I have a love-hate relationship with traveling with only carry-on bags. On the one hand, I like to bring several different wardrobe outfits, along with matching shoe and purse choices, and checking a bag while flying enables me to bring those varied options along with me. On the other hand, I worry about lost and damaged baggage, and it is so much easier once I land to simply walk off the plane with everything I need for my trip. No time lost waiting for bags, no worries about my bags fitting inside a car trunk, and no worries about lugging a huge and heavy suitcase onto a subway, train or bus.
One of the biggest frustrations with taking a carry-on bag only, besides being limited in how many pairs of shoes I can bring, is not being able to take liquids on the flight. Between contact solution, sunscreen, conditioner (because no matter how fancy the hotel, the conditioner always disappoints), and toothpaste, there is little to no room in the allowed quart-sized plastic bag for makeup. Somehow, I make do within the limits, but it is always a struggle to make everything fit.
The Travel Tip
I remember a tip from Rachel Rudwall that I saw some time ago about a great way to travel with makeup: use a contact lens case as a container. At the time I saw it, I thought, interesting, but contact cases are so small! How could I possibly fit enough makeup in one?
Flash-forward to my makeup tube (Clinique CC cream) being close to empty. As I squeezed as much out of the tube that I could, I decided this would be the perfect time to try Rachel’s tip.
This Clinique CC cream is my current favorite foundation. I do not like the thick feeling of foundation, and this cream does not feel thick, or greasy, or like I am wearing any foundation at all. It provides good coverage, is moisturizing and includes SPF30 sun protection (sun protection is a must for me in all my skin-care products).
I hate wasting product, and with makeup especially, there is always a little bit extra left in the tube once you finish squeezing. I discovered this makeup spatula (Every Drop Beauty Spatula) a few years ago, and it is amazing how much product you can extract from the tube or bottle using this tool when you think there is none left inside.
Preparing the Makeup
I opened my Clinique tube by cutting across at the top of the tube. Inside I could see a good amount of product still inside the tube.
Using the makeup spatula, I started scraping product from the sides of the tube. In the photo below you can see the upper sides of the tube scraped clean with only a small trace of product remaining.
Look at the amount of product I was able to extract from the tube with the spatula!
Once I scraped the makeup out of the tube, I transferred it to one side of a contact lens case.
Testing the Travel Tip
For my next trip, to Greece, I did check a bag, but I brought along my little contact lens case with my Clinique CC cream on the plane in my plastic liquids bag instead of checking a full tube of the cream in my luggage.
While I did not wear the CC cream on every day of my trip, I had more than enough product in my contact lens case for the days that I used it. For a trip of a few days, or even a week, a contact lens case full of makeup would be more than enough to use daily.
Since there are two sides to a contact lens case, I will use the other side in the future to store night cream – another product that does not come in small packages.
Even if I had a full tube of makeup, squeezing a generous amount into the contact lens case would save so much space in the plastic liquid bags that I bring on the plane with me. Plus, it is much easier than traveling with a full tube of makeup, especially for a short trip. I am sold on this travel tip!
Have you tried storing your makeup in a contact lens case while traveling? What tips do you have for traveling with liquids on a plane? Let me know in the comments below.