Fake Urban Decay Palettes: How I Ended Up With An Ebay Fake

It was mid-December and the buzz surrounding the release of the Urban Decay Naked 3 palette was gripping the beauty community. I had done my research and had already chosen my favourite shades.

And with my birthday and Christmas falling on the same week, I thought I may have just dropped enough hints to get my paws on this beauty. And for a makeup obsessive like me, more eye shadows were EXACTLY what I needed.

Makeup artist applying eyeshadow

So I  was pretty excited when Boyfriend produced a palette-shaped gift on my birthday. I took it out of its box to admire the shades and that beautiful rose-gold packaging.

But something was irking me - there was a blue-grey shade in the palette that I was certain I had not seen in any swatch photos or videos. 

I had a good look at it and realised that the swatch photographs on the back of the box were a range of different colours (green, purple, blue) but with the same names of the shades in the REAL Naked 3 palette. It was most definitely a fake and I was gutted.

naked 3 palette fake

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Now, let me state for the record that Boyfriend is an internet-savvy kind of guy. This is not your grandma assuming that the bags on the market stalls in Gran Canaria are genuine Chanel for €20. So I was really surprised when he told me that he had paid €75 for it on eBay, convinced it was the real deal.

And to add insult to makeup injury, my mother had done something similar. She had picked me up a fake Naked palette when shopping around Meath Street before Christmas. It was the one palette I didn’t have and though she knew it was a fake when she picked it up for €25, she thought it would make a good stocking filler nonetheless.

She had bought me quite a few genuine Urban Decay products for Christmas and so I never imagined any of them were fakes. I sat down to swatch the palette, applying an eyeshadow and photographing it, before removing it and applying another. I was only four or five eyeshadows in when I realised that ‘Half-Baked’, an eyeshadow I have had in several other palettes before, was the completely wrong colour. Then I noticed how some of the pans looked like they were about to fall right out of the palette.

Urban Decay Naked vs Faked

 

  • My mother instantly confessed to the bogus stocking bonus. Little did she know that the eye I was swatching on would hurt for the rest of the day. Often from applying and removing eyeshadow continuously, my eyelids can get a little chapped or dry but this was genuine pain in the inner corner of my eye and it remained red for the entire day.
  • You see, that’s the thing about fakes – they are not approved by anybody, they don’t have to pass any regulations, they don’t even have to be made with skin-safe ingredients! So I urge you to please be careful where you are purchasing your cosmetics and never knowingly buy a fake.
  • You may think it will make a great cheap gift for your little cousin and “she’ll never know the difference” but the truth is that it may be seriously damaging. A sore eye for a day doesn’t seem like much but I have heard so many horror stories about fake products leading to skin reactions that it was enough to terrify me to the core and I was glad to have an eyeball left at the end of the day.
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Do you have any experiences with fake products? Would you knowingly buy one? And how do you check you are buying a legitimate product?

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