- Joined
- Nov 13, 2009
- Messages
- 48
- Reaction score
- 0
So I was wandering through Belk's today for Black Friday sales when I realized there wasn't much I was interested in. However, I still had a 20% off coupon, so I figured I'd use it on some Laura Mercier tinted moisturizer. I don't know anything about LM shades, so after being approached by a mua, I expressed that I needed some help picking out a color.
She picked up a shade that I really feel is too dark for me. I have that classic ruddy irish skin on my face, with a very porcelain neck and chest and pretty much everything else. I explained to her that my neck is quite a few shades lighter than my face. Her response? That's what bronzer is for.
So, I'm supposed buy foundation that's too dark for my (overall) complexion, bronze my neck, and, what? apply fake tanner to the rest of my body? I explained to her, I'm not really a bronzer type a girl. She said, you don't want to look "pasty." Out of simple frustration I just said thanks and left. I'm really tired of being color-matched to the wrong shade.
For the record she was a redhead too. She should've understood, but she looked over-bronzed herself. I like being "pasty." Now I could kick myself. I should've just bought it anyways and exchanged it later after I figured out the right shade on my own. Then I would have still gotten the discount.
One small other pet-peeve is that she applied the product to my face without asking first and I would have definitely declined. I don't like that. It's just bothersome unless I've planned ahead.
I don't mean to offend. I know she didn't mean any harm and was trying to be helpful, but finding the right foundation has been a really frustrating experience lately.
She picked up a shade that I really feel is too dark for me. I have that classic ruddy irish skin on my face, with a very porcelain neck and chest and pretty much everything else. I explained to her that my neck is quite a few shades lighter than my face. Her response? That's what bronzer is for.
So, I'm supposed buy foundation that's too dark for my (overall) complexion, bronze my neck, and, what? apply fake tanner to the rest of my body? I explained to her, I'm not really a bronzer type a girl. She said, you don't want to look "pasty." Out of simple frustration I just said thanks and left. I'm really tired of being color-matched to the wrong shade.
For the record she was a redhead too. She should've understood, but she looked over-bronzed herself. I like being "pasty." Now I could kick myself. I should've just bought it anyways and exchanged it later after I figured out the right shade on my own. Then I would have still gotten the discount.
One small other pet-peeve is that she applied the product to my face without asking first and I would have definitely declined. I don't like that. It's just bothersome unless I've planned ahead.
I don't mean to offend. I know she didn't mean any harm and was trying to be helpful, but finding the right foundation has been a really frustrating experience lately.