Loose Powders
2
Our customer service team in the US is ready to assist you.
Monday - Friday
7 AM – 4 PM PT
Saturday
7 AM – 4 PM PT
Please help us maintain positive conversations here by following our guidelines below.
We reserve the right to remove comments and topics that don't adhere to the following rules. We also may remove the profile of any repeat offender. Thanks for reading and contributing!
Beautylish is a diverse, positive, and respectful community. It’s okay to disagree with someone, but be constructive—not rude. We have a zero-tolerance policy for negativity and harassment.
Take the time to make posts easy to understand by using proper spelling, grammar, and capitalization. Post topics in the appropriate category and refrain from making duplicate posts. Know that we don't allow self-promotion, advertisements, spam, commercial messages, or links to other websites or blogs. And be careful that you don't post someone else's work and present or claim it as your own.
We reserve the right to remove duplicate, miscategorized, and difficult-to-understand posts, or those we deem as advertisements, spam, or plagiarism.
Use the flag button to report inappropriate or disrespectful behavior, or email us at help@beautylish.com.
Jul 29, 2012
Olga T.
How does ELF hd loose powder works? Does it really gives a Matt finish like the MUFE loose powder?
Jul 30, 2012
Shelly T.
The MUFE HD powder is just silica powder (and is too expensive for what it is and for how much you get). The e.l.f HD powder is a mix of silica powder and dimethicone spheres (which is somewhat more reasonably priced but also skimps a bit on product).
Silicones give a product slip. I used to use the e.l.f. HD powder, and I have combination/oily skin (oily T-zone); it didn't really make a ton of difference for me.