Urban Decay Vice & Glinda Palettes – Are There Dupes?

As soon as Urban Decay released the Oz Palettes, I snatched up Theodora. I knew that the browns are different from those in my other UD palettes just by looking at them and knew that they would be put into heavy rotation as part of my shadow collection. The Glinda palette held me up though. My brain just kept repeating, “Do I need this palette? Is it just me, or do some of these shades look familiar?” After one such session of musing over the palette, I went home and flipped open my Vice palette. Aha! Tornado and South looked suspiciously familiar to some of my Vice colors. However, were they spot-on dupes? I wasn’t quite convinced.

Wayfaring Beauty

Glinda and Freakshow

Vice

Vice

Turns out, I was right about the colors not being spot-on duplicates for one another. However, some shades were pretty darn close! For the record, the majority of Glinda’s shades are unique. I have nothing else in my shadow collection that compares to Aura or Magic; Illusion looks like other fleshy, transition shades on me just because it disappears into my skin tone; I don’t own anything like the silver from Oz, although the gold isn’t totally original.

First up, the purples. Rapture and Vice are from the Vice palette; Tornado is from Glinda; Freakshow is a standalone for me but is also found in the Fun palette. Each color is labeled – click to enlarge. Lighting is listed as a caption. As a heads up, no that is no swatching mistake – I tacked Vice on twice so that it could be better compared to Freakshow.

Natural lighting

Natural lighting

Indoors w/ flash

Indoors w/ flash

Indoors w/o flash

Indoors w/o flash

The breakdown: Rapture is like a dark burgundy-based purple that’s been muted a little. It’s frosty with some subtle glitter. Vice is a violet-based purple, also with a frosty shimmer finish. It applied stronger than Rapture for me. It’s pretty darn close to Freakshow, which is also a violet-based purple. Both are medium, bordering on dark, and frosted with great pigmentation. I can see a difference between them but you probably don’t really need both shades in your collection. Tornado looks much different when swatched next to these shades than it did in the pan. It’s a rich, red-based purple with a frosted shimmer finish. While the undertones are similar to Vice and Freakshow, it’s a deeper, warmer purple. Close but no cigar!

Next up: the taupes. I wasn’t sure how close Armor (Vice) and South (Glinda) were, but I knew that they were both taupes that looked suspiciously similar in the pan. Again, each swatch is labeled and lighting is in the captions.

Natural light

Indoors w/o flash

Indoors w/ flash

Indoors w/ flash

Natural light

Natural light

The breakdown: Armor (Vice) is a gray-brown taupe with a frosted finish; so is South (Glinda). The difference is that South is noticeable cooler; I’d say it’s the more gray-based of the two since Armor looks much more warm and brown-based next to it. They’re like siblings but not twins. Do you honestly need both? Probably not. Does it hurt to have both? Not for me, they’ll both get used; if you aren’t into taupes though, stick with one or go buy a single of Mushroom, another close UD color that I actually don’t own.

The verdict? Urban Decay isn’t kidding when they say that new release shades in palettes are unique – technically, they are. However, some shades have pretty close matches in other palettes or existing singles. Sneaky, sneaky. If you love one or two shades in a palette but don’t think the whole shebang is worth your money, it’s probably worth doing a little side-by-side swatching to find a close comparison.

Swatches and my review of Urban Decay’s new Oz Palettes are here! – Click photos to enlarge

I went to work today thinking nothing would special happen, but when I got there my manager had a special message for this UD-lover – “Jay, guess what we got? I know you’ll be happy – we got the new UD Oz palettes!” Needless to say, I took off running towards them and they are indeed fabuloussss.

Each palette features six full-size eye shadows, a travel-size 24/7 eyeliner, and a full-size Super Saturated lip gloss pencil. The Glinda and Theodora palettes each also feature their own unique palette artwork. A nice feature? The eyeshadow pots are designed to be able to pop out of the case and placed into a Build-Your-Own palette. Each palette retails for $49. When I first heard the price tag for these palettes, I was a little dismayed. However, it’s actually a great deal for UD. The shadows and the lip gloss pencil are full size – normally the shadows retail for $18.00 and the gloss for $19.00. We’ll say the travel pencil is $9.50 since it’s travel sized and the full-size pencils retail for $19.00. This means your Oz palette is worth about $136 in retail value, but is only costing you $49.00 as the palette – that sounds much better, right?

Now what you’ve really wanted to see out of this post – pictures! First up is my favorite of the two, the sultry Theodora palette. This palette is made up of darker, moodier browns and greens – and believe it or not, there were some mattes in there!

From left to right: Theodora Lip Pencil, Broken, Beware, Bewitch, West, Spell (dual shade), and Jealous (dual shade)

From left to right: Theodora Lip Pencil, Broken, Beware, Bewitch, West, Spell (dual shade), and Jealous (dual shade)

Theodora is a bright, juicy red lip color. Broken is a shimmery white highlight, similar to Naked’s Virgin. Bewitch is a warm, matte fawn brown; I didn’t swatch them side by side, but it reminds me of Buck or a darker Faint. Bewitch is a deeper, duskier matte brown. West is a deep burgandy-brown shimmer with amazingggg payoff. Spell is a soft black with gold and green microglitter and a dark, metallic gold. Jealous is a bright, light green and a slightly deeper green, both pearlized (they make me think of a mojito!).

From left to right: West, Spell (black and gold), and Jealous (greens)

From left to right: West, Spell (black and gold), and Jealous (greens)

From left ro right: Theodora lip pencil, Broken, Beware, Bewitch, and West

From left ro right: Theodora lip pencil, Broken, Beware, Bewitch, and West

Below are swatches for the delicate, feminine Glinda palette. This one is made up of shimmery pinks, nudes, and metallics.

From left to right: Tornado, Aura, Magic, Illusion, Oz (dual shade), South (dual shade), and Glinda lip pencil

From left to right: Tornado, Aura (dual shade), Magic, Illusion, Oz (dual shade), South, and Glinda lip pencil

Tornado is a deep purple. Aura is a light, shimmery lavender and nude – this one is a little irridescent, which is awesome, even if it doesn’t really show up on my skin tone. Magic is a soft, pale pink. Illusion is a champagne peach. Oz is a dual metallic/glittery gold and silver. South is a gray/taupe with a silvery glitter to it. Glinda is a rose lip color.

From left to right: Tornado, Aura (dual shade), Magic, and Illusion

From left to right: Tornado, Aura (dual shade), Magic, and Illusion

From left to right: Magic, Illusion, Oz (dual shade), South, Glinda lip pencil

From left to right: Magic, Illusion, Oz (dual shade), South, Glinda lip pencil

These swatches are over bare skin, no primer; photos were taken indoors with overhead and accent lighting around, so shades may look slightly different in natural, outdoor lighting – however, I checked them out in all different lighting and found these essentially true to color. The shadows in these palettes were true to UD form, with a smooth, buttery formula that had great payoff and staying power. Out of both palettes, Spell (Theodora) and Oz (Glinda) will be the most likely to have fall out from sparkle/glitter. Spell has chunks of glitter and Oz is very shimmery. I love the fact that dual shades are included, but I do have one gripe with them – Oz was already getting blended in the pan from staff swatching, so you’ll need to be carefully using it unless you want the shades mixed on top. I also don’t love this palette construction, I found it a bit of a pain to close – the top has to be pulled forward and clicked down to lock shut and I prefer a magnetic snap lid or click like the Vice palette. There is also no brush here, so not as handy on the go as other palettes.

Theodora arm

Theodora arm

Glinda arm

Glinda arm

My verdict? These palettes are a fantastic deal! The colors had amazing, buttery textures and great payoff.  Shades in both can work great within their own palette for plenty of amazing eye looks OR can be used in conjunction with other UD palettes for more eye options. The lip pencils and liner are nice additions as well.

Well UDers, what’s the verdict? Purchase or pass on the Oz palettes?