The beauty products and gadgets I tried, tested and loved last year

<span>Saie and Klira products impressed me, along with Hermès’s Barénia perfume and the Ziip Halo facial toning device.</span><span>Photograph: Kellie French/The Guardian</span>
Saie and Klira products impressed me, along with Hermès’s Barénia perfume and the Ziip Halo facial toning device.Photograph: Kellie French/The Guardian

I was struck by how dominant makeup and devices were in 2024, after years of skincare mania in the market. Saie, a fairly priced US makeup startup, stormed it. With the notable exception of its complexion products (improvement needed), the line is excellent. Dew Bronze (£20), an extremely easy, natural-looking bronzing liquid, was its best launch. I reached for it again and again, fluffing it into cheeks and temples with their now-indispensable Base Brush (£21). Saie could get away with less for the money, but mostly overdelivers.

Speaking of price, the high-street hits kept on coming. Elf’s non-smudgy, seven quid Lash XTNDR would have been my mascara of the year at any price.

Born-again Garnier is now so consistently good that I’m bored of my own eulogising. Suffice to say, 2024 launches Vitamin C Daily UV Brightening Fluid Sheer Glow (£12.99) and Soothing Hyaluronic Aloe Cream Cleanser (£9.99) are worth your cash. A bigger financial commitment, but well worth it for access to one of Britain’s best dermatologists, is Dr Emma Craythorne’s Klira, a bespoke subscription skincare service.

Hermès Barénia (£70), a grown-up, glamorous, quietly elegant blend of mellow woods and dry fruits, was my scent of last year – and only partly because it is so defiantly at odds with the trendy, pudding-sweet fragrances du jour.

I bought the Dyson AirStrait fully intending to return it, but it is the best tool ever for straight hair

There were more complexion launches (foundations, primers, concealers) than anything else. The best of them were the much-hyped Charlotte Tilbury Unreal Skin Foundation Stick (£35), a glow stick that is really not a foundation at all, and the almost entirely ignored Make Up For Ever HD Skin Hydra Glow Foundation (£38), which very much is.

I’m not usually given to expensive beauty gadgets, but 2024 had me on the turn. I bought the Dyson AirStrait (£449.99) fully intending to return it, but it is the best tool ever for straight hair – if one can get past the cost, James Dyson and a plug the size of a touring caravan. It gives a smooth, glossy, lasting blow-dry with no kinks, little frizz and minimal effort, without the need for damaging straighteners.

I’m even more devoted to my Ziip Halo (£379), the single most effective facial gadget I’ve ever used. Its immediate and day-long tightening and sculpting effect, especially around my jawline, is a big enough win for me and, unanimously, the many friends who now own one. I thought I’d lost mine last summer and immediately panic-bought another – that’s how much I’ve come to depend on it.