logo
6 new beauty editor approved buys – including Dior's new lip balm and a £13 hydrating cleanser

6 new beauty editor approved buys – including Dior's new lip balm and a £13 hydrating cleanser

The Sun18 hours ago
I'M pretty sure I've found the best-value facial in London, and it just so happens to be from one of my favourite beauty brands.
The facial in question? Wildsmith's Radical Botany Facial, £140 for an hour (or £70 for 30 minutes).
Tucked away in the turrets of London's Liberty department store, when you walk through the double door's of the specially designed Wildsmith Treehouse, you're transported to the countryside, with projections of trees on the walls and a birdsong lullaby to soundtrack the treatment.
8
At face value, the price seems steep, but it is redeemable against purchases of Wildsmith products on the day of yout treatment - so you're effectively getting it free.
Trust me, you're going to want to stock up, given how good your skin will feel after the treatment.
Despite it being fully redeemable, they don't cut corners – the bed is wider than most used for treatments (about the size of a single mattress), so you can completely relax, and it's heated too, making it ultra-cosy.
8
The facial is far more than just a sales pitch for the products - wellness is the aim.
It starts with a foot massage, before your legs are gently stretched one by one, making my spine instantly feel longer, followed by a massage-heavy facial that dissolved the tension in my brow and jaw, as well as a scalp massage and a hand and arm massage that had me walking on air.
If you're not yet convinced, a 90-minute version of the same treatment at Wildsmith's home in luxe hotel Heckfield Place will set you back £300 – and that isn't redeemable on products!
Best new skin launches
BUY NOW
I discovered the new Wildsmith Skin Radiance Light Serum, £85, while I was there and have used it every day since.
It feels like silk on the skin, and is packed with my favourite ingredient, niacinamide, which helps to reduce inflammation, redness and uneven skin texture, while balancing oil production and reducing breakouts.
It also contains brightening antioxidants, hyaluronic acid and vitamin B5 to hydrate skin and boost radiance.
Made specifically for humid climates, it's not heavy or greasy, which is perfect for oily skin like mine.
I'm a huge fan of high-low beauty – pairing expensive products with affordable ones to get the best routine for my money.
The Inkey List Hydrating Cream-To-Milk Cleanser, £13
BUY NOW
As serums tend to have the highest potency of active ingredients, I generally spend most of my budget on them, so I've been pairing the Wildsmith one with The Inkey List Hydrating Cream-To-Milk Cleanser, £13, which also launched last month.
As the name suggests, it starts as a lightweight cream, which feels soothing and hydrating yet melts away every trace of make-up, before transforming into a milk-like consistency on contact with water, so there's no residue left behind.
It's hard to find a cleanser that gets rid of everything in one step without turning into an oil or balm, but this does it all.
Best new hair launches
I have a similar attitude when it comes to haircare, preferring to spend money on high-tech tools and products that make a visible difference, such as Living Proof Style Lab Flex Hairspray, £27, which has changed the game for me.
Living Proof Style Lab Flex Hairspray, £27
My hair doesn't really hold a curl, but this clever hairspray contains heat protection, so can be applied to wet hair before styling – and voilà, my curls now stay put for days!
Loxx Triple Flower Clip in Lemon Drop, £18
Similarly, Loxx Triple Flower Clip in Lemon Drop, £18, has been a godsend during the hot weather.
I've struggled to find a claw clip that can hold my waist-length hair, but this extra-long, arched design, created by celebrity hairstylist Chad Maxwell, keeps every strand up without tugging at my scalp or leaving a dent in my hair.
Best new make-up launches
Make-up-wise, the last month has been about adding colour to my face, as I'm ghostly pale and exhausted - I can't decide if the hot-weather induced sleepless nights are to blame, or my inability to refuse an impromptu pub visit in the sunshine!
Charlotte Tilbury Unreal Blush Healthy Glow Stick, £30
BUY NOW
I find blush wakes up my complexion better than bronzer (although I'll turn to that come August), and Charlotte Tilbury Unreal Blush Healthy Glow Stick, £30, has a subtle shimmer that instantly makes me look healthier, without being too glittery or exaggerating the texture on my cheeks.
I love that I can draw it straight on to my face, and blend it out with my fingers - no other tools necessary!
Dior Addict Lip Glow Butter, £33
Finally, Dior Addict Lip Glow Butter, £33, made it into my bag on cute factor alone, thanks to its adorable monogram charm.
The formula feels somewhere between a lip balm and a lip butter, and leaves my dry lips hydrated - I've had more compliments when wearing the Black Cherry shade than I can count on both hands!
Top beauty trends for 2025
Hayley Walker, Beauty Expert at Justmylook spoke exclusively to Fabulous about the big beauty trends for 2025.
Haircare
Hair gloss treatments are a must-have as beauty enthusiasts love the salon-quality shine and enhanced colour delivered by the trending treatment.
Hair glosses are multifunctional, as they nourish the hair while offering a vibrant, healthy-looking finish, combining 2025's core trends. This treatment is perfect for those seeking an affordable, at-home glow-up.
2025 will focus on skin repairing and texture-enhancing treatments.
Skincare
Rejuran treatment, a celebrity-endorsed procedure, will see a rise in demand this year as many seek to enhance their skin's appearance. The procedure entails injecting polynucleotides derived from salmon DNA to enhance skin texture and elasticity. 'Rejuvenation is expected to dominate 2025 skincare trends as many seek to achieve a flawless, youthful complexion.
Skincare will also include back-to-basic products for a simplified routine.
Ginseng cleansing oil and panthenol cream are among the trending products for 2025. The cleansing oil is excellent for dissolving make-up and impurities without clogging pores and is enriched with nourishing properties to leave the skin feeling and looking refreshed and radiant.
Make-up
Make-up trends will follow suit to achieve youthful and radiant looks. Under-eye brighteners will be sought-after products for delivering coverage while enhancing natural radiance. This beauty tool will complement natural beauty while improving and brightening dull skin.
Make-up looks will be bigger and bolder in 2025 with cluster lashes expected to surge this year. These lashes bring the glam to glamorous looks as they deliver dramatic volume to enhance everyday or special occasion looks.
Peel-off lip stains circulated the beauty industry in 2024 and are expected to dominate in 2025. The growing popularity of this product is due to its ability to provide long-lasting, transfer-proof colour to lips, enhancing a natural aesthetic. Additionally, cherry-coded aesthetics are expected to be everywhere this year as the deep, rich hue can be achieved using peel-off lip stains or bold lip looks for a dramatic effect.
Nails
2025 will be another year of countless, show-stopping nail trends. Goddess Nails and Aura Nails deserve an honourable mention as these designs channel an ethereal, celestial aesthetic for bold, self-expressing nails.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

The Bear's Will Poulter on his secret London favourites
The Bear's Will Poulter on his secret London favourites

Times

time27 minutes ago

  • Times

The Bear's Will Poulter on his secret London favourites

When I come to meet Will Poulter, best known for his performances in We're the Millers, The Maze Runner and Guardians of the Galaxy Vol 3, it's not on set or within the glitzy confines of a film premiere. Instead, it's in a bustling London kitchen where he's hand-delivering a taco. Crafted in collaboration with Side Hustle at the NoMad London, it is a delicious concoction of crispy pork, pickled honeydew melon and sharp shiso verde — and serves as a nod to his guest appearance on The Bear and his love of bold, layered flavours. This foray away from fictional cooking is both a credit to his love of food and in support of City Harvest, a London-based charity tackling food waste and food insecurity. For Poulter, food isn't just sustenance; it's a way to connect communities, preserve traditions and support vital causes: 'London has enriched my life in so many ways — through music, film and food, to name just a few. It only makes sense to give back in a small way where possible,' he explains. Away from the heat of the stove, he talks about the capital's culinary diversity, his favourite hidden gems, why Brixton Village should be protected and the importance of community work. South London. I've quickly come to love it. I've felt very embraced by the south and my local community. Paradise, which is a really special Sri Lankan restaurant tucked away on a Soho backstreet. It serves amazing food, working with a lot of Sri Lankan producers, and has a lovely team. Tayer + Elementary in Old Street. Monica Berg is a genius mixologist. I think it's one of the best cocktail places in the country and the snacks are also delicious. Black Axe Mangal in Highbury and Islington. There's no sign and it's very inconspicuous from the outside, but it's quietly and consistently one of the best and most unique meals you can get in the city. It's truly special. Dizzee Rascal, in Bow in the early 2000s. I would have loved to go to some house parties and early grime sets. Chishuru. Think stunning west African food served in both traditional and new creative ways. The growth of the restaurant and its impact is typical of so many African restaurants in London right now. I'd make free school meals available to all young people. Brixton Village. It has an incredible array of cuisines in one place and such a great atmosphere. It must be protected at all costs. • Get more ideas for things to do in London To learn how to slow things down for yourself. It's important in a city that can feel as though it's moving at 100mph at all times. Try and make time to take care of yourself or that can pass you by. I miss the diversity of cuisines available. Most of all I miss the Indian and Pakistani food that is so well represented here. Premiering [the film] Detroit at the Fox Theatre in Detroit with the entire cast and several of the survivors. New Horizon Youth Centre is a charity supporting young people who are homeless or unsafe, based in north London. It does vital work to meet the issue of supporting young people who are often not thought about in conversation and provisions that pertain to people experiencing homelessness. • Read more about London: the latest news, interviews and features I'm so honoured and disbelieving of the fact that I get to be on the same menus as these brilliant chefs like Tomos Parry, and work with the talent in both the NoMad and the Side Hustle kitchen. The pickled melon is a nod to my first episode in The Bear, which was called Honeydew. It is otherwise a homage to my mum, who is the best cook I know. Her party trick is to eat a habanero chilli like a cherry, so there's a good amount of spice in there. All the proceeds of the 'Tacos with Friends' series will go to the critical work City Harvest does — to re-divert food waste towards people who are experiencing food insecurity. I'd urge more restaurants to partner with them to reduce waste and support those in need. I would love to see more communal spaces for enjoying food. I would love to see more places that are in a position to donate to do so, and I would love it if more training programmes could be introduced in local communities because kitchens and restaurants should be protected as meritocracies.

Oasis reunion: A high-five and a hug - the gestures were there, but ultimately it was all about the music
Oasis reunion: A high-five and a hug - the gestures were there, but ultimately it was all about the music

Sky News

timean hour ago

  • Sky News

Oasis reunion: A high-five and a hug - the gestures were there, but ultimately it was all about the music

Oasis have reunited on stage for the first time in almost 16 years - with brothers Liam and Noel Gallagher sharing a high five and the briefest of hugs as they closed a performance that for fans was more than worth the wait. After the split in 2009, for many years Noel said he would never go back - and for a long time, as the brothers exchanged insults through separate interviews (and on social media, for Liam), it seemed pretty unlikely to ever happen. But now, here they are. As they walked out on stage at Cardiff's Principality Stadium, all eyes were on the Gallaghers for a sense of their relationship - dare we say it, friendship? - now after all these years. There was no reference to their fall-out or making up, but the gestures were there - lifting hands together as they walked out for the first time. Headlines and tweets of speculation and then confirmation of the reunion filled the screens as the show started. "This is happening," said one, repeatedly. In the end, it was all about the music. Liam has received criticism in the past for his voice not being what it once was, but back on stage with his brother tonight he delivered exactly what fans would have hoped for - a raw, steely-eyed performance, snarling vocals, and the swagger that makes him arguably the greatest frontman of his day. This was Oasis sounding almost as good as they ever have. 2:56 They opened with Hello, because of course, "it's good to be back". And then Acquiesce, and those lyrics: "Because we need each other/ We believe in one another." The song is said to be about friendship in the wider sense, rather than their brotherly bond and sibling rivalry, but you can't help but feel like it means something here. Over two hours, they played favourite after favourite - including Morning Glory, Some Might Say, Cigarettes & Alcohol, Supersonic and Roll With It. In the mid-section, Liam takes his break for Noel to sing Talk Tonight, Half The World Away and Little By Little; the tempo slows but there is by no means a lull, with the fans singing all his words back to him. Liam returns for hits including Stand By Me, Slide Away, Whatever and Live Forever, before sending the crowd wild (or even wilder) with Rock And Roll Star. When the reunion announcement was made last summer, it quickly became overshadowed by the controversy of dynamic pricing causing prices to rocket. As he has done on X before, Liam addressed the issue on stage with a joke. "Was it worth the £4,000 you paid for the ticket?" he shouted at one point. "Yeah," the crowd shouts back; seemingly all is forgiven. After Rock And Roll Star, the dream that very quickly became a reality for this band, Noel introduced the rest of the group, calling Bonehead a "legend". Then he acknowledges all their young fans, some who maybe weren't even born when they split. "This one is for all the people in their 20s who've never seen us before, who've kept this shit going," he says before the encore starts with The Masterplan. Noel follows with Don't Look Back In Anger, and the screens fill with Manchester bees in reference to the arena bombing and how the song became the sound of hope and defiance for the city afterwards. 1:31 During Wonderwall, there's a nice touch as Liam sings to the crowd: "There are many things I would like to say to you, but I don't speak Welsh." It is at the end of Champagne Supernova, which closes the set, that it happens; Noel puts down his guitar, and they come together for a high-five and a back-slap, a blink-and-you'd miss it hug. 0:26 "Right then, beautiful people, this is it," Liam had told the crowd as he introduced the song just a few minutes earlier. "Nice one for putting up with us over the years." From the roar of the audience, it's safe to say most people here would agree it's been worth it.

Oasis review – a shameless trip back to the 90s for Britpop's loudest, greatest songs
Oasis review – a shameless trip back to the 90s for Britpop's loudest, greatest songs

The Guardian

time2 hours ago

  • The Guardian

Oasis review – a shameless trip back to the 90s for Britpop's loudest, greatest songs

The noise from the audience when Oasis arrive on stage for their first reunion gig is deafening. You might have expected a loud response. This is, after all, a crowd so partisan that, in between the support acts, they cheer the promotional videos – the tour's accompanying brand deals seem to involve not just the obviously Oasis-adjacent sportswear brand Adidas, but the more imponderable Land Rover Defender. Even so, the noise the fans make as the reconstituted Oasis launch into Hello takes you aback slightly, and not just because Hello is a fairly bold choice of opener: this is, after all, a song that borrows heavily from Hello, Hello, I'm Back Again by Gary Glitter. But no one in Cardiff's Principality Stadium seems to care about the song's genesis: the noise is such that you struggle to think of another artist that's received such a vociferous reception. So, the success of the show seems more or less like a foregone conclusion. Anyone who saw them in the 00s will tell you that the old Oasis were a hugely variable proposition live: you never knew what mood Liam Gallagher would show up in, or how the current state of familial relations might affect their performance. But evidently as little as possible has been left to chance at these reunion gigs. No one – including, to their immense credit, Liam and Noel Gallagher – seems interested in pretending this tour is anything other than a hugely lucrative cash-grab, and clearly, you only grab the maximum possible cash if the tour doesn't descend into the kind of bedlam to which Oasis tours were once prone. Liam is on his best behaviour – 'thanks for putting up with us,' he offers at one juncture, 'I know we're hard work', a noticeable shift from the days when he was wont to rain abuse on the audience – and Liam and Noel have rhythm guitarist Paul 'Bonehead' Arthurs stood squarely between them on stage, creating distance. You could say that removes combustibility, the hint of potential chaos that was at least part of Oasis's appeal, but you might as well save your breath: no one would be able to hear you over the sound of people singing along en masse to a set that plays to the strengths of Oasis's back catalogue. Few bands' reputations have been better served by the rise of streaming, both in its favouring of curated playlists over albums – all the highlights and none of the rubbish, of which there was a great deal in Oasis's later years – and in the way it decontextualises music, denuding it of its accompanying story or contemporary critical responses. The much-vaunted Oasis fans too young to remember the band first-hand definitely exist – you can see them in the audience – but you do wonder how many of them believe Oasis split up in 1998, rather than grimly trudging on for another decade, to declining artistic returns. The show seeks to maintain this myth. It's very much playlist Oasis, big on the first two albums and B-sides from the years when Noel Gallagher's songwriting talent seemed so abundant he could afford to blithely confine stuff as good as Acquiesce or The Masterplan to an extra track on a CD single, and low on anything at all from their later years. Only the presence of 2002's Little By Little indicates that Oasis existed into the 21st century. You can still sense inspiration declining – 1997's D'You Know What I Mean? sounds like a trudge regardless of how many people are singing along – but far more often, the show serves as a reminder of how fantastic purple patch Oasis were. Against a ferocious wall of distorted guitars, there's a weird disconnect between the tone of Noel's songs – wistful, noticeably melancholy – and the way Liam sings them like a man seething with frustration, on the verge of offering someone a fight. Even discounting half their career, they have classics in abundance: Cigarettes & Alcohol, Slide Away, Rock 'n' Roll Star, Morning Glory. Enough, in fact, that a section where Liam cedes the stage and Noel takes over vocals doesn't occasion a dip in the audience's enthusiasm: during Half the World Away, the audience's vocals threaten to drown the song's author out entirely. It ends with precisely the encore you might have expected – Don't Look Back in Anger, Wonderwall and Champagne Supernova – which understandably occasions precisely the response you might have expected. A very perfunctory clap on the back – the only time the Gallaghers interact beyond playing the same songs – and Liam vanishes: a car is waiting by the side of the stage to whisk him away before the final notes die away, a triumph in the bag.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store