Sunday, September 15, 2013

OPI Tomorrow Never Dies

OPI Tomorrow Never Dies, indoors, natural ligh
Hey gang! As promised, here is my run-down of OPI's Tomorrow Never Dies. This is from their Skyfall collection, introduced late last fall/ early winter, in time for the James Bond movie's premiere. Each of the colors in the collection were named after a Bond movie's title. "Tomorrow Never Dies" was a Bond film of the Pierce Brosnan era. I prefer Daniel Craig over Brosnan any day, though Sean Connery is my favorite Bond. Brosnan was too... something. I don't know. The plot of "Tomorrow Never Dies" was interesting, and the movie was certainly fun, but I wouldn't have expected the polish to outshine the film. That being said, it really does.
OPI Tomorrow Never Dies, indoors, natural light

Of the Skyfall collection, Tomorrow Never Dies and You Only Live Twice were my two standout favorites. They were also the only ones I purchased. You Only Live Twice is very close to the previous year's Meep Meep Meep from the Muppets collection, so I'm not going to swatch and review it terribly soon.
OPI Tomorrow Never Dies, indoors, artificial light

Tomorrow Never Dies excited me, because it was a shockingly vibrant purple metallic color. I've heard a lot about Zoya's Imperial Russia Zang Toi trio that had a vibrant blue purple in it, and I'm betting Tomorrow Never Dies is a similar animal. I have to say, as much as I love the color, it has a bit of an identity crisis. I bought it for the purple, but it vacillates between purple and electric blue. To be honest, I think it leans blue more often than purple, but it's too beautiful for me to complain. When I think of periwinkle, I picture a soft and light blue/purple, so I'll have to call this a darker, electric periwinkle. It does tend to photograph on the blue side, so know that it does lean purple, as well. You can see, both in the bottle and on the nail, some micro fuchsia glitter in there.
OPI Tomorrow Never Dies, indoors, artificial light

The formula is actually quite lovely in this OPI polish. It glided on my nails quite nicely, and took just two thinner coats to be opaque. I used Zoya Anchor, OPI Tomorrow Never Dies, Zoya Armor, and Zoya Fast Drops for this manicure, and it was done in about an hour or so, from prepping my nails with nail polish remover to dry. Not bad at all. I'm a bit bummed, because I did the mani last night, and I already have some very visible chips in the tips. I've been spoiled by Zoya lacquers that last a few days with no chips.
OPI Tomorrow Never Dies, outdoors, sun

Sigh. I guess I can't have anything. I'm excited to see what Zoya's Belinda in their upcoming Holiday 2013 Zenith collection will be. It describes it as "cosmic purple," which might be very similar to Tomorrow Never Dies. Then again, Neve from the Zoya Satins collection is put in both the blue and purple categories, so that might be a winner, too.
OPI Tomorrow Never Dies, outdoors, full sun

I love the color of Tomorrow Never Dies, and I think it was a total standout for me in the collection. You can still find this and the rest of the Skyfall polishes on Amazon, as well as elsewhere on the net. Some are still hanging out in beauty stores, that sell through their older stock of OPI polishes well after the collection debuts. At least around me in Massachusetts, I've found that this collection sold out pretty quickly, so I wouldn't bet on that, though. Online is still your best bet.
OPI Tomorrow Never Dies, outdoors, shade.

This polish is a total statement, bright, fun, and electric. The formula is great; it glides on beautifully, and has excellent coverage. I am disappointed in the chipping situation. Sad Emily doesn't like chips.
OPI Tomorrow Never Dies, flash

I'll be posting some thoughts here soon, and have more swatches in the queue.

Till next time, kids,
Emily, the Manic Paintress

Saturday, September 14, 2013

Zoya Zenith Winter/Holiday 2013 announced!

I know. I actually have photos of manis waiting to be written about, but I am holding off at the moment because Zoya just posted about their Winter/ Holiday 2013 line, Zenith. I'm super excited about this. The line includes the following:
Seraphina: Polaris Silver Metallic. Full Coverage Formula - See more at: http://zoyanailpolish.blogspot.com/2013/09/zoya-winter-holiday-2013-collection.html#sthash.CuqZOxFN.dpuf
Seraphina, which is a silver metallic. They call it a "Polaris," which is the other name for the North Star.
Cassedy, which is a "celestial" pewter metallic
Belinda, a "cosmic" purple metallic
Mosheen is the "astro ice blue topper" that I swatched from the Aqua di Lara swim week trio. It's lovely and worth having, even if it did chip pretty quickly for me.
Dream is a "deep space blue halo." This is on my need to buy ASAP list, considering how fabulous Blaze and Aurora were from the Ornate line last year.
Payton is a "galactic cranberry halo." Same must-own status on this as for Dream.

I can't even tell you how much I want these polishes yesterday. When the Fall 2013 polish list included these, I was seriously hoping they would include a couple of holos. I'll be purchasing Storm while I'm at it, just because it's been in the need category for months now. Seriously, people. I'm in withdrawal.

I just painted my nails with a polish from OPI's Skyfall line, Tomorrow Never Dies. I'll be posting about it as soon as my brain can get past Zoya's announcement.

I suck at waiting.

I'll be back with my group share tomorrow, kids. Till then, dream of reaching that Zenith,
Emily, the Manic and Impatient Paintress
Seraphina: Polaris Silver Metallic. Full Coverage Formula - See more at: http://zoyanailpolish.blogspot.com/2013/09/zoya-winter-holiday-2013-collection.html#sthash.CuqZOxFN.dpuf

Friday, September 6, 2013

Zoya Sarah

Zoya Sarah, outdoor, bright sun
As I mentioned on my post about Zoya's Godiva PixieDust, painting with interior latex paints can be disastrous on a girl's manicure. Godiva's ride was cut tragically short. However, being the nail polish addict that I am, I figured I could make lemonade with those lemons, and start fresh with a new manicure. Thus, I bring you, Zoya's Sarah. I'll put up a disclaimer to start with: this post is really pic-heavy. It seemed different every time the light changed a bit, so I went a little click-happy.

Zoya Sarah, shade, outdoors
Zoya Sarah, shade, outdoors



















 Sarah is described on Zoya's website in a surprisingly detailed manner. They say it's "pearls of dark fuchsia, red-violet and ruby tones in a bright sparkle finish.  A very rich and different shade of cool red sparkle that will stand out in a crowd." I probably would have gone with ruby red, myself, but their description is actually vastly superior to my own. It's a jeweled red, to be sure, but it also is very bright. It's cheerful. I would say that it's the perfect color for the holidays, but it's so vibrant that you could definitely pull it off in the summer, or even fall when it would match the autumn leaves.
Zoya Sarah, outdoor, sun, closeup
Zoya Sarah, outdoor, shade, closeup
There are times, particularly in lower or artificial lighting, when Sarah can almost appear more raspberry in color than in direct lighting. In the bottle, there is an almost coppery glitter in Sarah's formula, but I haven't noticed it on my nails.

Zoya Sarah, indoor, artificial light

Zoya Sarah, flash (see what I mean about the raspberry tone?)
I really love Zoya's dark red holographic polish, Blaze, and I tend to reach for that first. This is actually my first time putting Sarah on my fingernails, because I reach for Blaze first. Although they don't look that different in the bottle, Sarah is actually a few shades lighter than Blaze, which makes it more versatile, in my opinion. It lacks the holo glitter that Blaze has, but Sarah has a remarkable amount of depth. I think it's that the glitter is multi-colored; fuchsia, copper, and red all make up Sarah's overall bright ruby tone.
Zoya Sarah, outdoor, sun

Zoya Sarah, indoor, natural light
The finish on Sarah is metallic, and there are multiple times when I look at it and think it's a foil. I have to apologize for my camera's shortcomings; it simply doesn't accurately capture Sarah's finish on the nail. It comes through on the bottle really well, though, so it should give you am idea that way. As with Zoya's polishes, the glitter never gives a strange or bumpy texture (unless it is a PixieDust), and is well-incorporated in the polish.
Zoya Sarah, oudoor, shade

Zoya Sarah, indoor, bright natural light near window
This polish is definitely in my wheelhouse for autumn and winter. I'm also wearing it right now in September, which I sort of view as really late Summer in New England. It's a bright, cheerful, and interesting red. I'll have something new up for you all in a few days, I'm sure.

Until then, my friends, keep painting.
Emily, the Manic Paintress

O.P.I. Vesper and Zoya Maisie Fix-Up

OPI Vesper and Zoya Maisie, outdoor, sun
You all may be surprised, but I actually decided to try and improve a nail polish with something OTHER than Zoya Godiva. I know. Heart attacks may happen.
OPI Vesper and Zoya Maisie, outdoor, shade

I was really unhappy with O.P.I.'s Vesper Liquid Sand. It just was... blah. It was vampy, but flat. Not my favorite. I decided a glitter would be fun to put over it, hoping it would work. I settled on Zoya's holographic mylar "Fleck Effects" polish, Maisie. I need to put out the disclaimer that I didn't buy this from Zoya directly--they don't sell it any longer on their website, so I sought other venues. Amazon magically found this for me.

OPI Vesper and Zoya Maisie, indoor, natural light
Maisie is really a top coat polish, or what Zoya calls a glaze. Alone, it can read a bit strangely, as the base is a blue-tinted translucent jelly, with mylar holographic glitter. The holo flecks in the polish are actually green in color, despite the fact that the polish looks blue in the bottle. You can still get Opal directly from Zoya. Honestly, based on my experience with Maisie, I think Opal will have the same results. Particularly over other polishes, Maisie simply looks green, and loses the base color.
Unlike with Blaze and Aurora (and, I assume, Storm) from the Ornate Collection, Maisie's holographic glitter really only reads monochromatic. Even in the bottle, Maisie looks like a blue polish with green holo flecks.


Zoya Maisie, shade
Zoya Maisie, sun



On Vesper, I have to say that Maisie did just what I wanted. It transformed it from a dark purple (almost black) polish to a dark polish with funky green glitter on top. They're very appropriate for Halloween, or even just autumn. It's not a look for the faint of heart, but it really works for a funky pedicure. It was a success in that it is certainly better than Vesper alone, but I still don't think Vesper is something I'll be wearing much. It's just not for me.
OPI Vesper and Zoya Maisie, indoor, artificial light
 
If you have any successful experiments, feel free to share them. I'd love to hear your thoughts! I'll be back with you guys soon with a new manicure.
OPI Vesper and Zoya Maisie, flash

Until later,
Emily, the Manic paintress

Zoya Godiva

Zoya Godiva, outdoor, shade
I really can't believe that I haven't given this polish its own review before now. I have mentioned it, and what I consider to be its magic ability to make any major color misstep -particularly of the blue persuasion- better (i.e. essie's in the cab-ana and Zoya Crystal). Yet, I was shocked that I hadn't given this polish its own feature. Zoya Godiva is one of my favorite polishes on the market today. It was part of Zoya's Spring 2013 PixieDust collection.
Zoya Godiva, outdoors, sun

Zoya describes Godiva very accurately on its website, as "a soft nude with a sugared sparkle, in the exclusive Zoya PixieDust Matte Sparkle formula." It's a beige-y base color with silver glitter. It's amazing. Seriously gorgeous. In the sun, it sparkles like diamonds on your fingertips.
Zoya Godiva, indoor, natural light

Gah. I'm just going to gush about this polish. Godiva is adequately opaque in two or three coats. In some lights, this almost looks a bit taupe on my nails, but it really is a lovely nude. Ideally, I would love a touch more pink in it, but it's much more neutral than Tomoko, which reads as rather yellow on my nails.
Zoya Godiva, texture close-up

This polish is in my top five all-time favorites. It's a clean, fresh look for your nails, that makes you look a bit more put together. The texture is not overwhelming, but is present enough to make it a bit more interesting. The glitter in Godiva is actually muted in softer light, but really sparkles in direct lighting. For me, that's perfect--I love the nail bling.
Zoya Godiva, indoor, artificial light

I learned a very important manicure lesson this week, guys. Interior paint (latex) and manicures don't mix. At all. Because of this, I have to admit that my time with Godiva was cut far too short. I'm so sad. On a more positive note, this means that I had to change color earlier than usual, so I shall post again really soon with a new manicure. I'll post what I did to make my pedicure nicer in a very short while.
Zoya Godiva, flash

You won't even have time to miss me. Seriously.
Emily, the Manic Paintress


Monday, September 2, 2013

OPI Vesper

OPI Liquid Sand in Vesper, natural light
I should say this from the get-go: this is a pedicure. I know you probably don't love my toes, and that's okay. I think toes need polish, too. It makes them feel less ugly. For today's pedicure, I decided to try out one of OPI's Bond Girls collection of Liquid Sand polishes--Vesper.

Vesper Lind was one of the most controversial of all Bond Girls. In the film, Casino Royal, she was portrayed by the gorgeous and mysterious French actress, Eva Green. The controversy regarding Vesper stems from the fact that she is neither a true Bond heroine, but she isn't fully a villain. She's somewhere in between. She does great things with our favorite spy, but also betrays him in some serious ways. In the novel, Bond reacts in a rather unexpected way to said betrayal. It's softened a bit in the movie version, but in both, she remains unique in her ability to walk the line of good and bad, and play the game almost as well as Bond does.

OPI Liquid Sand in Vesper, flash
In the bottle, OPI's Vesper polish looks like a very dark brown. When you put it on your nails, it looks like a very deep purple. It definitely needed a couple of coats to be opaque. I used three for the pictures. It's a liquid sand, so it has a matte finish, and a rough texture. The matte texture comes across beautifully, though the texture seems minimal in this polish. OPI is traditionally heavy with the use of glitter in the liquid sands, but Vesper's glitter is almost non-existent.

I'm going to say that part of the problem I have with this is that I used it on my feet. Maybe the smaller surfaces don't show off the color terribly well. Then again, maybe I just don't love this polish. It's very dark, almost black. While I like the vampy look, the matte finish actually seems to make this look flat and a bit boring.


OPI Liquid Sand in Vesper, artificial light

I have every intention on putting some top coat on top of this. Maybe a glitter? I'm not sure, but my toes don't look fancypants--they look stiff and dull. Actually--dull is perhaps the best description of this. I loved the surprise of putting on what looks like a brown polish, and getting a purple. That was reminiscent of its namesake, Vesper Lind. Unfortunately, I don't think it has the same charm.

I actually like a number of OPI's liquid sand polishes. They're generally well-crafted, full of dimension and eye-catching depth. Magazine Cover Mouse from the Couture de Minnie collection is a great example of this, as I wrote about in my last post. Vesper just falls flat. I think I'll stick to Jinx from the Bond Girl collection. It's very orange, but it really is dazzling.

Hopefully, if you were thinking about tracking down a bottle in your favorite specialty beauty store or Amazon, you may decide to pass on this one. Sadly, that is my recommendation for Vesper. Anyone out there agree or disagree?

I'll be posting about a definite favorite of mine that I have yet to really feature here. Expect to hear from me soon.

Until then,
Emily, the Manic Paintress