On my eyelids. Their skin is naturally darker so even when bare, it always looks like I have makeup on. However, I use it on very limited and formal occasions. I prefer bronze because it looks better on my green eyes.
On my eyelids. Their skin is naturally darker so even when bare, it always looks like I have makeup on. However, I use it on very limited and formal occasions. I prefer bronze because it looks better on my green eyes.
Brown, although I finally began using it for drawing eyebrows.
The rest is quite fine except some shades of orange that make me look like a zombie.
That’s why I don’t like palettes very much, because there’s always some shade I don’t like.
I usually buy one only when there are maybe just two wrong colors. (I prefer pencils to eyeshadows)
In here it was quite simple: foundation, a very thin strip of eyeliner, a fair eyeshadow (neutral colors only: white, beige, mustard-colored. Creamy ones were better because they were easier to apply) and a pale pink or transparent gloss, if nothing at all. You can adapt it using powder instead of foundation and eye pencil in lieu of damn eyeliner (which requires too much of a mastery).
Have been particularly grateful to this makep trend. I was a freshman at university and was the most versatile thing ever.
Thanks! Definitely helps. My bag makeup is just two eyebrows pencils (depending whether I want to draw them lighter or darker), a mini eyeshadow palette with basic colors that I could use multiple ways + brush, a highlighter pencil and gloss (used to carry more than one but kept losing them).
What? Despite my personal rhythms are pretty slow, it never took me so long: partly because I don’t use too much makeup and partly because it is rare I could perform a full one, I’m always late!
I began wearing makeup on a more everyday schedule since 2001 upon starting university. At the time the trend was pretty favorable to me and it took maybe 10 minutes. Then for a period I kept putting it while heading towards wherever I was going to, which meant I wasn’t late and couldn’t do it at home: using public transportation has its advantages sometimes.
During last months of 2014 my bag began to be so heavy my knees would ache everyday, so I had to cut down on a number of small unnecessary items, makeup sachet included. It was ridiculous carrying base cream, powder, several pencils, 2-3 glosses, blush and brushes altogether in a period my skin barely tolerated any substance. This move necessarily brought me to develop new routines and try to speed up a bit, but in reality the only improvement I got is just learning to do what it looks like a full makeup in 5 minutes by wearing only base cream, penciled eyebrows, eyeshadow and gloss. Had to get rid of powder and blush but proved beneficial for overall tolerance. I do a full makeup only on occasions and whenever we’re holding a concert with my choir (in this case my makeup process could take up to almost an hour).
My advice, and what really has been a turning point in general for me, is to use practical items. Eyeshadow pencils are much more convenient than powder eyeshadow, and glosses are better than lipsticks because they don’t require a precise application and go well with any style. Lip pencils are the most unnecessary thing ever and even mascara has been a personal burden for years. A brightening pencil does miracles and could also be used as a concealer- and it’s even more effective. Applying base cream at least five minutes before actual makeup prevents patchy and unnatural results. Choose a very moisturizing one for extended comfort but that at the same time isn’t very greasy or heavy on the skin. Reduce your bag supplies to the very minimum but in a way you could always retouch when necessary, and avoid carrying powder and blush because I always ended up destroying their cases.
It takes a bit, but you can do it. 💝💝💝
Because it’s a basic makeup. But much depends also by skin quality: if it’s smooth without any imperfections, even concealer will be concealed.
Sounds good, have to give this a try!