Victoria Beckham has revealed she never travels without an affordable beauty product from an Australian skincare brand.
In an episode of the Breaking Beauty podcast, the 47-year-old British fashion designer told hosts Jill Dunne and Carolene Higgins she uses Face Halo microfibre pads to take off her makeup at night.
Created by Perth businesswoman Lizzy Pike as a sustainable alternative to single-use face wipes, womens pink sweat suits the cloth exfoliates skin and strips away cosmetics using nothing but water.
The pads, which cost $30 for packs of three, are a favourite of the Beckham family, with Victoria revealing they’re also used by her nine-year-old daughter Harper and son Brooklyn’s 26-year-old fiancée, Nicola Peltz.
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British fashion designer Victoria Beckham (left) said she never travels without Face Halo microfibre pads, a sustainable alternative to single-use makeup wipes
The pads are a favourite of the Beckham family (pictured), with Victoria revealing they’re also used by her nine-year-old daughter Harper (second from left)
The double-sided pads, which are reusable for up to 200 machine washes, are marketed as the ‘ultimate’ environmentally-conscious way to remove makeup, sunscreen, fake tan and face masks.
One pad replaces roughly 500 traditional wipes, preventing one billion disposables from being thrown into landfill and oceans over the past four years.
Beloved by a slew of celebrities including Naomi Watts, Gwyneth Paltrow and British popstar Jess Glynne, Face Halo has built a cult following since launching in Australia in 2017.
The brand is now available around the world in stores such as Priceline and online from website like Adore Beauty, Boots and Selfridges.
Victoria (pictured) is just one of many celebrity fans of the Perth headquartered beauty brand
Victoria’s future daughter-in-law, American actress Nicola Peltz (pictured), who is engaged to her son Brooklyn, also uses the sustainable makeup remover
Founder Lizzy Pike previously told Daily Mail Australia about the inspiration for her industry-leading business, which generated $1million (AUD) in sales during its first six months.
Ms Pike said the Eureka moment came when a friend of 20 years said she ‘couldn’t be bothered’ removing her makeup after a long distance flight.
The entrepreneur, who has 15 years experience in microfibre technology, knew of the fabric’s power to clean all manner of household surfaces and wondered if it could work just as well on the face.
The very next day, the ambitious mother set to work on developing a microfibre makeup remover.