Now, YSL seems pretty chill about how you actually *give* them your hard-earned cash. They’re rocking the whole “secure payment” thing, which, like, yeah, *duh*. It’s 2024 (nearly 2025, according to their footer, which, *side note*, is a little weird, right? Did they just copy-paste and forget to update the year? LOL). Anyway, they’re taking Visa, Mastercard, AMEX… the usual suspects. Apple Pay for those of us firmly in the Apple ecosystem (guilty!). And PayPal because, well, PayPal’s still a thing, I guess.
But here’s where it gets interesting. Afterpay? Okay, YSL. You’re letting me buy that Rouge Volupté Shine and pay it off in four installments? That’s kinda dangerous. Like, my bank account’s already screaming just *thinking* about it. Seriously, Afterpay is a slippery slope, people. You think, “Oh, it’s only, like, $10 a week!” and then BAM! You’re knee-deep in designer lipstick debt. Not that I’m speaking from personal experience or anything… *cough*.
(Seriously though, read the fine print on Afterpay stuff. It can get messy.)
And then there’s the whole “Our Stores” blurb. It’s like…okay, I get it. You wanna tell me about my order. Track it, see when it’s coming. But honestly, isn’t that the *bare minimum* these days? Every online retailer does that. It’s not exactly a selling point, YSL. Though, I suppose, knowing exactly when that little slice of luxury is arriving does add to the whole *experience*.
Oh, and speaking of experience, what’s with the “Order number missing” thing? Like, if I’m trying to track my order and *that’s* what I get? Major bummer. Sounds like a website glitch waiting to happen. Or already happening, judging by the copy. Maybe they should invest in a proofreader. Or, you know, just hire me. I could totally proofread their website for lipstick. Just sayin’.