While Margot Robbie and her beauty routine are now trending because of the blockbuster Barbie movie, my fellow shopping editors at HELLO! Online and I have been keeping our eyes out for the Australian star's favorites for a while now.
For example, this major find: did you know a French drugstore dry oil was key in making Margot look so radiant on screen for her star turn with Brad Pitt in the movie Babylon? And you can shop the multitasking Embryolissé Beauty Oil, which can be used for face, hair and body, for $30.
You may have already heard of Embryolissé, since Kim Kardashian and Gwyneth Paltrow are famous celebrity fans of the beauty brand's $16 (£18) Lait-Crème Concentré (which you can shop here on Amazon). The enriching multi-purpose cream is another versatile beauty buy which can be used as anything from a primer to a moisturizer.
But it was the Embryolisse Huile de Beauté, "beauty oil" in French, that gave Margot her alluring glow for the three-time Oscar nominated film. The non-greasy beauty wonder nourishes and softens skin with a blend of natural shea, apricot, lemon and pomegranate oils.
Makeup artist Heba Thorisdottir revealed the behind-the-scenes beauty secret in an interview with Popsugar, crediting "lots of Embryolisse Body Oil" for Margot's on-screen radiance as starlet Nellie in the 1920s Hollywood-set movie.
Margot, who used a skin-perfecting spray for her all over radiance at the Oscars, has now topped the box office charts with Barbie, for which her look was created with Chanel beauty both on and off screen.
So it's not just Barbie's pink outfits that are inspiring fans! It seems everyone wants to know how to get that Barbie glow.
“The Barbie glow is all about embracing your personal style and beauty; there’s a multiplicity of versions of how that glow would shine,” Margot's Barbie makeup artist Pati Dubroff told Vogue. “For me, the most beautiful glow is one that shows healthy vibrant skin and light that’s emanating from an inner place of confidence and feeling one’s most beautiful.”
The celebrity MUA later continued: “A glow that is not made up purely of cosmetics it’s the one that’s most aspirational from within.That’s real beauty.”