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Posts tagged how to contour

[Requested] Highlighting 101: Understanding Your Facial Structure and Choosing Products to glow, illuminate, and scult your face.

Note: Demo in one of the images above was done with deliberatedly exaggerated contouring and highlighting so you can see where everything goes. I never wear it so strong in daily life!

Highlighters are used for various reasons; 

  1. To bring out a dewy, polished glow to the skin
  2. Illuminate certain areas of the face and make yourself look fresher and more awake
  3. To sculpt the face and bring out (or subtly alter) bone structure

Depending on what your primary need is out of the 3 above, you will need to go for slightly different products. 

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"Beauty FAQ: January 2013"

As before, here are some previously unanswered questions that some of you sent me! If you want a quicker reply, do send me a message via your Tumblr account so I can privately reply you instead of consolidating your question with all the other anonymous ones!

Q: Any tricks on how to make close-set eyes look farther apart (and wider) when doing a soft, subtle smoky eye? (Thank you!)

Just make sure you apply a light shade in the inner 1/3 of the lid and concentrate any dark colors on the outer corners of the eye. This pulls the eyes “outward” visually and adds the illusion of space in the center of the face.

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Q: Do u have any pictures of your full face?

Yes! Just check in the archives. :) 

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How to get Glowing, Contoured Cheeks (for Day)

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1. Contouring vs Bronzing:

I think there’s a lot of confusion regarding bronzing, contouring and highlighting. 

Bronzing does not equate to contouring. When you bronze yourself, you give yourself something of a fake tan and a sun-kissed glow. It subtly changes your skin color but does not make your face skinnier or your bones more pronounced.

Highlighting and contouring subtly alters your facial structure but does not alter your overall skin tone.

It’s important to separate the two because so many people end up buying the wrong product to do the wrong job when they get it mixed up. 

This tutorial is for:

  • People who have slightly oilier skin or don’t like cream products to slide around on their face.
  • People who want subtle contouring and highlighting that looks natural enough for day-time wear.
  • People with relatively clear skin at the cheeks. If you have lots of marks and pitted scars to conceal, I don’t recommend doing this.

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The tools:

I’m using a slightly shinier highlighter and a deeper contour powder than I wear on a day-to-day basis because my camera will not pick it up otherwise.

You need

  1. A firm, large eye shadow blender for highlighting (like the MAC 227, above)
  2. A small face powder brush like the MAC 109 or Sigma F50
  3. A powder highlighter: If you are pale to light skinned, get something pink-toned (I used MAC Silver Dusk Iridescent Loose Powder). If you have medium to tan skin, go for a peachy shade. If you have deep-toned skin, go for a real bronze-y or coppery shade.
  4. Matte contouring powder: Make sure you get a color that looks like the color of the shaded parts of your face. This means your skin tone but 2-3 shades deeper. This does NOT mean any redder, or yellower.
  5. Regular blush
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The Steps:

Step 1: Start with foundation or whatever base you use. Conceal any discolorations if you need but know that you might need to touch up afterwards as your contouring and highlighting may remove some product.

DO NOT SET WITH POWDER AT THIS POINT.

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Step 2: Apply your highlighter thickly along the brow bone, and then along the cheekbones. Be generous with your highlighter. This is going to get faded out and blended when you apply all your other products later. Also, start the highlight much higher up on the cheekbones, almost right under the eyes. See below image for the whole area where you should pack on highlighter. This lifts your cheek bones and allows the sheen to catch the light better, so you get that polished perfect-skin glow. 

Warning: If you have a lot of laugh lines at the outer corners of your eyes, avoid going up that high of course.

Step 3: Contouring.  Use a small face powder brush for more control and color intensity. The darker matte powder should “cup” the highlighter earlier and curve in at the outer corners of your temples in a rough C. If you want to sculpt and lift your cheekbones, you should always run your contour just slightly higher than the actual hollow points of your cheeks. 

If your lower cheeks are a little chubbier than you’d like, you can also lightly dust the remaining contour powder down towards your jawline. 

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By this time, your highlighter should have become quite subtle from the brushing, and your contouring should not look like any hard stripes.

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Step 4: This is optional. If you want a flush, just pick up your regular blusher and lightly dab from the cheekbones INWARD along the line where your highlight and contour meet, until you end at the apples.

I say go inwards because placing your brush onto your apples first will leave you with a big patch of pink or red on your apples, when your blush hits the moisture of your base. If you place it along the cheekbones first, the skin there has already been set with a layer of highlighter and contour powder, and you should have just a small amount of blush left by the time you reach your apples. Otherwise you will need to blend out the red patch with loose powder.

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Step 5: Optional as well! Touch up any concealer lightly where needed, but don’t go overboard unless you want a matte beige spot on a dewy pink cheek. 

Finish by dusting setting powder all over IF you need to bring down the sheen and color a notch. I mostly just skip this and apply setting powder only in the center of my face.

The finished look: Contoured, glowing cheeks that look like dewy skin but don’t FEEL sticky or oily at all.

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