Dodatkowe przykłady dopasowywane są do haseł w zautomatyzowany sposób - nie gwarantujemy ich poprawności.
So many women don't know where to put their blusher.
You just need to not have an edge to your blusher.
To find the right place to apply your blusher you should smile!
A tiny little man with sharp, black eyes touched up her blusher.
Baby has those cute cheeks, so a lot of blusher is used.
She'd probably meant to add lipstick or blusher and then had forgotten.
In chronic blushers, though, there may be no obvious trigger.
The foundation looked OK and the blusher was in the right place.
I also pat it on to the cheeks for a creamy blusher.
Putting blusher too low on the cheeks; it's very ageing.
She had no need to shadow it with blusher.
It’s important to use a good blusher brush so it doesn’t look patchy.
Gemma: Put the brush down and step away from the blusher.
I was getting pretty good at makeup, eye shadow, blusher, lipstick.
And not one actress has been allowed blusher or access to dry shampoo.
Add a bit of colour with this new blusher in a pretty coral orange shade.
The lipstick was also used as a blusher to add a dash of colour to our cheeks.
I was going to wear a blusher veil and antique gloves.
How do you get a sculpted look with blusher?
We always reapply foundation, blusher and powder throughout the flight.
He's bbishingl Wednesday, my sweet, you brought me a blusher.
A larger size brush in natural bristle used to apply blusher.
But when we tasted the amanita rubescens later that night, it was indeed delicious and produced no ill effects.
Amanita rubescens (The Blusher), which can be reduced to much the same colour by weather.
Furthermore, phalloidin is also found in the edible (and sought after) Blusher (Amanita rubescens).
Amanita rubescens (European blusher)
Amanita rubescens (The Blusher).
If it is a form that has a pale-colored, yellowish-brown cap, Amanita regalis may be confused with the blusher (Amanita rubescens, edible).
Its larvae have been found growing in various fungi (Amanita rubescens, Clitocybe nebularis, Lepista flaccida, Xerula radicata) and also under tree bark.
Yet Hugh Fearnley Whittingstall illustrated the blusher, Amanita rubescens, as one of the safe edible mushrooms (if well cooked) in a Saturday Guardian 'giveaway' this year.
Compared to three other wild edible mushroom species also tested in the study (Amanita rubescens, Boletus frostii, and Ramaria flava), L. indigo contained the highest saturated fatty acids content, including stearic acid with 32.1 mg/g-slightly over half of the total free fatty acid content.