

The earrings were just £3 a pair (Image: Kirsty Bosley)

I took two away, a pair of lightning bolts with shining crystals (RRP £12) and a pair of little silver saturns, which are still available on the Claire's site for £18, reduced from £30! Two pairs of studs for £6 instead of £42 seemed like a wicked deal. I nabbed that for £2 - normally it'd cost me around £7!įor £3 each, there was a big box filled with sterling silver earrings from Claire's Accessories, all still on their boards, with plastic covers keeping the butterfly fastenings secure on the back. They'd got the Luminous Putty Blush that I'd been looking for in Superdrug, a lovely warm shade with some light shimmer in, for juicy autumn cheeks. The next stall that caught my eye had a lot of brand new ELF makeup, which I'm a big fan of. The seller was a bit gutted that I wasn't taking him and his knitted wife together, but they were a fiver each and I didn't want to blow half my budget on myself, so I left his forlorn spouse abandoned and walked away with my woolly St Nick. None of her clothes were big enough for me, so I settled on a knitted Santa, pristine and perfect with a poofy knitted beard and a little sack I could put chocolate coins in. It's extremely sweet and, with no one around to knit me a cardi of my own, I decided to treat myself. I do maintain that there is no more adorable sight on this earth than a little baby in a cardigan knitted by someone who loves them. Not just that, but she'd knitted tea cosies, as well as cosies for your Terry's Chocolate Oranges and Ferrero Rochers. My first find came near the back of the field, where a lovely lady was selling knitted baby clothes and toys. Read more: We bought a £1 mystery item from a car boot sale - and one of us hated it
#Elf putty blush free#
I thought it'd be easy to do but, upon coming across a stall selling both a Free Willy VHS tape and a half-eaten jar of Branston Pickle, I was less sure. With a pocketful of change I'd successfully managed to negotiate for in Asda at the very last minute, I promised myself I wouldn't leave until I'd spent the entire thing. I had plans to Christmas shop, seeing how much of it I could get done with £20 in a field on a chilly autumn morning.
#Elf putty blush crack#
You see, we were car boot virgins, and you can read about what a wild experience that was for us both, here.īut what I didn't explain in that article was why I agreed to waking up before the crack of dawn to go there in the first place. Leading international certifiers PETA and Leaping Bunny have no information concerning this company’s use of animal testing.When my colleague Robson and I headed out to the massive eBoot car boot sale in Tamworth, neither of us had any idea of what to expect, nor what we hoped to buy when we got there.
#Elf putty blush skin#
For consumers who are concerned about companies’ policies on animal testing, Skin Deep reports this information. Some cosmetics companies have taken People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals and Leaping Bunny animal-testing pledges. PHENYL TRIMETHICONE, SILICA, ALUMINUM STARCH OCTENYLSUCCINATE, POLYMETHYL METHACRYLATE, POLYETHYLENE, MICROCRYSTALLINE WAX (CERA MICROCRISTALLINA), PHENOXYETHANOL, TOCOPHERYL ACETATE, CAPRYLYL GLYCOL, ARGANIA SPINOSA KERNEL OIL, GLYCERIN, DIETHYLHEXYL SYRINGYLIDENEMALONATE, CAPRYLIC/CAPRIC TRIGLYCERIDE MAY CONTAIN: TITANIUM DIOXIDE (CI 77891), RED 6 LAKE (CI 15850), RED 28 LAKE (CI 45410), BLUE 1 LAKE (CI 42090), RED 7 LAKE (CI 15850), YELLOW IRON OXIDE (CI 77492), BLACK IRON OXIDE (CI 77499), RED 22 LAKE (CI 45380), YELLOW 6 LAKE (CI 15985), RED IRON OXIDE (CI 77491) Product's animal testing policies
