Merit Beauty’s Minimalist Makeup Routine and Tech-Friendly Appeal
Merit Beauty has built its reputation on doing more with less, a theme that resonates deeply with anyone chasing a minimalist makeup routine. Beauty editors praise the brand for delivering a full face in under 10 minutes, thanks to creamy sticks and pots that can be scribbled on and blended with fingers for a fresh, awake look. A typical Merit Beauty review highlights products like The Uniform tinted SPF, the Great Skin Instant Glow Serum and The Minimalist complexion stick, all designed to melt into skin with natural, non-greasy finishes and fool-proof function. Creamy Flush Balm blushers, Bronze Balm and Day Glow keep textures intuitive and blendable, while Brow 1980 and Signature Lip Blush add structure and a bitten-lip effect without fuss. This streamlined, tactile approach feels almost gadget-ready: ergonomic sticks, clear purposes and quick results that mirror the ease we now expect from premium beauty devices.

Hermès Les Façons: A Sun-Inspired, Sensory-First Hermes Beauty Line
If Merit is about speed and simplicity, the Hermès beauty line for spring, Les Façons Makeup, leans into pure sensory luxury. The capsule is built around replicating the glow of a setting sun on skin, using warm, gradient-driven tones. A standout is Soleil d’Hermès, a face powder embossed with an intricate solar-ray pattern and offered in beige, pink and red families to flatter different complexions. Supporting pieces include three satin lipsticks and two tinted lip care oils, all wrapped in dual-toned casings that feel more like jewelry than packaging. Even the lipsticks’ fragrance—blending arnica, sandalwood and candied angelica flower—shows how Hermès treats makeup as an olfactory experience as much as a visual one. The result is a collection that engages sight, touch and scent, signaling how high-end cosmetics can function as collectible design objects, not just color products, and setting a clear precedent for future luxury beauty tools.
From Lipsticks to Luxury Beauty Tools: A Shared Design Language
Placed side by side, Merit’s clean sticks and Hermès’s sun-etched compacts reveal a shared direction that is increasingly echoed in luxury beauty tools. Merit’s sleek, finger-friendly components resemble minimalist gadgets: cylindrical, stackable and easy to navigate without a cluttered vanity. Hermès’s Les Façons, with its sculpted solar patterns and dual-tone cases, mirrors the aesthetics of high-end fashion accessories. This same design language now appears across premium beauty devices, from streamlined facial tools that resemble pens or bracelets to glossy, compact gadgets that could pass for a clutch detail. As brands refine how a blush stick feels in your hand or how a powder clicks shut, they are effectively prototyping the form factors for next-generation devices. Minimal surfaces, intuitive shapes and tactile finishes are no longer limited to packaging; they are becoming the blueprint for how smart, connected tools will inhabit our bathrooms and bags.
How Merit and Hermès Could Influence Future Premium Beauty Devices
It is easy to imagine Merit and Hermès influencing the next wave of premium beauty devices. Merit’s ethos—fewer steps, faster results—translates naturally into travel-friendly tools that slot into a minimalist makeup routine. Think pocket-sized facial massagers, cooling sticks or LED spot-treatments shaped like their existing complexion sticks, designed to be swiped on in seconds before The Uniform or The Minimalist. Hermès, meanwhile, is perfectly positioned to turn its sunlit vocabulary into collectible gadgets: perhaps a sculpted, solar-inspired compact housing a smart mirror or a refillable device that pairs light therapy with scent, echoing the fragrance-infused lipsticks. Their focus on tactile patterns and refillable-feeling formats also aligns with sustainable, long-lived devices rather than disposable gadgets. As beauty tech matures, these brands may not only launch tools but also set expectations: that technology should feel as considered, sensorial and display-worthy as a favorite lipstick or powder.
Building Your Own Beauty Setup: Pairing Color and Devices with Intent
For everyday users, the lesson is to curate a beauty setup where products and tools support both your routine and your aesthetic. If you lean toward a minimalist makeup routine inspired by Merit, prioritize devices that are compact, multi-use and easy to clean: a single facial cleansing tool, a streamlined microcurrent or sculpting wand and perhaps a travel-sized LED bar that fits next to The Minimalist and Flush Balm in your bag. Match the look—matte finishes, neutral colors, minimal buttons—so your tools visually blend with your sticks and serums. If you are drawn to the Hermes beauty line, choose devices that feel like objets d’art: tools with metal accents, tactile patterns or sunlit color palettes that echo Soleil d’Hermès. In both cases, let form follow function: pick devices you will realistically use, then ensure their design makes you want to leave them out and reach for them daily.
