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'Beautiful' £19 perfume set is 'great for taking on holidays'

'Beautiful' £19 perfume set is 'great for taking on holidays'

Daily Mirror2 days ago

The Ghost Goodie Bag is currently on offer for £19.09, and not only gets customers a selection of travel-friendly perfumes, but also a cute drawstring pouch to keep them in
While some perfume fans prefer to stick to one signature scent, others enjoy rotating their fragrance collection to suit their mood. And Amazon is currently selling a gift set that gets shoppers six different scents for £3.18 each.
The Ghost Goodie Bag is currently on offer for £19.09, and not only gets customers a selection of travel-friendly perfumes, but also a cute drawstring pouch to keep them in. According to the retailer, more than 200 of the bags have sold on Amazon in the last month, having proven popular with holidaymakers and early Christmas shoppers.
Inside there are three 10ml bottles, including Whitelight Eau De Parfum, Deep Night Eau De Parfum and Daydream Eau De Parfum. There's also three 5ml bottles - Purity Eau De Parfum, Ghost The Fragrance Eau De Parfum and Sweetheart Eau De Parfum.
For those looking for similar discovery sets, the Maison Margiela Memory Box, at Sephora, is the perfect way to trial or gift some of Maison Margiela's best-selling Replica fragrances. The set is composed of 10 x 2ml minis, totalling 20ml, each of which are designed to evoke different memories.
The unisex scents include the likes of Lazy Sunday Morning, Jazz Club and Beach Walk. Currently reduced to £30.60, it's much more affordable than buying a 30ml bottle for £62. Alternatively, the Charlotte Tilbury Fragrance Collection Of Emotions Perfume Travel Trio Set, is available for £48 at Space NK.
In the Ghost set, there's a total of 45ml of fragrance for under £20. A 50ml bottle of Ghost would typically cost between £40 and £45 at Boots, so it works out around half price, but with the benefit of variety and not being married to one bottle. The set currently boasts a 4.7 star rating on the online retailer's website.
One shopper said: 'I'm so very happy with this product. You get a lovely bag the size of a make up bag with six little bottles of perfume inside. They all come in velvet bags inside the bag. All of the perfume smells beautiful. You get 3 bigger bottles and 3 smaller bottles. It's a beautiful gift to yourself or somebody else and I will buy one of these again in the future. Great for taking on holiday to put a few of your bits in along with the little bottles of perfume.'
One thoughtful customer commented: 'Asked the girls in work to put their hand in the lovely bag to pull a smaller bag out. These were used as a kind gesture, to say thank you for a tough week. The ladies loved them and were so happy, absolutely great idea and will definitely buy again.'
A third knocked a star off for the lids, writing: 'Great option before committing to a full size and great to drop them in your bag/pocket. The only negative point is that the little bottles don't have a screwing lid. It's just a pop one. Slight concern about them leaking or the liquid going everywhere when opened.'
'I love this little perfume collection,' said another, 'It comes in a lovely bag. Each perfume is in its own little bag and is perfect for carrying in your handbag. They smell great too. I've bought some as Christmas gifts.'
The deal comes ahead of Amazon Prime Day, which runs from July 8 - 11 this year. It goes to show you don't necessarily need to wait until the event to bag a bargain, however, the discount days will see a number of offers across perfume and beauty, so it's well worth keeping an eye on. Shoppers can take a look at the Ghost Goodie Bag here.

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EXCLUSIVE Secret exchange between Lauren Sanchez and Jeff Bezos revealed after he was forced to protect new wife from yelling reporters
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EXCLUSIVE Secret exchange between Lauren Sanchez and Jeff Bezos revealed after he was forced to protect new wife from yelling reporters

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Bezos wedding celebrations met with protests in Venice
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Bezos wedding celebrations met with protests in Venice

Hundreds of protesters marched through the narrow streets of Venice on Saturday to protest against the three-day wedding of billionaire Jeff Bezos and Lauren Sanchez. Letting off smoke flares, blaring loud music and chanting 'Bezos out of the lagoon', they marched from Venice's railway station to the Rialto Bridge, which spans the Grand Canal. They carried placards which read 'Money Can't Buy Style', 'F--- Capitalism' and 'No Space for Bezos' – a play on the Amazon founder's Blue Origin space venture and his new wife's recent space flight. The estimated 500 marchers were shadowed by a small phalanx of riot police equipped with batons, helmets and shields. The noisy demonstration came as Mr Bezos, his new wife and their celebrity guests prepared to take water taxis from their luxury hotels to the Venetian Arsenal, the city's historic shipbuilding complex, for a final wedding celebration – a culmination of the three-day nuptials that have divided the city. 'Bezos is acting like he's king of the world' Some have hailed the economic impact of the event and the attention it has brought. But activists accused Mr Bezos, the third wealthiest person in the world, of treating Venice as a rich man's playground, a picturesque backdrop to a wedding believed to have cost between 40 and 50 million euros. The demonstrators are furious about the security arrangements and the fact that some parts of the city have been closed off to the public to allow access for Mr Bezos and his 250 guests, who include Ivanka Trump, Queen Rania of Jordan, Leonardo DiCaprio and the Kardashians. 'Our message is that everyone is welcome in Venice but not people who create disruption like he has done,' said Oliveiro Cassala, a 43-year-old protester who works in a hotel in Venice. 'He came to Venice acting as if he was king of the world. He thinks he can pay money and do whatever he likes. But we are proud people in Venice, and we don't like it.' He carried a placard which said that Mr Bezos' donation of three million euros to Venetian causes, from education to the environment, was paltry. 'With an estimated net worth of $230 billion, this donation represents 0.0013 per cent of his wealth,' he said. 'It's as if he had left a tip of three euros. Money does not buy respect, and Venice deserves much more.' Other placards with messages that read 'Free Palestine' and 'Stop Bombing Iran' were paraded down the streets past groups of tourists enjoying the evening sunshine and sipping Aperol Spritz cocktails. Elena Dal Toso, 80, said police had blocked her from walking from her home to a hospital clinic on Thursday evening, when Mr Bezos hosted a gala dinner in the cloister of a historic church called La Madonna dell'Orto 'They told me I couldn't pass – in my own city. It's fine to come here and get married, plenty of people do it, but not to cause this kind of inconvenience,' she said. 'We already have enough problems, like lack of housing and too much dependence on tourism. I feel like the city has been taken over these past few days.' Alice Bazzoli, another activist, said Venice had been 'exploited' by Mr Bezos and his wealthy friends, with mega-yachts moored in the lagoon, private jets landing at Marco Polo airport, and some parts of the city cordoned off. 'Protestors don't represent the majority' Police officers and Italian soldiers guarded narrow alleyways to Venice's centuries-old Jewish Ghetto to block any pro-Palestinian protesters from veering off the main route of the march. There were more police on standby in blue and white motor launches and on jet skis, deployed to surrounding canals. But many Venetians have welcomed the Bezos wedding, saying it would bring huge economic benefits to Venice. 'These protesters don't represent the majority,' said Matteo, who runs a trattoria near the Venetian Arsenal, the venue for Saturday night's celebrations. 'I think it's good that he came here. He's so rich, he could have chosen anywhere in the world. He could have gone to New York or St Tropez or Fiji. But he chose Venice. That says something about what a special place it is.' As wedding guests, including Bill Gates, Orlando Bloom and Oprah Winfrey, headed to the Venetian Arsenal, amid unconfirmed rumours that they would be serenaded by Sir Elton John and Lady Gaga, it remained a mystery as to who would actually provide the evening's entertainment. The menu was to consist of specialities from the Veneto region, including baccalà, or salt cod, and tiramisù. Paparazzi faced a stiff challenge in trying to access the venue – the Venetian Arsenal is surrounded by high crenellated walls and there are just a few entrances, all of them by boat. It evolved over the centuries as a place to construct merchant vessels and warships, built to fend off pirates, commercial rivals and marauding Turkish fleets. 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Jeff Bezos and Lauren Sanchez wedding leaves Venice divided
Jeff Bezos and Lauren Sanchez wedding leaves Venice divided

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Jeff Bezos and Lauren Sanchez wedding leaves Venice divided

The lavish wedding party of Amazon founder Jeff Bezos and TV presenter Lauren Sanchez concludes this evening in Venice with the main gala as their celebrity guests step into water taxis from their luxury hotels, paparazzi poised, some Venetians are gathering to protest against the big event. Their causes are varied, from locals opposed to over-tourism in a delicate city, to activists protesting against climate change and capitalism. While they plan to march on Saturday evening, plans to launch themselves into the city's canals with inflatable crocodiles and block the wedding guests' passage have been dropped. In pictures: Jeff Bezos and Lauren Sanchez's wedding Protesters gather Spotted heading into Harry Bar's for lunch on Saturday, Bezos blew kisses towards the cameras when a local journalist asked what he made of the city's deputy mayor dismissed the activists as "narcissists" and insisted the wedding was the "high-quality tourism" Venice Venturini, city councillor for economic developments, said he hoped "a lot of people will want to get married in Venice" now and boost the city's wedding sector."We are not Iran. The city cannot say who can or who cannot get married. We have no moral police going around," he told the BBC on the bank of the Grand Canal, as gondolas loaded with tourists drifted by. The activists have already claimed one win, though. Tonight's party was moved further from the city centre for security reasons. The new venue, Arsenale, is easier to protect."I think the main problem is that Venice is becoming like an amusement park," argues Paola, an Italian member of the Extinction Rebellion group. She's especially incensed that wedding guests arrived here on private jets and argues the world's elite are the worst polluters."Of course, mass tourism is eating the city alive, but the fact that billionaires can come here and use the city as their amusement park is an enormous problem." Stars descend for 'wedding of the year' The Italian media have leapt on the glitz and glamour of what they are dubbing the "wedding of the year".Their pages and posts are full of pictures of the 200 or so A-list celebrities now in town, including Leonardo di Caprio and Kim talk of cuttlefish banquets – tonight's spread will feature cod, cooked regional-style – and photos of the bride's white lace Dolce and Gabbana gown, apparently inspired by one worn by Sophia Loren in the seems, however, that talk of this wedding bringing the city to a halt was Trump has been spotted at an art gallery, as has Bill Gates, and the newly married couple have been photographed and filmed in various locations and most tourists, or Venetians, are more likely to bump into a Bezos look-a-like, who made a purpose journey from Germany to pose for photos, than any of the real-life rich and are plenty of water taxis and gondolas still free for hire and no crowds of angry tourists, deprived of their magical streets were briefly closed around the main events but disruption appears to have been of the posters declaring "No Space for Bezos" have been ripped down and just the odd bit of graffiti can be seen. Attempts to project slogans on buildings were quickly stopped by police. A planned march by protesters on Saturday evening is taking place with official permission. Venetians divided But fears of Venice becoming a tourist playground, forcing locals out of town, are no down from the main railway station, police check visitors at random for mandatory day passes. It is a new measure to try to control the crowds. All around, cafes are packed with people shiny-faced from the humidity and pink from the brutally fierce sun. A short walk away is the pretty piazza where Roberto Zanon has spent all his life but which he now has to leave. His landlord has sold his home to out-of-town developers and the 77-year old is being evicted soon together with his two dogs. Finding anything else in his home city is impossible, Roberto says. He can't compete with higher-paying tourists. "One, two, three doors - those are locals, but the rest is all for tourism now," Roberto says, pointing to the wooden doors around his square. "There are fewer and fewer Venetians here," he says quietly, deeply upset at the loss of his home. "There is no purpose any more. You lose your friends. You lose piece of your heart. But sadly this situation is unstoppable." That doesn't mean Roberto is fretting about a billionaire choosing Venice for his wedding, mind you. He worked in tourism himself for many years and calls it "an honour" to have such famous guests in the city he himself loves so much. "I find it positive."He's not alone. In a souvenir shop selling magnets and T-shirts, Leda is all in favour of the Bezos-Sanchez bonanza. She is blunt: "I think there should be more people like Bezos here. Right now we get trash tourism and Venice doesn't deserve that."Leda used to have her own store selling quality Italian goods but had to close it to adapt to a low-spending market. "It's low-cost, hit-and-run tourism," she says. "People take 20 euro flights, come here and don't spend a thing. That's not what Venice needs."So what will be left, when the big party jets out of town? The deputy mayor confirmed tech boss Bezos had donated "around three million euros" to groups working to protect this fragile city-on-the-water, in a gesture of support. As for the 30 million euros the wedding might net the city in other ways - activists call that a "drop in the lagoon" for one of the richest men on earth. "It's around three euros for a normal person, if you put in proportion to Bezos's wealth," Lorenzo from Extinction Rebellion said. "It's a very low amount of money."

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