Chanel Foundation Reviews: N°1 de Chanel, Water-Fresh Tint and Complexion Touch

This is Part 2 of my deep dive into my most recent Chanel purchases. Today’s focus is on the foundations specifically.

I’ve praised the N°1 de Chanel across several posts, but never officially reviewed it. So, I will do so today and showcase the newest shade I own in that line, along with discussing my newest purchases: the Water-Fresh Tint and Water-Fresh Complexion Touch.

N°1 de Chanel Red Camellia Revitalizing Foundation in BD91, BD101, and BD121


This has been my holy grail complexion product since the beginning of 2024. I had dry to normal skin when I lived in Florida, but over there I could still pull off wearing soft matte and natural finish foundations. When I moved to Germany, my skin required way more hydration due to the difference in climate, and most of my previous foundation favorites didn’t cut it anymore (even ones known for being hydrating).

The N°1 de Chanel is accurately described as a luminous and moisturizing foundation with buildable coverage. Although it still doesn’t look ultra glowy on me, it’s the most hydrating foundation in my possession currently. It looks natural-finish in the beginning, and within an hour my face gets a glow that appears as if it’s my own natural oils (as if I have a normal skin type). As the day goes on, that oil level remains the same and doesn’t get greasier. So, I love it for that reason. I also prefer medium coverage (and up) foundations. So, I can apply a small amount with a brush that isn’t so dense to get easy medium coverage or use my typical foundation brushes and 1-2 pumps for the high coverage I tend to aim for.

This foundation is very long-lasting with minimal transfer, depending on how hydrating my skincare products are underneath. My only gripes are the shade availability options, the added parfum/fragrance, and price. It smells like the typical florals from a prestige fashion house, which isn’t bad, but I would prefer for it to not be there. The scent is quite noticeable as I apply it, but thankfully it doesn’t linger in the air for that long.

I own BD91 and BD121 because they were the only shades that had the potential to work on me that I could buy from reputable discount makeup retailers online. Two years ago, I refused to pay $80 on a single foundation that I could not return, and I was uncertain if BD101 or BD111 would be my best shade. I figured at the discounted price I paid, I could get BD91 and BD121 and just mix the two colors if they didn’t work out. As it turned out, BD121 is a little dark, but the biggest issue is that it’s overly orange on me. Whenever I tried to combine the two colors, I could get the right depth, but it was always a little too warm. So, I eventually started using BD91 only, and would just rely on bronzer to balance it out.

Look using N°1 de Chanel in BD91

Attempts to pull off BD91 after my trip back to Florida last April left me feeling dissatisfied. This is why I eventually succumbed to my wishes during the holidays and decided to get BD101 from the Chanel website. In the US, shades BD101 and BD111 used to be exclusive to Chanel. Now, they can both be found at Ulta. In Germany, BD111 doesn’t exist and BD101 can still only be purchased directly from Chanel.

BD101 in the N°1 de Chanel isn’t a whole lot darker than BD91, but it is at least closer to my year-round skintone while in Germany. So, I expected BD101 to be my shade in all other Chanel formulas. I didn’t realize the Complexion Touch range runs slightly light!

Chanel Les Beiges Water-Fresh Complexion Touch in BD101

This product is intended to be hydrating, which it is to an extent, but the finish is natural rather than dewy or luminous. It was my mistake for assuming a foundation with “water” in the name would give my skin a shinier or wetter appearance than the N°1 de Chanel, but it does not. On the bright side, the Water-Fresh Complexion Touch has been transfer-proof. I don’t need to use a setting spray with it, nor setting powder. Also, it does not contain parfum.

What immediately impressed me about this formula is how easily and evenly the pigment microcapsules break into the solution. I can squirt some directly on my face and my brush will break and spread the spheres and blend it into my skin in the same amount of time as any traditional foundation would. When I was using the Rose Inc Tinted Serum, I had to pump it out onto the back of my hand and crush the pigment capsules with my brush first for a bit before transferring the product onto my face, otherwise the pigment would not mix into the solution properly and then would not spread evenly on the face. There would be patches of unblended spheres without enough liquid left to move it around.

As seen in the photo below with comparisons to the Rose Inc Tinted Serum, The Complexion Touch is viscous enough that it is slow to drip when I hold it at an angle, but it still feels light and gel-like on the skin, whereas Rose Inc’s is runny and feels watery. They have a lot of ingredients in common, but Chanel’s feels a bit more emollient and contains more pigment. In my example photo, the Rose Inc pump dispensed double the droplet size, but when I rubbed it, it was still sheerer than Chanel’s. Rose Inc’s product is a true tinted serum. The Complexion Touch is more of a lightweight and buildable light to medium coverage foundation, but it can be applied as sheer as a tint if it’s used with a sponge or a less dense synthetic foundation brush. Perhaps it could be built up to higher coverage, but I can’t do that due to the imperfect shade match. It’s better for me to use as little product as possible.

I miss the Rose Inc product a lot, so I really hoped this would fill the void. Unfortunately, BD101 is a bit too light for me. In this formula, it’s slightly lighter than BD101 in the N°1 de Chanel.

Heavier application. Applied later in the day.
Better lighting. Morning.

Because it’s at least not orange and too dark, I can somewhat pull off wearing this if I bronze up the perimeters, but the whole reason I wanted this was for minimal makeup days. I wanted something that would even out my complexion while being hard to detect on the skin. An ill-fitting shade is a glaring indication that I have makeup on.
Unless Chanel expands the range to include B111, there isn’t another option for me.
The Complexion Touch is technically more expensive than the N°1 de Chanel, at $3.50 per ml vs $2.67 per ml, and yet it didn’t dethrone that foundation. So, perhaps I would not buy another shade even if the brand releases more colors.

This foundation comes with a tiny brush, but it’s too small for me to enjoy using it all over my face. Instead, I’ve used it to apply the Complexion Touch as a concealer under my eyes. I can’t wear my shade alone because my dark circles are so deep that the product looks grey on top of them. However, it did give the Correcteur I mentioned in Part 1 its best results when paired together.

I’ve tried using this as a primer or mixed in with my darker foundations to improve the shade match. Even though this is water-based and some of the combinations were oil-based, that didn’t seem to impact the longevity or change the consistency in a negative way. I was able to successfully get the shades closer to my face color, but unfortunately I kept feeling that every product I used (N1 de Chanel, Rose Inc Tinted Serum, the Water-Fresh Tint, etc) looked better alone than when mixed. For example, when I mixed it with the Rose Inc Tint, it improved the color, but added just enough coverage to prevent it from looking undetectable, while also not managing to give enough coverage for me to like it. Sheer coverage is one thing, but when it’s light coverage, I feel like I may as well try to cover most of my imperfections. I either want a tint that’s so low coverage it just evens out the skin without being able to tell I’m wearing makeup, or having the minimum of medium coverage.

The Complexion Touch has a fair amount of positives going for it, but it isn’t a good fit for me or my preferences.

Chanel Les Beiges Water-Fresh Tint in Deep and Medium Deep

Deep

This is the product I should have started with all along. As I mentioned in the previous section, I want either a veil of color to even out my skintone while looking like my normal skin or an imperfection-erasing foundation. This checks the “nearly undetectable” box! It’s perfect for minimal no-makeup makeup days.

Using my barest amount of skincare with the tint, I get a natural finish with the tiniest bit of glow. The second I apply powder products like highlighters, blush, and bronzer, those are enough to mattify my skin and I lose any luminosity. My face then feels mostly dry to the touch, and the tint doesn’t transfer. A single long pump (pushing it down fully) is all I need to create that veil, or perhaps a tiny bit more if I’m using a brush that isn’t dense.

I need to clarify that this tint is water based and also water soluble. Although I don’t get transfer if my face touches something, I still need to wear a primer underneath if I want any chance of avoiding streak marks if I cry or my face gets wet in some other way.

If I use two full pumps (or 4 smaller pumps) to get medium coverage all over my face, I will be able to feel some of the gel residue when I touch my face, and it will have that kind of wet shine that glycerin (and maybe other ingredients) leave on the skin, similar to MAC Fix+ and other hydrating sprays. Thankfully, I can still get close to medium coverage with three small pumps of tint without being able to feel it on my face.

The tint is still self-setting if I use my typical skincare products underneath, though I will get a little bit of shine as the day goes on. If I use my most hydrating skincare, then my face can surpass the glow of the N°1 de Chanel Foundation. If I don’t use setting powder, it will be dewy for quite a while, but even then it dries down on its own eventually. At most, it’ll feel as if I just have a gel moisturizer on. In my skin’s most hydrated state with the Water-Fresh Tint on, touching my skin will transfer moisture to my fingertips, but no actual pigment from what I can see. When I press a white paper towel to my skin everywhere, there is only the faintest hint of color.

There are times when I’m testing a new concealer or eyeshadows, but I don’t feel like putting on a full face of makeup. Products like this are useful to make me feel a bit more put together.
Of course, I can take a fuller coverage product and just sheer it out. However, if I’m already not in the mood to put in much effort, I’m not going to want to mix products together in that moment either.

The Water-Fresh Tint is runny in consistency and sheerer than the Complexion Touch, but the Rose Inc Skin Enhance Luminous Tinted Serum is still even more watery and with lower coverage. The Complexion Touch and Rose Inc product have more ingredients in common, but there are three ingredients that the Water-Fresh Tint shares with Rose Inc’s Serum Foundation that the Complexion Touch does not. That means that there are only 6 out of 28 total ingredients in the Rose Inc formula that can’t be found in either of the Chanel ones. In my eyes, that adds even more credibility to the rumors that Rose Inc took a lot of “inspiration” from Chanel in making their Luminous Tinted Serum.

Also, neither of Chanel’s Water-Fresh products have that cooling sensation on the skin. I’m not a cosmetic chemist, but it’s possible that it’s merely the benzyl alcohol evaporating on the skin, which according to Google, “extracts heat from the surface and causes a localized, temporary cooling effect.” If this is what’s responsible for the amazing feeling I loved from Rose Inc’s Tint, perhaps it’s for the best that the Water-Fresh ones don’t have it.

The Water-Fresh Tint has added fragrance, but it’s less noticeable than with the N°1 de Chanel Foundation. Again, it’s that kind of classic luxury brand floral smell.

Like the Complexion Touch, this also comes with a brush, though I am more willing to use this one all over the face because flat tops lead to such fast applications of products. Still, a bigger brush is my preferred application tool.
With the Complexion Touch, the capsules were so easy to mix in that I could just use my fingers to apply it to my face if I wanted. Although the Water-Fresh Tint’s capsules mix better and more evenly than the Rose Inc Product, and I can apply this to my face like a normal foundation, it takes extra effort with fingers to get the color fully and evenly dispersed in the solution. So, I recommend using a brush.

No online retailers in Germany have the shade Medium Deep. If a color within my expected shade range is unofficially exclusive to the Chanel website, I can assume that one is going to be my best shade match. So, I bought Deep first to try it (and as a potential shade adjusting product). Deep is a little warmer and darker than I am right now. The coverage level reminds me of the Beekman 1802 Milk Tint SPF 43 Tinted Primer Serum, which I also have in the shade Deep. Thankfully, Chanel’s isn’t as dark as Beekman’s, so I believe I can get away with wearing it. However, I couldn’t stop nagging at myself to get another shade too. That’s how I ended up buying the second one.

For anyone curious, this was the gift bag charm for February/Valentine’s Day!

Like I mentioned in Part 1, one of my biggest gripes with Chanel is the fact that, in Germany, my best shade match is exclusive to their website across all of their foundation formulas. Since they almost never have sales or discounts on their own site, that means I have to pay full price if I don’t want to mix shades or to rely on other products to balance things out.

Photos Compiled from Chanel.com

Considering how much I loved the Rose Inc Skin Enhance Luminous Tinted Serum, and its similar formula to Chanel, I think it’s a great alternative for someone wanting to spend less money (provided they have a shade option and it doesn’t oxidize). To clarify, the Rose Inc Tint starts off as my correct shade, but it looks orange in photos and perhaps when I use certain skincare products with it, but I’ve never been able to figure out which ones cause this.
Chanel’s Tint is $72 and Rose Inc’s Tint is $49. Rose Inc’s product does dry down more in the German climate than when I was in Florida. Over here, Chanel’s is more hydrating. So, it’s a bit of a toss up as to which one I like more. Medium Deep was a deciding factor and ultimately having my better shade match tipped the scales in Chanel’s favor.

In addition to these three photos, I also took a picture of Medium Deep swatched across my cheek (like I did with the shade Deep), but it was not visible at all, so I did not include it here.

Medium Deep is a good match, but it looks even closer when I use the Victoria Beckham Beauty Cell Rejuvenating Illuminator in the shade Golden as my primer underneath.

To sum things up, the N°1 de Chanel Foundation gives the most coverage with the most hydrated finish, and has the biggest shade range of the three. The Water-Fresh Complexion Touch has the second-most coverage and shade range, but it’s the least hydrating. The Water-Fresh Tint has the least amount of shades and provides the lightest coverage, but it’s the second-most hydrating.

It’s clear to me that the N°1 de Chanel Foundation is something I will continue to repurchase, and in my correct shade from now on. However, I’d like to bring up the fact that the Danessa Myricks Yummy Skin Tint Foundation was second on my list of most used foundations in 2025. It’s $39 if you live in the US, and it’s the most similar performing that I’ve found to Chanel’s (with Chanel’s being more hydrating). For some reason, Danessa’s is €51 within the EU, but sometimes the retailer Purish drops the price to 50% off.
Just like the Rose Inc product, I feel that this is another excellent alternative.

I technically don’t need any other foundation, but I do like having a nearly-undetectable option too. So, I am glad I bought the Water-Fresh Tint.
It’s only because the two Chanel products are holy grails to me that I am willing to spend so much on them. However, $100 or €85 is my personal limit at which a foundation won’t become worth it to me no matter how amazing it is. For example, I don’t see myself ever buying the €121 Victoria Beckham Beauty Foundation Drops, the €125 Hermès Plein Air Luminous Matte Skincare Foundation, or even Chanel’s €168 Sublimage L’Essence de Teint.
The €75 for my exclusive shade in the N°1 de Chanel Foundation is the most I’ve ever spent, and I’m not so sure I’ll be willing to try any others this expensive again. I was tempted by the Tom Ford Architecture Radiance Hydrating Foundation, which I could have gotten for €68, but I don’t want to purchase anymore foundations with fragrance in them. Chanel is my final exception on that.

That’s all for today! Thank you for reading!

-Lili



Chanel Holiday Packaging Plus Concealers, Powders, Blush, and Lip Serum Reviews

This is Part 1 of my deep dive into some of the latest Chanel makeup releases from their permanent lines. Part 2 will be dedicated to Chanel’s foundations.

For the holidays, but starting in October 2025, Chanel gave customers the option of choosing special holiday gift packaging instead of their classic white with black-trim bags and boxes. The options were a smaller white bag, a larger deep blue bag, and then I’m not sure how many box varieties there were. The ribbons were dark blue with some glitter specks and the pattern design had a mix of gold, silver, and blue coloring. They were absolutely stunning!

When opting for the holiday packaging, customers could only choose whether they would get the large gold camellia flower charm with a smaller silver comet/star or the large gold comet with the smaller silver camellia. Over the course of the winter season, I ended up getting both.

If you’re already familiar with me (and this blog), you know I love scoring a great deal. I’ve discussed how in Germany, there are several legitimate online retailers that sell newly launched Chanel makeup at a discount from 15-30%. So, for those wondering why I ended up ordering directly from Chanel’s website, it is because I wanted my better shade match in their foundations and unfortunately here my shade is exclusive to Chanel.

As for the concealers, although the website doesn’t have the “exclusive” marker posted next to any of the shades, I could not find any retailer in Germany that sold darker than B40. All of the retail websites had six shades available at most. Chanel has two actual color correctors that were released with these concealers called Peach and Amber. If a retailer had one, it was only Peach. So, I didn’t have the option of buying any of these anywhere else, except directly through Chanel.

Chanel Ultra Le Teint Le Correcteur Concealer (Ultrawear All-Day Comfort Flawless Finish Concealer) in BD91 and B110

This concealer launched in Europe in September 2025, but I didn’t realize (until I saw the flood of videos in January 2026) that it hadn’t come to the US until this year. I bought mine in October last year, so I’ve had plenty of time to test this product.

There is currently no BD101, which I assume would have been my closest shade. BD121 has always been a little dark for me and too warm. I figured having some orange color correcting effects from BD121 wouldn’t be so bad, but having a concealer that’s too dark is a problem. So, I chose BD91 as the next best option with a golden undertone.
I also wanted to see just how neutral B110 would be, and to figure out how deep it is (compared to my estimate of BD121), so I made the decision to get that shade as well.

Photos from Chanel

This concealer became the instant holy grails and number 1 concealers of Charlotte Holdcroft, Han Beauty 101, and French For a Day, so I thought surely I would like it too!

Chanel BD91 Concealer and 40 Medium Plus Powder

Every time I put on this perfume-free concealer, I have high hopes. My undereyes look so much smoother than any other concealer thus far has been able to achieve, and the coverage is great! When I pair it with the brand’s Universal Libre Powder, it looks like a match made in heaven! Unfortunately for me, it just doesn’t have the longevity I need.

Six hours is the longest it can go before I see my dark circles underneath what remains of the concealer. In the worst circumstances, my natural oils fill the creases and breaks it down within fifteen minutes if I haven’t powdered it enough. In other circumstances with powders heavier than Chanel’s (such as my go-to Charlotte Tilbury or even the Huda Easy Bake Powder), the concealer gradually fades to the point that I can see my under eye darkness again within three or so hours.

Technically, if I continually touch up my under eyes (for example smoothing out the creases with the remnants of what is left on my concealer brush and then powdering it with the remnants of what is on my setting brush), it can look “passably” faded between 8-10 hours before it’s not salvageable anymore. However, I consider that very unrealistic. I don’t like to babysit my makeup.

I’ve tried pairing it with the Milk Hydro Grip Eye Primer (which I also use with my KVD Good Apple Concealer), tried using less concealer and less powder, using more concealer and more powder (better outcome), waiting a minute for it to settle before setting it with powder, setting the concealer with powder immediately after applying it (better outcome also), doing alternate layers of concealer > powder > more concealer > and more powder, and mixing it with a few other concealers. I’ve tried using setting spray, drying my undereyes, keeping my undereyes moisturized. Nothing I do can get me more than six hours of nice wear time.

I don’t usually show all day wear tests because I cannot figure out how to get consistent lighting. The last photo though is especially off because I forgot to turn on my usual lights.

If I had to guess what’s affecting how the concealer wears, I would say it’s probably the combination of my natural oils breaking the concealer down (it’s supposed to be waterproof not oil-proof) and the hydrating skincare ingredients, such as glycerin and sodium hyaluronate, that my skin soaks up. Maybe there’s an ingredient that causes an increase in my oil production, since my undereye skin is usually not oily on a consecutive basis, yet it tends to be oily each time I wear this concealer. Maybe the consistency is too creamy and the concealer cannot stay put in the lines of my eyes.
The Ultra Le Teint Le Correcteur has film formers that are meant to flex with movement and increase the concealer’s adhesion to the skin, which I am prone to believe considering how easily the concealer smooths back into place with a brush instead of coming off even more after being disturbed on the skin. Perhaps it’s too creamy, since those kind of concealers have never worked for me (e.g. Nars Radiant Creamy Concealer and the Creamy version of Tarte Shape Tape).

Recently, I decided to try using the Les Beiges Water-Fresh Complexion Touch as an undereye primer for this concealer (since it’s supposed to be usable as a concealer too). This combination gave me six hours of wear before needing to be seriously touched up. However, if I use too much of the Complexion Touch or not enough Ultra Le Teint Le Correcteur and powder on top, it gives worse results. Essentially, finding the right balance time and again is difficult.

I love how this concealer looks in its best state, to the point that I am still using it. However, I just wear it on days I know I will not be leaving the house and when I’m less likely to have visitors.

BD91 is a tad more yellow with not enough warmth to be a perfect shade match for me, but I never wear B110. It turns out that shade is still too dark and the neutral undertone looks even more unnatural on me. So, I at least confirmed for myself that B110 is not a shade option for me. I need to stick with the golden tones. Photos of this are in the powder section.

Based on my experience, I can’t really recommend this product. I don’t mind having to use a second product to prime my eye area, but to still need to do touch ups throughout the day is bothersome. I’m willing to buy expensive makeup if it’s going to make my life easier; this one did not.
I acknowledge that other people have not had the same problems with it that I do. If it was able to last at least 8 hours without needing a touch up, I’d have been over the moon about this concealer. Unfortunately, it just didn’t work out and I’ve gone above and beyond already in testing various methods.

Since this released and until February, the only reviewer I found who had a similar experience to me has been Sofia Sees Beauty. Ironically, she likes the Prada concealer more (though she doesn’t recommend that either) and in the majority of the Chanel vs Prada videos I watched, everyone preferred Chanel’s concealer. So, there seems to be certain skin types that this product just doesn’t work for.

Chanel Universal Libre Powder (On-the-Go Format) in 40 Medium Plus and 50 Medium Intense

Based on the ingredient lists I can see on Chanel’s website, the main differences between the original format of this powder and the refillable “to-go version” is that the standard contains silica instead of cellulose, plus the additional ingredients towards the bottom which are sodium lauroyl glutamate, lysine, and magnesium chloride.

Since I consider the powders to be pretty much the same, and the two products are similarly priced at the discount websites, I opted for the newer packaging. There is a huge difference in the amount of product though, considering the non-refillable jar contains 1 oz (30 grams) of product, but the refillable packaging contains 0.21 oz (6 grams). I’ve only ever used up one powder, so it’s not a concern to me, but that could be a factor for others.
I also heard that the jar packaging is super messy to handle. I have always kept the stickers over the holes of my loose powders and punctured just a few so that I have way more control over how much comes out. I’m not sure if even that tactic would be enough. I find that the refill packaging is still messy if I don’t use my typical methods.

I hate having powder float everywhere, so I only punctured the 8 innermost holes in the sticker. I knock the base to tip the powder contents out onto the lid of the refill. I use what’s needed. I pick up the excess powder back up with my brush to clean off the lid. If there’s still too much powder left, then I use the powder puff that’s included (in both the full to-go packaging and the solo refills) to wipe off the rest. Then I place the puff back over the sticker and holes, and close everything up!
The reason I clear the lid each time is so that the top of the puff will remain looking clean.

I have both the full packaging and a separate refill. The first shade I bought (50 Medium Intense) looks light in the swatches below, but it deepens up a little on my skin. I can wear it on my face, but not under my eyes. Also, the closure part of the refill lid is so easy to open that I worried if I stored it anywhere other than flat on a shelf that I’d have a massive mess to clean up. So, I put it back in the unicarton on my shelf and I waited for a good sale to get the complete packaging in the shade 40 Medium Plus. That one is perfect for my undereyes!

As far as I’m aware, this powder is meant to lightly mattify and be translucent, rather than offering coverage like a powder foundation. So, I was surprised to discover that the shades 70, 91, 121, and 152 exist. I haven’t found a single retailer in Germany that sells anything darker than 50. The darker shades are only on the Chanel website.

I’m glad that all the hype about this powder being dry-skin friendly is true. It is a super finely milled and thin powder. It doesn’t work as well with my concealers that require stronger powders to lock them in, but I bought this specifically to pair with Chanel’s concealer. Although I still have problems with the wear time of the concealer, the Chanel powder has given me the best results with it. I find it to be slightly blurring and this is the most lightweight loose powder I own that can successfully give me a soft matte finish without making my face look drier. That’s why I don’t think this will work well for people with oily skin. If I use the bare minimum of skincare with most of my foundations, this powder will keep me matte for most of the day, but when my products give me dewy skin and I use the Chanel Powder, I become shiny again within four hours. I imagine that length of time would be increased for someone who doesn’t have dry skin like mine.

I like Chanel’s powder more than the uber expensive Guerlain Parure Gold Powder because I can’t smell any fragrance (even though this does have parfum listed in the ingredients).

Chanel Hydra Beauty Micro Sérum

I didn’t know about this product’s existence until Kackie Reviews Beauty talked about it in one of her videos. The way she described it was so fascinating that I bought it the very next day!
The retail price is €56 ($60) but I got mine from Parfümerie Pieper for €39.

I usually take product descriptions with a grain of salt, but Chanel’s is pretty on point with what I have experienced. According to them: “The Micro Sérum Lèvres is a dual-phase formula consisting of an aqueous base with hyaluronic acid and White Camellia Extract, which have a moisturizing, plumping, and soothing effect, and an oily phase with White Camellia OFA (Oleofractioned Active) micro-droplets which melt into skin and lock in hydration.
Furthermore, “this lightweight and water-fresh serum immediately absorbs and forms a thin protective layer on lips, keeping them hydrated for up to 24 hours** and leaving them perfectly prepped for makeup.

This serum “plumps” in the sense that it fills in lip lines, and its shine gives an appearance of fullness, but this is not a lip plumper that would cause the lips to be enlarged. Chanel doesn’t call this a lip plumper, but many customers would assume it could double as one by stating that this has “plumping effects.” This is the only aspect of the website description that is questionable.

After applying the Hydra Beauty Micro Serum, I’m left with a somewhat shiny finish on my lips, which have the tiniest bit of grip. I can wear this alone as a gloss or balm, but the occlusive gel layer is so lightweight that I need to reapply it at least once or twice throughout the day, especially since it’s easily removed while eating. When I rub my lips together, it feels truly unlike any other lip product I’ve used. Also, this is not fragrance-free, since it has a slight fruit-candy type of scent.

What makes this a useful product to me is how quickly it seeps in to smooth and hydrate my lips, combined with its priming abilities. I have spent a long time seeking products that nourish and condition my lips. All of my favorites are thick and/or sticky, oily, and basically don’t have the kind of consistency that I can use to continue improving the condition of my lips (or prevent my lips from drying further) while wearing other products on top. Products like the Ami Colé Lip Treatment Oil, Clarins Lip Comfort Oil, and Eadem Le Chouchou Peptide Lip Balm are better at improving the condition of my lips over the course of a full day, but this Chanel product is what I’ve been using when I want my lips to look better fast, and wiping those other products off my lips would leave too much residue behind. That occlusive layer is what makes my favorites and so long-lasting, while also preventing me from using them as lip prep products. This is where the Chanel serum fills a void in my collection.

The reason I wear lip glosses and balms so much isn’t just out of enjoyment of low maintenance products. It’s also out of necessity. Although this lip serum can make matte lipsticks look satin, I’ll take that over not being able to wear my lipsticks that often due to my chronic dry lips issue.

So, this isn’t deeply nourishing to me. It’s a quick fix. According to the statistics Chanel provided, “After 4 weeks of use, lips look 49%* more plump and 70%* smoother. Natural lip colour appears 62%*** more vibrant.

I have not used this product daily for 4 weeks straight, so I cannot comment on how true that sounds or not. Based on at least one week of consistent use, I don’t think the ingredients are enough for my lips to be nourished long-term. This serum has come in handy so many times as a lip primer since I bought it in September. I have only ever used a couple of actual lip primers, so I can’t say for sure how much better this is from other lip preps out there. Since I’m not interested in spending even more money trying to test other products like this, I will stick with what I know.
Should I ever use up this product, I hope that I’ll be able to get another on sale again!

This lip serum is useful to be able to wear less comfortable lipstick formulas. However, if I stick to only buying balms that condition and deposit a nice amount of color, I wouldn’t need the Chanel Hydra Micro Serum as much. If I downsize my lip collection each year, there may reach a point that it will no longer be necessary to have a product like this around.
That day isn’t today though, and I am happy I’ve got it!

Chanel Les Beiges Water-Fresh Blush in Intense Coral

I’ve been avoiding buying liquid and cream blushes for over three years, so I had no plans to buy the Chanel Blush until I watched Alicia Archer’s video.

Admittedly, my first choice for the color would have been Deep Bronze, but it’s a Chanel exclusive shade. So, I went with my second favorite option and ordered Intense Coral from Flaconi at a discount.
Intense Coral shows up on me and can be built up in more obvious layers, but it might not look that great on someone with a skintone several shades darker than mine.

Intense Coral reminded me of the Joues Contraste Intense Cream-to-Powder Blush in the shade Radiant Rose, but Radiant Rose is the tiniest bit darker with a little more warmth.

The watery gel-like consistency and the fragrance are the same as the Water-Fresh Tint. The blush has half the amount of product, but it isn’t half the price of the tint ($72 vs $56). The price per ounce or milliliters for the blush is even more expensive here, considering it’s €67 for the tint and €55 for the blush.

I like the hydrated feel of the blush on my skin and that it dries down. One pump is enough to give a beautiful flush to both cheeks. Although I can blend it well with fingers, I prefer the control I get with a brush application by pumping the blush into the back of my hand and coating the brush bristles evenly before alternating pouncing the product onto both cheeks.

When I wear this on my bare skin, even on top of skincare, this has terrible longevity. The blush is significantly faded within a few hours. At a minimum, if I wear my typical skin prep products and the Chanel Water Fresh Tint underneath the blush, it can last most of the day with an acceptable amount of fading. However, it is still susceptible to being easily removed by liquids. On one of the testing days, my watery eyes caused the skin tint and blush tint to disappear where the droplets rolled down my cheek. Adding a primer to the prep steps is enough to combat the water-soluble issue and prevent the blush from fading.

When I wear the Water Fresh Blush on top of my Chanel N1 Foundation, I have no longevity issues at all. I figure that’s because it provides an even stronger barrier between my skin and the blush. So, although this product is appealing to makeup minimalists and those that want the most lightweight layers of product with the most skin-like finishes, this blush has to be used in specific ways to get it to last. I’d also like to note that due to lighting, the blush is easier to see in person than in my photos.

I like the blush color, the dewy looking finish, the seamless blend, and how easy it is to use despite being a liquid form. Usually liquid blushes are the most troublesome for me to work with.
The €36 I paid for this was a fair price for Chanel makeup. I like this product a lot, but I don’t think it will become a favorite purely because I am a powder blush fan. I wanted to be able to wear this all day on bare skin and have it still be long-lasting. I haven’t tested this idea yet, but if adding a face primer to my cheeks is enough to fix the longevity problem without needing to wear a tint/foundation too, this could make me use this blush more often. I’d be able to wear it on low-makeup days as planned.

That ends this post! I hope it has been helpful. Please keep an eye out for Part 2 if you enjoyed this!

-Lili