
Why Your Lips Stay Chapped
10th February 2026
Why We Don’t Make “Baked” Mineral Makeup
26th February 2026When the Effort Changes
After a lifetime as a hairdresser — and more than a decade running English Mineral Makeup — I’ve spent a great many hours talking to women.
Salon chairs and makeup consultations look like they’re about hair and lipstick, but they’re really about life. Women talk there in a way they don’t always talk anywhere else. Quiet honesty appears while someone trims a fringe or hands over a mirror.
And over the years I’ve noticed something we rarely name.
Some women don’t stop wearing makeup because they’ve made a bold decision to “go natural”. They stop because they’re tired.
Not emotionally tired. Physically tired.
Wrists ache. Eyes water halfway through mascara. Skin suddenly reacts to products used happily for 30 years. Leaning into a magnifying mirror at 7am starts to feel like a sporting event.
Sometimes it isn’t just age. I’ve had women in my chair going through cancer treatment, others living with arthritis, autoimmune illness or chronic fatigue — hands painful, grip weak, shoulders stiff. Things that once took five minutes now genuinely hurt.
We talk a lot about women trying too hard to look young. We talk far less about what happens when the effort simply becomes too much — and how that quietly affects confidence.
It Was Never Really About Vanity
I often wonder: Do women feel less visible because they stop wearing makeup? Or do they stop wearing makeup because they already feel less visible?
For many women, makeup wasn’t vanity. It was readiness. A small signal that said, I’m up, I’m prepared, I’m entering the day.
When the routine drops away, something subtle goes with it. Not beauty. - Presence.
When Effort Becomes the Problem The sentence I hear most often is: “I didn’t stop because I wanted to… it just became a palaver.”
Midlife introduces friction. Foundation shows lines instead of softening them. Eyes water. Hands aren’t steady.
At 25 you can do your makeup while making toast. At 55 — or when your hands hurt — it requires concentration. When the effort outweighs the reward, women quietly let it go. Not as a statement, simply practicality.
Why Ease Matters
This is why simple routines suddenly matter. Loose minerals work with you rather than against you. You gently buff instead of paint. No pulling delicate skin, no precise lines, no layers to correct. You don’t need perfect eyesight or a strong grip and you can stop halfway and still look like yourself.
For women with sore joints, reduced dexterity or fatigue, that matters enormously.
The feeling isn’t, I look younger. It’s: I can still do this.
Sometimes the real gift isn’t coverage. It’s removing the effort.
The Other Kind of Invisibility
Many women don’t feel invisible in public. They feel invisible at home. They are a mother, grandmother, partner — often the organiser of everybody’s lives.
They may have a full loving family and yet still say quietly, “I don’t know where I went.” They are constantly needed but not always noticed. Everything works because they are there — birthdays remembered, worries absorbed, plans organised. A woman can matter enormously… but not feel seen as an individual anymore.
A Small Ritual
For many women, a little makeup was never about attracting attention. It was a moment of self-recognition. A pause that said: I am not only everyone else’s support system. I am a person entering the day. When that disappears, what’s missed is not lipstick. It’s that moment.
I don’t believe midlife women care less about themselves. I think they measure energy carefully and choose what supports them. And sometimes five gentle minutes with a soft brush and a familiar face in the mirror restores something surprisingly important: Not perfection. Just the quiet feeling — I’m still here.




