Question Beauty Garden of Iridescent Wings palette, closed, with lid art of three iridescent scarab beetles on black.

Garden of Iridescent Wings lands, with the full Question Beauty multichrome kit

Question Beauty is a multichrome specialist, and the part of the catalogue that earns it that name is now in Canada. The shipment cleared, and the whole colour-shifting system landed together: the new chapter palette, the loose pigments the brand is known for, the eyeliner pencils, and the primers and mixing tools that hold a shift in place all day.

The centrepiece is the Garden of Iridescent Wings palette, Chapter 4 in Question Beauty's collectible storybook series. Ten pressed shades shift through emerald, teal, violet and gold, set against garden tones in luminous blues and glowing greens, with five of them pressed multichromes:

  • Born to Shift
  • Iridescent Wings
  • Playful Spring
  • Jewel Plated
  • Living Jewel

The brand calls it their most magical multichrome palette yet, and the packaging is part of the appeal: collectible beetle lid art on a magnetic lid that lifts off and swaps across Chapters 1, 2 and 3, so the palettes build into a set.

Arm swatches of all ten Garden of Iridescent Wings shades beside the open palette, on a mossy green ground with scarab beetle figures.

Early looks make the range of it obvious. Veronica (@vmeers) built a jewel beetle eye and wrote that "the mattes were nice and pigmented and the chromes were buttery smooth, so sparkly and shifty." Kim Kroft (@kimkroft) called it "this new banger of a palette," and on first testing it found the colourful mattes "pigmented and high quality" and the shimmers "super impactful." Alisa (@beautyducktales) posted a first impression look in it. The beetle theme keeps pulling people toward bold green and jewel-toned eyes.

Close-up of a blue eye wearing magenta pink and copper green multichrome shadow from the palette.

Behind the palette sit the loose multichrome pigments, the brand's hero category, described by Question Beauty as a literal rainbow in a pot: an ultra-fine pigment that shifts through the spectrum the second the light hits it. Eleven shades are here in Canada:

  • Silver Mirror
  • True Holo
  • Ultraviolet Bouquet
  • Jungle Mirage
  • Rustic Seafoam
  • Blooming Charm
  • Dark Flame
  • Holo Petal
  • Lemon Sherbet
  • Mystic Haze
  • Pink Opaline

They work pressed onto a lid or swept across the cheekbone as a highlighter, and they can be mixed into a liquid for liner and graphic work. Professional makeup artist Alice Baranga (@alicebaranga) reached for the Jungle Mirage pigment in a recent look.

Question Beauty multichrome loose pigments in their pots.

The multichrome eyeliner pencils bring the same shift in a creamy, buildable format, in five shades:

  • Pearl Keeper
  • Oceanic Symphony
  • Bronze Mirage
  • Playful Spring
  • Jungle Mirage

The brand frames them as liners that transform an eye look in seconds: wear one as a bold line, blend it out as a shimmering base, or add a pop of colour to the inner corners or waterline. Soft in everyday light, striking in sunlight, smudge-proof once set.

Question Beauty multichrome eyeliner pencils with colour-shifting tips.

Loose pigment is only as good as what holds it, which is where the rest of the kit comes in. The Gel Primer is the tacky base built to grip pigment and keep the colour shift vibrant for hours. The Black Primer goes the other way, a rich black base that deepens multichromes and reveals extra shades while extending wear. The Mixing Medium turns any pigment into a liquid, long-wear, waterproof formula for foiled lids and custom liner. And the Mixing Palette, in Clear and Holographic, gives you a dedicated surface to blend and customise on.

Question Beauty mixing palette for blending loose pigments.

Everything is available now in Canada and ships from BC, so there is no overseas wait or customs surprise on Canadian orders. Shop the full Question Beauty collection β†’

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