Chanel reinvents the balm and makes it as desirable as an iconic lipstick, for lips with a tailored color intensity that are more beautiful day after day.
A unique balm with a double function "Color and Treatment". Rouge Coco Baume's intelligent formula allows for tailored use, from a light veil of color on the first application
to almost lipstick-like coverage on the third swipe. Rouge Coco Baume, with a natural luminosity, offers its benefits with exceptional qualities for a makeup result that matifies over time.
At the heart of the Rouge Coco Baume formula: the oleoactive, an oil resulting from the combination between the fruit of the olive tree, rich in omega 9, and its leaves, rich in polyphenols. This oil with antioxidant powers preserves the beauty of the lips.
Nourished from the first application, lips benefit from long-lasting hydration, comfort for 12 hours* and the sensation of dryness is reduced by 41%*. After 28 days, lips are plumper (+10%*), smoother (+19%**), more flexible (+77%*) and less chapped, and look more beautiful day after day.
The flowers from the garden of La Pausa, the house to which Gabrielle Chanel escaped to regain strength, have inspired the Chanel Makeup Creation Studio, which creates a color palette that ranges from a slightly pearly transparent tone to a brownish burgundy.
Various shades presented in a white and gold version of the iconic Rouge Coco Baume case. The ivory tone evokes the softness of the texture and the gold attracts the eye, making it an object of desire!
How to apply: Apply the balm directly with the stick to the lips in a single gesture.
Rouge Coco Baume can be applied alone or combined with other shades to illuminate or intensify makeup.
If you want a more diffuse result, you can blend the contour with your fingertips.
Choose intensity:
1 single swipe for lips with a subtle color.
3 strokes for coverage almost as intense as lipstick.
Octyldodecanol | Hydrogenated Polyisobutene | Pentaerythrityl Adipate/Caprate/Caprylate/Heptanoate | Synthetic Wax | Polyglyceryl-10 Decaisostearate | Squalane | Ethylene/Propylene Copolymer | Polyglyceryl-2 Triisostearate | Disteardimonium Hectorite | Butyrospermum Parkii (Shea) Butter | Olea Europaea (Olive) Fruit Oil | Olea Europaea (Olive) Leaf Extract | Ethylhexyl Palmitate | Propylene Carbonate | Tribehenin | Hydrogenated Castor Oil | Tocopherol | Jojoba Esters | Parfum (Fragrance) | Sorbitan Isostearate | Aluminum Hydroxide | Lactic Acid | Oryza Sativa Wax (Oryza Sativa (Rice) Bran Wax) | Helianthus Annuus Wax Seed (Helianthus Annuus (Sunflower) Seed Wax) | Palmitoyl Tripeptide-1 | Aqua (Water) | [+ / - (May Contain) | Ci 12085 (Network 36) | Ci 15850 (Network 6) | Ci 15850 (Red 7 Lake) | Ci 15985 (Yellow 6 Lake) | Ci 17200 (Red 33 Lake) | Ci 19140 (Yellow 5 Lake) | Ci 42090 (Blue 1 Lake) | Ci 45380 (Red 22 Lake) | Ci 45410 (Red 28 Lake) | Ci 73360 (Red 30 Lake) | Ci 77163 (Bismuth Oxychloride) | Ci 77491, | Ci 77492, | Ci 77499 (Iron Oxides) | Ci 77742 (Manganese Violet) | Ci 77891 (Titanium Dioxide) | Mica]
Chanel is one of today’s best known and most highly sought-after fashion brands, and has been one practically since it was founded by Coco (Gabrielle) Chanel in 1909. Her big break hit when she opened a small shop in Paris in 1910 where she sold her hats. And by 1913, after asserting disdain for resort wear, she launched sportswear: Her take was simpler—flannel blazers, jersey sweaters, and women in trousers, all of which were decidedly against twentieth-century culture memes.