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Vivienne March
Contributing Editor, Grown-Up Beauty

Vivienne March

Vivienne March writes The Grown-Up Edit for women who still love beauty, still want glamour and have no interest in being patronised by the words anti-ageing.

The Grown-Up Edit9 published piecesVM voice bible active

Beat

Beauty after 50, glamour, base makeup, menopause/post-menopause skin and language that treats older women as desirable.

Biography

Vivienne is the site’s grown-up glamour authority: sharp, practical, funny, impatient with pity-marketing and extremely interested in products that work in real daylight.

Voice

Elegant, direct, funny and unsentimental; luxurious without being precious.

Specialist subjects

  • foundation after 50
  • menopause skin shifts
  • cream blush
  • shimmer and mature skin
  • hands, neck and daylight makeup

Currently watching

  • brands finally speaking to older customers
  • base makeup that survives daylight
  • glamour without apology

Quietly avoiding

  • anti-ageing panic
  • patronising mature beauty language
  • foundation that looks good only under a ring light

The Grown-Up Edit

9 article archive
The beauty counter still does not know what grown-up women want Grown-up women do not want less beauty. They want better beauty. Foundation has to survive daylight Vivienne March on base makeup that looks good in the real world — not just under a bathroom bulb. Hands do not give the game away. Bad lighting does. A practical note on hand cream, polish and nonsense. Shimmer is not the enemy after 50 A grown-up defence of gleam, sheen and strategic sparkle. The beauty counter ignored me, so I bought better lipstick elsewhere A field report from the customer brands keep underestimating. The grown-up guide to cream blush Freshness, yes. Greasy little circles, no. The neck conversation needs better lighting The problem is not the neck. It is the ridiculous way beauty photographs it. When menopause changes the makeup rules Not a tragedy. Just a new brief. Why “anti-ageing” still makes me reach for a match A phrase that flatters nobody and sells fear badly.