Black Lip Color

LIPSTICK QUEEN Black Lips

Soon after I blogged about Obsessive Compulsive’s expanded range of coloured lip balms, including its Tarred lip balm, I discovered the Black Tie Optional lipstick and sheer lip gloss from Poppy King’s Lipstick Queen.

As with Obsessive Compulsive’s Tarred lip balm, this lip color is not intended to be goth: it’s intended to deepen your lip color.

Thanks to jamiem from ThisNext for this discovery!

Aaron de Mey is the new Makeup Artistic Director for Lancôme, after the departure of Gucci Westman for Revlon. Picture below is the limited edition lip color set that he created for Lancôme. It features ‘Le Rouge’ Color Fever lipstick in a balanced red and Piha Black Color Fever Gloss. The Piha Black Color Fever Gloss was inspired by the black volcanic sands of Piha Beach in Aaron de Mey’s native New Zealand.


Aaron de Mey for Lancôme

For reviews, see We Try It: Black Lip Gloss from the Beauty Counter blog at style.com.

I’m a sinner, I’m a saint …

Lipstick Queen is a brand founded by Poppy King, who previously had her eponymous line and then, after her Poppy line collapsed, joined Prescriptives as its creative director.


Poppy King

As with her former line Poppy, Lipstick Queen is limited to lip color. Poppy King describes her Sinner lipsticks as “opaque, rich and creamy with a matte yet silky finish” and her Saint lipsticks as “The sheerest, moistest, most serene lipsticks you have ever tried.”

I tested lipsticks in both Sinner Rust and Saint Rust at the Soft Surroundings store in St. Louis, after the saleswoman told me that warm tones suited my complexion than cool tones and dissuaded me from wine or berry shades.

Sinner Rust was very matte, but not “creamy” or “silky,” as Poppy King described. I found the matte lipsticks very dry. I prefer lipsticks that are between cream and matte, with some luster.

Saint Rust is more a lip stain, and therefore not sheer. It is a little more creamy that other lip stains I’ve tried (Laura Mercier, Underground by Rimmel).

These lipsticks do not match Poppy King’s descriptions. Still, I like the Saint lipstick, but I’d be reluctant to shell out $20. I’d pass on the Sinner lipsticks.

UPDATE: The JC Report interviews Poppy King. She says, in words surprising for a beauty entrepreneur, ” Feminine is a construct, whereas female is a fact … To be in fashion right now means to understand the difference between feminine and female and to get the balance right: too feminine and we are back in the submission of the ’50s, too confrontational and it becomes ’80s power woman. … Perhaps if Hillary Clinton had got this sense of female right it may have turned out differently for her.”

It is not surprising that Poppy King would comment on politics: in Australia, she was part of the Australian Republican Movement.