wise about my choices).
Bottom line, this, in Biscotti, is absolutely beautiful on my skin. It’s a total transformation that makes me feel wonderful. Once in a while, it’s a special treat to wear this, but its careful application and very full coverage keep it in the “pro” category for me. Wear it for a few hours, look in the mirror a lot, wash it off, and back to Meteorites Baby Glow in the morning.
exactingSyrup6
This is basically the Scott Barnes version of Countess Isserlyn Liquid Makeup. It has the stir stick and even the basic shape of the bottle is almost identical. While the Countess keeps fresh for hours, it doesn’t quite have the glow that Multimedia does. It’s not surprising since Barnes created the J-Lo glow back in the day. Countess also has much stronger coverage from the get-go. Multimedia offers buildable coverage and suggests different application methods. Both are hard to find irl and both are roughly the same price. I have to admit that I wouldn’t like having to choose between the two.