Lip & Cheek Rouge - Viola

$20.00
Write a Review
Shipping:
Calculated at Checkout

A natural formula that provides moisture and protection with rich colour for a lovely, natural finish on lips or cheeks. 

Shade Description: A true cool pink, so classic and sophisticated; a natural pop of bright colour.

Flavour: Mango Peach 

Swatch Shades (beginning at the wrist): Abigail, Charlotte, Nellie, Isabella, Harriet, Maud, Viola

How to Use: 

Lips: Apply it directly from the glass jar with the tip of your finger. Or for a more precise application, apply it with the Pure Anada Retractable Lip Brush.

Cheeks: Apply it directly from the glass jar with the tip of your finger. Pat the pigment gently on the apple of your cheeks. You can also use the Pure Anada mini kabuki brush. Simply swirl the brush into the product, and stipple it onto cheeks.

Ingredients: Ricinus Communis (Castor) Seed Oil*, Argania Spinosa (Argan) Kernel Oil*, Cera Flava (Beeswax), Cocos Nucifera (Coconut) Oil, Simmondsia Chinensis (Jojoba) Seed Oil*, Copernicia Cerifera (Carnauba) Wax, Tocopherol, Aroma*, Maltodextrin, May Contain: CI 77891, CI 75470, CI 77491, CI 77742 *Ingredients from organic farming

100% of Ingredients from Natural Origin

crueltyfreelogo-cmyk-300.jpg

Size: 5g glass jar

SKU: 039853103118

 

***For information regarding our Tester Policy, please click here.***

 

 

Each shade of Pure Anada Lip & Cheek Rouge is proudly named after a noteworthy Canadian woman:

Viola Desmond 

In 1946, entrepreneur and hairdresser Viola Desmond, defied the odds and withstood racial inequality at a movie theatre by refusing to move from the whites only seating area to a section of the theatre unofficially set aside for black moviegoers. Viola was arrested for the stand she chose to take, was placed in jail for the night, and was convicted without legal representation of an obscure tax offence – an offence that would not be pardoned until 2010. Despite officials denying that Viola’s case had anything to do with her race, her refusal to accept an act of racial discrimination stirred the black population of Nova Scotia and sparked change. Segregation was legally ended in Nova Scotia in 1954. In 2018, Viola Desmond was the first Canadian woman to be featured by herself on the face of the $10 bank note and was also named a National Historic Person by the Canadian government.

You can read an article featuring Viola Desmond at The Canadian Encyclopedia.