The Makeup Box

The makeup blog with your daily dose of beauty inspirations, makeup tutorials, product reviews and shopping deals!

Find me on Instagram @ makeup_box
Coupon: MAKEUPBOX (5% off @ Beautyjoint.com)


Follow Me on Pinterest

Posts tagged mac idol eyes

Simple Foiled Silver Eye (How to work with gritty shadows like MAC Lustres)

I was going through my stash of shadows the other day and rediscovered a few MAC Lustre shadows, which I seldom use because the texture is SO hard to work with. These are some of the least popular shadows from MAC (with the exception of a few shades like Tempting) because they look so gorgeous in the pan but give you TONS of fall-out.

Lustres are made up of lots of large gritty chunks of reflective pigments, very much like glitter but not as shiny. This means the little bits tend to flake or dust off, instead of sticking to your skin as well as finely-milled pigments. (Some of the MAC Mineralize shadows are also very much like these.)

So since I was such a sucker back then and snapped up a few shades before I realised how difficult they were to work with, I figure there might be others who love how they look but don’t know how to work with them. 

You can use either a flat shadow brush or a regular blending brush, but the trick is to always apply them damp. If you are using water, you can just dampen your brush (damp, not soaked!) and dip directly into the pot to pick up shadow. If you’re using Fix+ or any sealant or mixing medium, then you HAVE to pick up the shadow on your brush first, and then spray or dampen your brush before applying.

(If you use anything other than water, do not re-dip your brush back into pot.)

Your shadow will go on a lot stronger and stay on a lot longer.

NOTE: In general, most shadows should work go back to normal when dry (except for some poorer formulas so be mindful). Also, make sure your brush is really clean. Any oils or residue on it might transfer and seal over your shadows when dampened.

Step 1: I wanted a little dimension and depth to the eye look so I applied a little rich, plum cream shadow to my lids. (Benefit Creaseless Cream Shadow in Stiletto). I picked purple because the shadow I’m using (MAC Idol Eyes) has a slight lavender tone which I wanted to bring out.

Step 2: Using a brush dampened with water, I picked up a generous amount of MAC Idol Eyes (silvery-lavender flakes with a soft gold highlight), and smoothed that onto the lids. If you want to get a really foiled effect like I did here, firmly brush in a single direction, then go back and repeat. Don’t rub back and forth in multiple directions. This helps the little flakes of pigments to sit lay flat and really shine.

Step 3: For definition and a twist on the typical grey/silver eye, I am using the same purple base to line. Just use a flat synthetic brush (you can get plenty at the art store for very little money btw) to pick up a little color and then gently rub it along the lash line section by section.

Step 4: To finish, I merely curled lashes and applied black mascara. (NARS Larger Than Life, which I happen to have on hand. Any black mascara will work.)

Soft Colorful Wash Featuring MAC Lustre Shadows (Idol Eyes and Retrospeck)
—-

From L-to-R: MAC Idol Eyes, MAC Restrospeck, and The Body Shop Shimmer Cube 07 (Argyle Pink)
—-
Many people despise MAC Lustre shadows for the sheerness (it’s more shimmer particles than actual color pigments), and the crazy amount of fall-out.
However, all that aside, I find them to be a very fun texture to work with because they can give a soft tinted wash to your lids without looking too strong. 
I own 3 Lustres; MAC Lustreleaf (silvery-green), Idol Eyes (lavender-grey with gold sheen) and Retrospeck (champagne). Of the three, I would probably recommend Idol Eyes the most because it’s the most interesting color. But if you’d like a cheap alternative the shimmery grey-gold shade in the Wet n Wild Coloricon “Greed” Palette (6-pan) is quite close, although the gold sheen isn’t as strong.
—-

For this look, all I did was apply  Idol Eyes (lavender grey) in the inner 1/3 of the lids, Retrospeck (champagne) in the center and a pink shimmer (The Body Shop Shimmer Cube #07) to finish in the outer 1/3, smoking upwards around the socket line to finish.
For definition, a black liner would be too strong, so I used a metallic wine-brown (try MAC Sable or any shimmery deep brown - Wet n Wild Knock on Wood has  2 nice browns if you’re looking for something inexpensive) to shade along the upper lash line and lower lash lines for smoky definition.
Then finish with black liquid liner (or pencil) just on the tide line under the lashes (I love how you get no strip of white flesh peeking out under your lashes; makes them look fuller and longer) before applying mascara. 

Soft Colorful Wash Featuring MAC Lustre Shadows (Idol Eyes and Retrospeck)

—-

From L-to-R: MAC Idol Eyes, MAC Restrospeck, and The Body Shop Shimmer Cube 07 (Argyle Pink)

—-

Many people despise MAC Lustre shadows for the sheerness (it’s more shimmer particles than actual color pigments), and the crazy amount of fall-out.

However, all that aside, I find them to be a very fun texture to work with because they can give a soft tinted wash to your lids without looking too strong. 

I own 3 Lustres; MAC Lustreleaf (silvery-green), Idol Eyes (lavender-grey with gold sheen) and Retrospeck (champagne). Of the three, I would probably recommend Idol Eyes the most because it’s the most interesting color. But if you’d like a cheap alternative the shimmery grey-gold shade in the Wet n Wild Coloricon “Greed” Palette (6-pan) is quite close, although the gold sheen isn’t as strong.

—-

For this look, all I did was apply Idol Eyes (lavender grey) in the inner 1/3 of the lids, Retrospeck (champagne) in the center and a pink shimmer (The Body Shop Shimmer Cube #07) to finish in the outer 1/3, smoking upwards around the socket line to finish.

For definition, a black liner would be too strong, so I used a metallic wine-brown (try MAC Sable or any shimmery deep brown - Wet n Wild Knock on Wood has 2 nice browns if you’re looking for something inexpensive) to shade along the upper lash line and lower lash lines for smoky definition.

Then finish with black liquid liner (or pencil) just on the tide line under the lashes (I love how you get no strip of white flesh peeking out under your lashes; makes them look fuller and longer) before applying mascara. 

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...