$44.50 Value! New in Box!

MOST OF THESE COLORS AND BOTH FORMULAS ARE DISCONTINUED!!!


8 shades of lip colors in one palette! Create custom lip looks for any outfit and any occasion with this portable, do-it-yourself lip palette. Featuring four shades of Long Last Soft Matte Lipstick and four shades of Butter Shine Lipstick.


You can easily build your own custom shade or use each on its own. The palette features a mixing well and retractable, antibacterial lip brush for application ease and a spatula to mix colors.

Long Last Soft Matte Lipstick:
Pink Chocolate,
Vintage Wine,
Matte Magenta,
Matte Plum

Butter Shine Lipstick:
Baby Baby,
Pink Goddess,
Pink-a-Boo,
Raspberry Rush

Many of these colors are now discontinued!

How to use: Apply any shade using the retractable lip brush. To create a custom shade, use the spatula to pick up a color from the first row and dab into the empty mixing well. Wipe the spatula clean, then repeat with a color from the second row. Blend together, then apply. There are no rules-mix-and-match to your lips' desire.

Full Size. Total weight: . 0.14 oz / 4 g . Retail value $44.50!

Comes original Clinique box.

 

COPYRIGHT NOTICE: ALL IMAGES AND TEXT IS OURS! Under Fair Use, trademark and copyrighted allows a seller to use the name and a picture of the item they were selling. For example: If you are selling a Lancome or Dior Mascara you can say “This is a Lancome or Dior mascara” without infringing on the trademark. International law is consistent on these issues. All descriptions and pictures are taken with my camera and written up on my computer. The Lanham Act also specifically recognizes the “fair use” of a company’s trademark. The Fair Use Doctrine grants the use of a trademark under certain conditions. Copyright laws: Copyright law, like trademark law, grants a lot of exclusive rights to the holder of the copyright. It also states specific exceptions. The First Sale Doctrine is an important part of trademark law. Without it, owning something would be VERY complicated. The First Sale Doctrine says that once the owner of a copyrighted item sells it, or gives it away, the owner can no longer control what is done with the item. If that were not the case, you could not repaint your car, have a garage sale to get rid of junk, or donate that old computer to the charity. The First Sale Doctrine prevents the copyright owner from interfering with your use, alteration, and subsequent disposal of something you bought or received as a present. Suppose you purchased a coloring book manufactured by Disney and your child colored a picture making the Lion King purple. Should Disney have the right to have you arrested because your child didn’t use the correct colors? No. They lost control of that coloring book when you bought it. In short, fair use permits others to use a protected mark to describe aspects of their own goods, provided the use is in good faith and not as a mark. See 15 U.S.C. § 1115(b)(4) . That is precisely the case here. The “offending” use described is merely fair use to describe the product(s) offered for sale. The fair use doctrine permits use of a protected mark by others to describe certain aspects of the user’s own goods. See Car­Freshner Corp. v. S.C. Johnson & Son, Inc. , 70 F.3d 267, 270 (2d Cir. 1995).