Dior Rosewood (012) Rosy Glow Blush Review & Swatches
Rosewood (012)
Dior Rosewood (012) Rosy Glow Blush ($40.00 for 0.16 oz.) is a dusty, darker coral-pink with subtle, warm undertones and a flat, matte finish.
- Semi-sheer coverage, buildable to medium coverage
- Firm, stiff, dry texture; had to be scraped to loosen product for use
- Applied unevenly, difficult to blend out
- Lasted for seven hours but looked patchier after five hours
FURTHER READING: Formula Overview for details on general performance and characteristics (like scent).
Top Dupes
- Marc Jacobs Beauty Tantalize Glo (Blush) (LE, ).
- ColourPop Glass Slipper (DC, $12.00).
- MAC Happy-Go-Rosy (P, $29.00).
- Haus Labs Hibiscus Haze (P, $38.00).
- MAC Fleur Power (P, $24.00).
- NARS Angel Pride IV (LE, $30.00).
- ColourPop Mistress (LE, $12.00).
Formula Overview
$40.00/0.16 oz. - $250.00 Per Ounce
The formula is supposed to "last all day long" that "reacts to skin's moisture level" and its pH to deliver a "customized color." The texture is described as "ultra-fine" and "lightweight" so that it blends well and feels weightless. It was also described as being buildable, and it had semi-sheer to medium, somewhat buildable coverage.
If you can dislodge the powder away from the surface, it's a decent blush; it seemed kind of flat and was more apt to emphasize skin texture/dryness compared to other blush formulas. Some shades blended out better than others, but the texture of all the blushes I tried in the range was incredibly firm, stiff, and prone to developing hard-pan within a handful of uses. I felt like I was constantly using a paper towel to break up that top surface to get product to apply and to swatch.
The "customized color" it gave me often was in the form of making the application seem patchier over time, which was more noticeable with medium and deeper colors against my skin tone. (Naturally, the closer your skin tone is to the blush color, the less apparent some patchiness will be.)
On my skin, they lasted around seven hours on me, so a little below average, but about half the shades turned patchier and seemed to "sink" into my pores over time.
From a texture standpoint, these are some of the worst high-end blushes I've come across. Usually, the textures at this price point are incredibly silky, smooth, and blendable, but wow, what a total miss.
Browse all of our Dior Rosy Glow Blush swatches.
Ingredients
SYNTHETIC FLUORPHLOGOPITE • MICA • DIMETHICONE • BORON NITRIDE • LAUROYL LYSINE • ZINC STEARATE • SILICA • CELLULOSE • CAPRYLYL GLYCOL • ETHYLHEXYLGLYCERIN • SODIUM DEHYDROACETATE • PENTYLENE GLYCOL • STEARIC ACID • AQUA (WATER) • TOCOPHEROL • [+/- CI 77891 (TITANIUM DIOXIDE) • CI 77491, CI 77492, CI 77499 (IRON OXIDES) • CI 73360 (RED 30 LAKE) • CI 45410 (RED 27)]
Disclaimer: Ingredient lists are as available by the brand (or retailer) at the time of publishing. Please always check product packaging, if it exists, for the ingredient list applicable to the product you're purchasing, or the brand or retailer's website for the most up-to-date ingredient list.
This release is nothing, if not consistent. Boo and bummer.
I’m sure that it took much finagling on your end to get this shade to look as lovely as it does in the picture. Either that, or a mix-up in photos. Because it doesn’t look bad the way that the majority of the reformulated Dior Backstage Blushes have. Still, I’m not chancing it, and probably have something just like it anyway. Matter of fact, I’m sure that I do!
A big disappointment.