For a long time now, I feel like I’ve been stuck in a makeup rut. Even as a beauty editor, I’ve found myself sticking to the same eyeshadow colours, the same application methods and the same trusty products to apply my makeup. While it’s great to have a tried and tested makeup formula to fall back on busy mornings (a shimmery bronze eyeshadow stick and a glowing bronzer are always staples in my makeup bag) doing the same look with your makeup can get boring, and as your features and skin change over time, what might have worked for you five years ago might not necessarily work for you now. Plus, it’s easier to encounter makeup mistakes when you go on autopilot during your usual routine.
So when an email landed in my inbox to have a 1-2-1 makeup masterclass with top makeup artist, Lan Nguyen-Grealis, at Studio One Makeup (based within Urban Retreat in Knightsbridge, London) I jumped at the opportunity for her to dissect my makeup routine, the products I was using and help me improve my makeup game.
One of my qualms with my makeup was that my eyeshadow never seemed to stay put. Having deep-set, hooded eyes, I found that my eyeshadow would look great on initial application, but it would soon settle in to the creases of my eyelids as the day went on, before totally disappearing by the end of the day. “For long-lasting eye makeup, you need to layer a powder-based eyeshadow on top of a cream formula in the same shade. This helps to seal in your eyeshadow shade and helps it to last for longer,” says Nguyen-Grealis. My error was just using either a powder or a cream eyeshadow stick straight onto my lids, which don’t have enough staying power on their own. If you have hooded eyes, another trick of Nguyen-Grealis’s is to take your eyeshadow further up past your eyelid crease and towards your brow bone. Because most hooded eyes don’t have a visible lid crease, any eyeshadow that is applied to the lid disappears when you look straight ahead. Bringing it higher up to the brow bone helps your eyes look larger.
Eyeliner has always scared me a little bit. My eye shape tends to be overwhelmed by lining my upper lash-line. I do like a slight wing to my eye makeup, however my eyelid naturally folds over where a wing would usually be, so my painstakingly applied cat eye usually looks a bit distorted once my eyes are relaxed. Nguyen-Grealis recommends drawing this from the lower lash line, opposed to the top lash line if you find this the case on your eye shape. “Draw along the lower lash line and wing out,” she says. “Then, diffuse the line with an eyeshadow brush while connecting it to the very edge of your upper lash line.” She explained that this helps to add definition while lifting and elongating your eyes.
If you are prone to hay fever or have watery eyes, or even if you find that your eyeliner doesn’t last as long as you’d like, Nguyen-Grealis recommends fixing your eyeliner with a eyeshadow powder. “This will set the look in place and give your eyeliner longevity,” she says. And if you’re looking to go glam with your makeup, but you find false eyelashes too heavy, Nguyen-Grealis recommends opting for individual lashes which will add subtle definition without looking too dramatic.
Tagged: makeup