![]() l-r: Passion The Chimera The Matriarch.This is much easier to work with as it blends out much more easily than the larger particles, and is also a more subtle, wearable shade. ![]() ‘She Who Traversed the Rainbow Bay’: This is a much finer pigment and is a satin pinky-peach with a soft golden shift to it (you can tell which sorts of colours I’m most attracted to!). You can see the variation in the shade in the swatches above, and how it almost picks up green in certain lights. ‘Life-Giver’: This works much more effectively as a pink-gold duochrome shade, and is again a chunkier pigment. This isn’t as chunky as the previous shade, and is a warmer gold, with the occasional flash of that pink. ‘A Dragon’s Joy’: This is described as a “goldenish-pink” shimmer, but I definitely found it pulled much more strongly on the yellow-gold side of that. This adds a beautiful light, without being quite as ostentatious as a straight glitter. With these shades with larger particle sizes, the brand recommend patting them into place over a sticky base, and blending the edges with a more finely milled shadow, which I agree is the best way to apply them. ‘Heiress to the Throne’: This is a chunkier, glittery-er copper gold. l-r: Heiress to the Throne A Dragon’s Joy Life-Giver She Who Traversed the Rainbow Bay.On to the pigments! I grabbed seven, one of which is a Chromatic shade, and all of the swatches are with a dry finger onto a sticky base, taken in natural light. The stickers on the jars are in Russian only, however, so I’m hoping I’ll get all the names right in this post! The smaller jars that I picked up nearly all go for 250RUB, which works out at less than £3, except for the Chromatic shades which go for 600RUB, which is approximately £7 (prices approximate at time of writing). They are a Russian company, which can make navigating the website a little more difficult but it is largely translated into English. ![]() They change up the packaging every week, so if you want to know what you’re likely to get you can take a look at their instagram, but it’s always exquisitely thought out. The outer packaging is also stunning: ribbons, illustrations, beads… I mean, just look at it: This means that if you remove the lid from one jar, you can screw it directly into the bottom of a second jar, saving space in your collection if you are that way inclined. Also worth noting, the smaller of the two jar sizes available (the size I picked up) can be stacked as the bottoms of the jars are threaded. The jars themselves have black lids as pictured, with the company’s logo in a raised design. And finally, I decided to take the plunge and make an order, so here’s what I picked up!įirstly, I have to make a comment on the packaging. I can’t remember exactly how Sigil Inspired came to my attention any more, but I do know that I have been eyeing up their pigments for months now.
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