I dread to think what it would have looked like if I’d used a full pump instead of half. It also seemed to sit on the surface of my skin, making it look caked and dried out. I’m 35 and I don’t like the way that L’Oreal True Match settled into my lines and made me look 5 years older than I usually look. It’s also not great for women with mature skin. I have really clear skin but this foundation left me looking like I was having a minor breakout around the side of one nostril because of the way it caked around my pores in that area. L’Oreal True Match is not good for enlarged pores, as it cakes around the edges of them, and the same is true of spots. My husband said there was no visible difference between my face and neck in natural light and asked if I’d blended it better (I half-assed the blending if I’m honest about it). If you struggle to find a foundation to match your skin tone, this is perfect. If you have greasy skin or younger skin than mine, this is the one for you. It’s also got quite good coverage and made my skin discoloration disappear quite well, so if you have freckles, rosacea or blue circles this will help. It’s still as good today at tone-matching as it was when I first bought it in 2014. L’Oreal True Match is good if you want a product that blends into your skin tone to achieve a flawless transition from your neck to your face. What it looked like on my face 20 What it’s good for Next I’m going to talk about the pros and cons of each foundation separately, before I bring all my thoughts together at the end. ![]() The improved packaging doesn’t look stronger, but a smaller lid means that the glass bottle is doing more to protect the foundation, as well as meaning the product’s plastic footprint is reduced. The packaging has been redesigned compared to my last bottle of L’Oreal True Match in 2016 which had a huge lid that cracked one day, causing foundation to fill my bag while I was in class. Ease of useīoth foundations were easy to use and packaged in identical push-top pump bottles with plastic lids. ![]() ![]() The obvious interpretation would be that skin could breathe through the product, and I definitely didn’t feel like it was clogging my pores or sinking into the lines on my face (although it did sink into the lines on my fingers). The L’Oreal Infallible 24 Hr Fresh Wear claimed to have “oxygen technology” but I don’t really understand what that’s supposed to mean and it didn’t elaborate anywhere on the bottle. ![]() The L’Oreal True Match claimed it had hyalauronic acid as one of the ingredients, which should have made my skin look better after I applied it. The L’Oreal Infallible 24 Hr Fresh Wear has SPF 25 which is a respectable amount that most people could safely wear on its own in a British or Irish summer. The L’Oreal True Match has SPF 17, which will work if you use a day cream with an SPF but probably isn’t enough to be ideal by itself. The top showing the shade and shade numbers (the same colour has different numbers on different foundations the True Match Ivory is 1.N and the 24 Hour Infallible Fresh Wear Ivory is 20: SPFīoth foundations had some SPF which was good. If you want to know whether to buy L’Oreal True Match or L’Oreal Infallible 24 hour foundation, read on to find out which is right for you. This made life a lot easier for me and meant I was able to confidently choose the right shade of both products to do this review comparison. I have bought L’Oreal True Match in the past, so I already knew that my perfect shade in L’Oreal foundations is Ivory (the palest neutral shade they offer). When there are no testers in some countries still because of Covid, the decision is even harder than it ever used to be. If you’re reading this, I imagine you’re doing what I did two days ago standing in front of the L’Oreal counter trying to decide between two different products. In this review I’m going to compare L’Oreal True Match foundation and L’Oreal Infallible 24hr foundation.
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