July 22, 2021

KVD Beauty Epic Kiss Nourishing Vegan Butter Lipstick Available in Full and Mini Sizes

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KVD Beauty Epic Kiss Nourishing Vegan Butter Lipstick ($22 for Full-Size or $12 for Mini Sizes) are a new hybrid lipstick that pays the pigment and color pay off of a lipstick and the nourishing, hydrate, and shiny finish of a balm into one formula.

I swear this is the product that is going to get me back into KVD Beauty again. I am the biggest sucker for freaking lip butters! Available in 15 shades these contain vegan cupua�u butter that give the formula a rich, buttery, balm-like texture.

I just hope none one blows them up on Tiktok because I probably won’t buy them if they do. Because the way KVD Good Apple Skin-Perfecting Hydrating Foundation Balm was blown right the hell out of the water because of Tiktok is still making my head feel like its spinning. I was convinced that stuff was not great but everyone and their moms too were singing about how great it was across Tiktok and the damn thing sold out in a flash! Several weeks later the really bad reviews started pouring in and now we can see who might have been fibbing a little about how amazing, incredible, brilliant, fantastic, terrific, and mind blowing it really is. Mmm Hmmm! I see you Tiktokers!

None the less, I better try these before they are ruined for me by Tiktok! Good news! I don’t have to splurge the $22 on a full-size. There’s a few shades available in a mini size for $12! Minis are 0.02 oz for $12. Oddly, the full-size are 0.03 oz for $22 so the minis are actually not too bad a deal.

They also kept one of Kat’s original and most popular shades, Lolita! I’ll be trying the first.

Do you think KVD Beauty Epic Kiss Nourishing Vegan Butter Lipstick is going to be great?

Or another eh product?

Where to buy

Ulta

5 Comments

I receive a small commission if you shop through my link.

About the Muse

Isabella MuseIsabella is just an average everyday geeky girl who doesn’t blend her eyeshadow correctly, wears too much blush, and hopes she never finds her holy grail products because she likes the thrill of the chase so much. Her mission is to bring you super honest reviews on makeup, skincare, fragrance and all things beauty. She’s in no way an expert on the topic and she sure as hell isn’t a super model. But she’s passionate about makeup and is seeking like-minded individuals that like pina coladas, getting caught in the rain, and ones that enjoy spending hundreds of dollars at Sephora without feeling buyer’s remorse. If you’re that person feel free to reach out and leave a comment or follow me on Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, and Bloglovin‘.

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Comments

  • kjh

    Is TikTok actually translated from an Asian language, meaning Hype Talk? An endless font of positivity, meaning nothing? You could fill us in on the post-Kat story of the brand. How KVDVB is in Ulta, etc. I think Lolita is a grand color. And I hate the cancel culture that lobbies against the shade due to the name association. And I mean with the Nabokov novel, not K herself. If you�re grossed out by an older man�s obsession with a young girl, don�t buy it. Don�t read it, and don�t watch the aging-well Jeremy Irons in the film. Don�t watch Rohmer�s Claire�s Knee. The theme is universal and timeless. But DON�T believe you have the right to make others follow suit in your thought. Giorgio Armani has an entire lipstick collection name/inspired by Thomas Mann�s Death in Venice. Grossly the same story, but very Germanic, and the older gent is repressedly in love with the perfect young man. Gay. SHOCK! Immediate cancel (except the cancellators have no idea about Tadzio or any of it.). Nobody bitches about that collection, because they are ignorant of the origin of the names. I�m coining a phrase: IT�S FUCKING LITERATURE, SO DEAL WITH IT. I hate how this nation is becoming at once polarized and self-righteous. Thank god you work at bringing some genuine positivity.

    • Isabella Muse

      I’ve always had a really sore spot about cancel culture too! I get your frustration especially about shade names (Orgasm, Deep Throat, etc…). I’m quite a liberal person and the shades names have never shocked me. People are very sensitive lately. Especially with the pandemic! I really feel like I have to tiptoe around what I say because someone is instantly emailing, commenting, or contacting me some other way about being hurt about what I said or annoyed by it or to correct me etc…! It’s a hard call. May�December relationships fall into that space where people become highly sensitive. 🙂 thanks for the vote there! I try to do my best girl!

      • kjh

        Yeah, tiptoe. I work a night retail job and have had to invent new shade names to tell customers. Nars Do It, rather than Do Me, Baby. Bec if you said the real name, you�d be reported to corporate. Now, that same caller might be jerking her child by the arm or letting the young�un climb the shelves, but that caller has righteous indignation that you say something that is sex related. Guess what, the names are too indirect and multiple-meaning for the kids to understand anything beyond the literal meaning. Freedom of speech? Only for some. I�m real tired of all the targeted criticism. No one deserves that. Let he who throws the first stone�. Let�s follow Iz and try to be our best, most tolerant selves. Like KIMMWC, in on the mini. Sue me. Jail me. As long as the mattress is soft�.

  • Kimmwc03

    OK, they got me on the Lolita shade in the mini size butter lipstick. I’ll give it a shot. I had given up on this brand years ago but I’ll give this a go.
    (And I’m not offended by the lipstick name despite being familiar with the novel and film.)

    • Isabella Muse

      I’m curious! I tried the mini too! maybe it’ll be awesome!