SKINVELOURE BLOG

How to Choose (and Actually Wear) the Right Lipstick Shade for Your Skin Tone

How to Choose (and Actually Wear) the Right Lipstick Shade for Your Skin Tone

A "wrong" lipstick shade almost never means the color itself is bad — it usually means it's the wrong undertone match, or worn in a way that fights your natural coloring instead of working with it. Here's how to actually narrow it down.

Cool undertones

If your skin leans pink, red, or blue-based, look toward blue-based reds, true berries, mauves, and cool-toned pinks. These shades tend to make teeth look brighter and complexions look fresh rather than washed out. Warm oranges and yellow-based corals, on the other hand, can sometimes clash and make cool-toned skin look sallow.

Warm undertones

If your skin leans golden, peachy, or yellow-based, warm coral, brick red, terracotta, and golden-toned browns tend to look most harmonious. These shades echo the same warmth already present in your skin, rather than contrasting against it. Very blue-based, icy pinks can sometimes look slightly out of place on warm undertones — though as with everything in makeup, "rules" are really just starting points.

Neutral undertones

If you're neutral, you have the most flexibility — most shades will work, since there's no strong warm or cool bias to clash against. This is a good starting point to experiment more freely with trend shades.

Depth matters too, not just undertone

As a general (not absolute) guide: fair skin tends to be overwhelmed by very dark, opaque shades unless applied with a lighter hand; deep skin tones can wear almost any shade brilliantly, but particularly come alive in rich, saturated colors like deep berries, true reds, and warm browns that have enough pigment density to show up as intended rather than looking sheer or chalky.

Finish changes everything

The exact same shade can read completely differently depending on finish:

  • Matte intensifies color and lasts longer, but needs well-exfoliated, hydrated lips underneath to avoid emphasizing dryness.
  • Satin offers a natural middle ground — full pigment with a soft, comfortable finish.
  • Liquid lipstick tends to offer the most intense, long-wearing color payoff, ideal for shades you want to stay put through a full day.

A simple way to test before you buy

Swatch on the pad of your finger, then press it gently onto your bottom lip rather than judging color from a photo or the bullet itself — lighting and packaging can both distort how a shade will actually look once worn.

Whether you gravitate toward Mahogany, Pearl Aubergine, or something bolder, the goal is the same: a shade that looks like an enhanced version of your natural lip color, not a mask over it.

Why Vitamin C Belongs in Your Skincare Routine

Why Vitamin C Belongs in Your Skincare Routine

Vitamin C shows up in almost every "best ingredients" list for a reason — but knowing it's good for you and knowing why (and how to actually use it) are two different things. Here's what it's doing under the surface, and how to get the most out of it.

It's an antioxidant, first and foremost

Your skin is exposed to environmental stressors all day — UV rays, pollution, blue light — that generate free radicals, unstable molecules that damage collagen and accelerate visible aging. Vitamin C neutralizes those free radicals before they can do that damage, acting as a first line of defense rather than a repair treatment after the fact.

It supports your skin's own collagen production

Beyond just defending against damage, Vitamin C is a required cofactor for collagen synthesis — meaning your skin literally cannot build new collagen efficiently without it. Over consistent use, this is part of why Vitamin C serums are associated with firmer-looking, more resilient skin over time, rather than an overnight fix.

It helps even out tone

Vitamin C inhibits an enzyme called tyrosinase, which is involved in melanin production. In practical terms, that means less new pigment formation — making it genuinely useful for fading the look of dark spots and evening out overall tone with consistent use, rather than just brightening temporarily.

How to actually use it

  • Apply it in the morning. Since its main job is defending against daytime environmental stress, morning application (after cleansing, before moisturizer and SPF) is when it does the most work.
  • Always follow with SPF. Vitamin C supports your skin's defenses, but it is not a replacement for sunscreen — think of them as a team, not substitutes.
  • Start slow if you're new to it. Two to three times a week is a reasonable starting point for sensitive skin, building up to daily use as your skin adjusts.
  • Store it properly. Vitamin C is notoriously unstable and can oxidize (turning a serum brown and less effective) when exposed to air, light, and heat. Keep the cap tightly closed and store away from direct sunlight.

What to pair it with — and what to avoid

Vitamin C plays well with Hyaluronic Acid (for hydration) and Vitamin E (which actually helps stabilize and boost its antioxidant effect). It's best to avoid layering it directly with retinol in the same routine slot, since both are potent actives — most people do best using Vitamin C in the morning and saving retinol for night.

Our Vitamin C Serum is formulated with stability in mind, so you're getting an active, effective dose every time you use it — not a bottle that's already broken down before it reaches your skin.

The 5-Minute Everyday Eye Look Anyone Can Do

The 5-Minute Everyday Eye Look Anyone Can Do

Not every morning has time for a full eyeshadow tutorial — and most days, you don't need one. This look is built for real mornings: five minutes, three steps, and a result that looks intentional rather than rushed. All you need is a warm-toned eyeshadow palette (like Phoenix, Matte and Shimmer), a fluffy blending brush, and a smaller flat brush for definition.

How to Match Your Foundation Shade (Without Guessing)

How to Match Your Foundation Shade (Without Guessing)

Finding your exact foundation shade shouldn't feel like a gamble every time you shop. Yet it's one of the most common beauty frustrations out there — a bottle that looked perfect in the store photo turns orange by lunchtime, or leaves a visible line at the jaw. The good news is that shade-matching is a skill, not luck, and it comes down to a few details most people skip.