Lilac/silver pearl
Apologies - I got caught up yesterday and didn't get time to post.
So here's my delayed Vintage Valentine. Another Rimmel 60 Seconds from the '90's but I think we'll all agree this one is much less desirable than the previous stunner!
Odyssey is a silver/lilac pearl. In sunlight it looks more silver, in shade more lilac.
It's pretty but also pretty brushstrokey and I can see in the third swatch, a bit bald near the cuticles, I probably should've done 3 coats.
Swatches are 2 coats, no top coat.
So not such a great colour but I do really like the bottle shape on these old Rimmels.
Showing posts with label Rimmel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rimmel. Show all posts
Sunday, 8 February 2015
Thursday, 5 February 2015
Vintage Valentines - Rimmel 60 Seconds Extreme - Zeitgeist 878
Stunning plum/green duochrome
Rimmel were probably the first nail polish brand I was aware of. Back in the 70's they marketed themselves through double page ads in women's weeklies like Woman and Woman's Own. Spread across two pages they would showcase each shade and variant of a particular product, foundation & blusher, eye products and nail polish. The nail polish ad consisted of a grid of close to 100 close-ups of stylised nails each painted with a different Rimmel shade, like some kind of periodic table of nail polish!
I haven't been able to find the exact ad I remember but this one is close...
My sister and I would pore over the ads, each choosing our favourites in turn - if only we'd had the money as pre-teens to buy any of them!
In the early 80's I finally had money (courtesy of a job delivering local free papers) and would excitedly head to Woolworths in Canterbury to peruse the selection in person.
Of course back then they were mostly shades of red, pink and pinky nude with the odd purple, blue or green shade to add excitement. And I was more interested in the pearls and frosts than boring cremes, how times change!
Fast forward to the 90's and Rimmel is no longer one of a small number of players with the market sewn up, all kinds of new drugstore brands have come along, and everyone has to up their game. So, perhaps influenced by the extreme colours and formulations of people like Urban Decay, Hard Candy and Rimmel's drugstore rivals Revlon and their Streetwear range, Rimmel put out all sorts of amazing colours under their 60 seconds and Lasting Colour ranges.
Here is one of the standout shades from that time, Zeitgeist, a fantastic name for an amazing polish.
Zeitgeist is a strong plum/green duochrome. The plum is warm, pinkish and somewhat muted, the green is yellow toned, almost olive.
In artificial light it's plum with a hint of green but in sunlight it really comes alive. The duochrome flip is so strong you can get both colours showing on even moderate length nails.
Swatches shown are 2 coats.
Sadly, as you can see, I have a duff bottle and all of the white overlay printing has come loose and moved around and I've had to put sticky tape over the bottle to try and preserve what's left. After I'd taken these pictures I found another bottle of Zeitgeist in my stash, label still intact.
Application on this one was a bit odd but that may have been down to the many drops of thinner I'd had to add. From my limited research it seems a number of the 8xx series Rimmels were standout shades, including Climax, Zenith, Mania (coming up) and Fanatic. And what awesome names.
Rimmel were probably the first nail polish brand I was aware of. Back in the 70's they marketed themselves through double page ads in women's weeklies like Woman and Woman's Own. Spread across two pages they would showcase each shade and variant of a particular product, foundation & blusher, eye products and nail polish. The nail polish ad consisted of a grid of close to 100 close-ups of stylised nails each painted with a different Rimmel shade, like some kind of periodic table of nail polish!
I haven't been able to find the exact ad I remember but this one is close...
My sister and I would pore over the ads, each choosing our favourites in turn - if only we'd had the money as pre-teens to buy any of them!
In the early 80's I finally had money (courtesy of a job delivering local free papers) and would excitedly head to Woolworths in Canterbury to peruse the selection in person.
Of course back then they were mostly shades of red, pink and pinky nude with the odd purple, blue or green shade to add excitement. And I was more interested in the pearls and frosts than boring cremes, how times change!
Fast forward to the 90's and Rimmel is no longer one of a small number of players with the market sewn up, all kinds of new drugstore brands have come along, and everyone has to up their game. So, perhaps influenced by the extreme colours and formulations of people like Urban Decay, Hard Candy and Rimmel's drugstore rivals Revlon and their Streetwear range, Rimmel put out all sorts of amazing colours under their 60 seconds and Lasting Colour ranges.
Here is one of the standout shades from that time, Zeitgeist, a fantastic name for an amazing polish.
Zeitgeist is a strong plum/green duochrome. The plum is warm, pinkish and somewhat muted, the green is yellow toned, almost olive.
In artificial light it's plum with a hint of green but in sunlight it really comes alive. The duochrome flip is so strong you can get both colours showing on even moderate length nails.
Swatches shown are 2 coats.
Sadly, as you can see, I have a duff bottle and all of the white overlay printing has come loose and moved around and I've had to put sticky tape over the bottle to try and preserve what's left. After I'd taken these pictures I found another bottle of Zeitgeist in my stash, label still intact.
Application on this one was a bit odd but that may have been down to the many drops of thinner I'd had to add. From my limited research it seems a number of the 8xx series Rimmels were standout shades, including Climax, Zenith, Mania (coming up) and Fanatic. And what awesome names.
Sunday, 13 February 2011
Rimmel - Electric 397
Dark blue with glitter
Yet another TJ Hughes bargain.


Electric is a Rimmel Wear Maxx, presumably a long wearing formula.
It's a dark/navy blue with lots of fine blue glitter and this is 2 coats, no topcoat.
It's pretty, who doesn't love a dark blue glitter, but I'm pretty certain I've got a few others like this.... One for the de-duping pile I think.
Yet another TJ Hughes bargain.
Electric is a Rimmel Wear Maxx, presumably a long wearing formula.
It's a dark/navy blue with lots of fine blue glitter and this is 2 coats, no topcoat.
It's pretty, who doesn't love a dark blue glitter, but I'm pretty certain I've got a few others like this.... One for the de-duping pile I think.
Thursday, 22 April 2010
Rimmel - Purple Addict
After yesterday's nostalgia-fest here's another modern Rimmel
This is Purple Addict - now there's a name a lot of polish fans can buy into!
Apologies but these aren't the best pictures or the best application, there seem to be bubbles or bits on a couple of nails - doh!
Please, ignore the errors and enjoy the purple goodness...
Sun

Shade
Two coats, no top coat.
This is Purple Addict - now there's a name a lot of polish fans can buy into!
Apologies but these aren't the best pictures or the best application, there seem to be bubbles or bits on a couple of nails - doh!
Please, ignore the errors and enjoy the purple goodness...
Sun
Shade
Two coats, no top coat.
Wednesday, 21 April 2010
Rimmel - Black Pearl
It seems strange that I haven't shown you any Rimmel before. Rimmel along with Cutex, are probably the brands I've associated with nail polish (and removal) the longest.
I can remember as a young girl, probably about 10 or 11, pouring over the adverts Rimmel used to run in Woman and Woman's Own (weekly housewife type mags).
Back then they'd run a double page spread with swatches of all the nail colours, bliss! Of course this was when it was plain old Rimmel, not the Rimmel London it is today.
Unfortunately of all the magazines I kept (you don't wanna know!) , I didn't keep any of those and so I'm still searching for a copy of that original advert. I did find a fragment on the web which I'll share with you

Just imagine a whole page of this... The prices ranged from 15p to a heady 34p each
Enough of the reminiscing here's a swatch of a very modern Rimmel polish - they did have pale green and blue but definitely no charcoal!
This is from the Rimmel - Lycra Pro range and goes by the evocative name of Black Pearl
Shade

Sun
It's a charcoal with very fine silver/multi shimmery fine glitter.
This is 2 coats with no top coat and it's not the shiniest of polishes
Application was ok but it had one of those weird pro brushes like Sally Hansen which I don't have much experience of and I have teeny nails.
Overall I like it... Anyone else have fond memories of vintage nail polishes?
I can remember as a young girl, probably about 10 or 11, pouring over the adverts Rimmel used to run in Woman and Woman's Own (weekly housewife type mags).
Back then they'd run a double page spread with swatches of all the nail colours, bliss! Of course this was when it was plain old Rimmel, not the Rimmel London it is today.
Unfortunately of all the magazines I kept (you don't wanna know!) , I didn't keep any of those and so I'm still searching for a copy of that original advert. I did find a fragment on the web which I'll share with you
Just imagine a whole page of this... The prices ranged from 15p to a heady 34p each
Enough of the reminiscing here's a swatch of a very modern Rimmel polish - they did have pale green and blue but definitely no charcoal!
This is from the Rimmel - Lycra Pro range and goes by the evocative name of Black Pearl
Shade
Sun
It's a charcoal with very fine silver/multi shimmery fine glitter.
This is 2 coats with no top coat and it's not the shiniest of polishes
Application was ok but it had one of those weird pro brushes like Sally Hansen which I don't have much experience of and I have teeny nails.
Overall I like it... Anyone else have fond memories of vintage nail polishes?
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