Sep 262012
 
bw2_copy

Doing headshot makeup can be the bread and butter of a makeup artist’s career. But it’s also the trickiest part of makeup, since you now find yourself dealing with light and dark, and not color when working on your client’s face. So how do you make sure that your makeup doesn’t show up too dark, if at all in your pictures?

When doing makeup for a black and white portrait, the easiest mistake to do is pack on way too much foundation. The best part of black and white film is that it literally makes your skin look good for you. So just apply your foundation and concealer as you normally would if you were going out.

An important trick is to make sure that all red tones in the skin are covered. Red can show up as gray in a black and white picture, making your skin look splotchy, so make sure you use that yellow concealer before your foundation to effectively hide any redness. This is also the case with men too. If your male client is sceptical on doing makeup for his headshot, this bit of information is enough to get them to change their mind. It also helps keep the cost down in retouching as well. Continue reading »

Sep 252012
 
res_waterproof_foundation

When easing into the warm days of summer, after months of battling rainy weather, I can’t wait for the warmth. And I’m also finding myself revamping my makeup look to go along with it. Nothing like warm weather to make you want to redo your image.

KEEPING SKIN LOOKING GREAT

After you’ve done the mandatory sunblock, (you do this on a regular basis,right?)

Warm weather does wonders for how you feel, but it can also make your foundation seem to disappear. After a few hours of wear, it can look as if foundation/concealer or powder were never put on at all. Here’s how to adapt. Continue reading »

Sep 212012
 
dryskin

Don’t overcleanse (stripping skin of all its oils only induces it to produce more), and exfoliate daily (or as often as your skin can tolerate) to keep dead skin cells from clumping together and clogging pores.

You should beware this surprise pimple-promoter: popular vitamin, mineral, and herbal supplements containing iodine, sometimes listed as potassium iodine. Iodine triggers angry red breakouts in many people, especially those who are acne-prone to begin with.

If your foundation causes pimples or blackheads, the product is probably too heavy (too-heavy moisturizers or cleansers may compound this problem). Look for foundations labeled noncomedogenic or nonacnegenic. Continue reading »

Jul 262012
 
Party Make Up

For Your Lips
Shape up your lips nicely and precisely, with the help of a lip liner pencil. Now is the time to apply the lip color, with the help of a brush.Blot the lipstick with tissue and then apply once again.

For The Cheeks
As against the powder-based blush of the summers, it is best to opt for a cream-based blush for the cheeks in shades of peach and pink in this season on order to give them a natural glow. Also, a dewy look for the lips is the thing to go for this season. The lips should be given a subtle look in shades of pale pink. Make sure that you use a lip liner and blot the lips with a balm to give them the moist look.

For the eyes
For the eyes, use a concealer if you’ve got dark circles – remember to pat the concealer and not rub it in. Use transfusion powder and eye shadow to highlight the eyes. A dash of mascara can work wonders in lengthening your lashes.

Continue reading »

Lean at last

 Featured  Comments Off
Jun 292012
 
img-right

15 great, take-no-prisoners strategies to get you back to the gym—from top fitness gurus and real people alike.

The caterers for a handful of chic, exclusive pre-parties for Barbra Streisand’s extravagant New Year’s Eve gala at Las Vegas’ MGM Grand Hotel served over 500 pounds of caviar and lobster, 250 pounds of French cheeses and petits foursand 1000s of bottles of Veuve Clicquot. Indeed, the fallout from 2012 is nothing compared to the damage done during the millennial, to-hell-with-it-all over-indulgence. Here, fifteen strategies for getting back in shape:(1) “If you had a love-fest with a box of Oreos, so what?” says Kacy Duke, creative consultant to New York’s exclusive Equinox Fitness Clubs, who gets her mega-star clients—everyone from Annabella Sciorra, Lenny Kravitz, and Maxwell to Monica Lewinsky—back on track with (2) rapid-fire bouts of cardio: one minute of jumping rope alternated with (3) 12-15 push-ups, repeated for 15 to 20 minutes. “It’s over; let it go.”

Calista Flockhart

Continue reading »

Jun 182012
 
ds

Using concealers

Concealers can be used to correct, camouflage and lighten imperfections, blemishes, and under eye circles. Using too light of a concealer will give you raccoon eyes. Applying it to the whole under eye area when you have a puff and a circle will just defeat the purpose. When you begin shopping for a concealer youâll find they come in stick, wand, pot, tube, compact and pencil form. Concealer comes in a variety of skin tone shades and several correction shades such as yellow to correct blue, green to correct redish areas, blemishes and scars and violet for sallow skin tones. Others have light reflecting, or brightening qualities. Continue reading »

Jun 182012
 
mnj

Younger skin can get away with bright, garish makeup, but on older skin these colors tend to look “clownish”.. plus, they can emphasize fine lines and wrinkles!

Skin starts to change when you’re in your twenties. By the time you reach thirty, it starts losing color.

The worst thing you can do is to try adding color to your face by using foundation… this will give you a terrible “mask-like” effect and leave you with tidemarks on your jawline. Continue reading »

Jun 072012
 
eyeshadowapp

Eyeshadow ~ Powder Products ~ Blush ~ Concealer ~ Foundation ~ Mascara ~ Lips
~Choosing Make-up Colors For Your Skin Tone~
Adjusting Your Make-up For Unflattering Clothing Colors ~ Wedding Day Make-up
~ The Question of Balance ~

Good make-up application and choosing appropriate colors for your skin tone are what make your face look great, not how much you spend. Lots of good books have been written on make-up application. I particularly like Bobbi Brown Beauty by Bobbi Brown and Annemarie Iverson, and The Beauty Bible by Paula Begoun. You can find a lot of books on make-up application at the library. Even the books that are 10 or 15 years old can still have much you can learn from. Sometimes you can even find the newest books. The only problem with these types of books is that authors often say “this is the best way” to do something, and then you try it, and it may not work well for you. There are many good opinions and techniques out there, but ultimately very few true “rules.” Sometimes what works well for a professional in her work is too technical, time consuming, or impractical for daily use by the rest of us. Women also have different skill levels, different skin types, different amounts of lines on our faces, live in different climates, and use different types of products. Continue reading »

Jun 042012
 
makup1
This spring give your face a jolt of electricity with technicolor eye shadows.
Move over mod, color is back with a vengeance. Forget those dark, kohl- rimmed eyes, the new face of spring is aglow with vibrant, bold colors.
Faces are dewy and moist-looking this season with a slight glow on cheeks, and a lot of color on the eyes,” says Miriam Azoulay, a Toronto-based makeup artist. “After years of neutrals and earthtones, it’s good to see people finally wearing color again.”
At spring collections, New York designer Todd Oldham, sent models down the runway sporting electric blue and green shades, as did Versace in his Versus collection. Colors were a little more subdued at Donna Karan, with eyes featuring just a smudge of tangerine.
There are a lot of very colorful fashions this season and makeup reflects what’s happening in fashion,” Azoulay says. Once thought to be strictly taboo, this season it’s de riguer for your eyeshadow to match what you are wearing.
Hot shades to stock up on include: lime green, orange and even the once dreaded baby blue. For evening looks, take a walk on the wild side with rich burgundies and royal purples.
Play around with different colored shadows to find what works for you and what you feel most comfortable wearing,” Azoulay explains. Continue reading »

May 232012
 
vcx

Unsatisfied with what you see in the mirror this morning? Consider going faux. We’ve assembled some of the best beauty tricks to hide, lengthen, brighten, shrink, tame and glamourize you.

My Colorist is Booked!
There’s nothing tackier than obvious roots, so grab your mascara, wipe the wand of excess product and lightly touch up the trouble area. Blondes need to use a taupe or gold mascara. And of course, don’t use waterproof — regular mascara will rinse out when you shampoo.

Make Deep-Set Eyes Pop
Cindy Crawford’s pal, makeup artist Sonia Kashuk, suggests making eyes appear larger with very light lid colors. Stay away from dark shadows and keep liner smudgey. Finish with a few coats of black mascara. (This is great for puffy eyes, too.)

Fix My Nose!
Apply foundation as usual, then draw a fine line from the center of the nose, to just before the tip with a shimmery white pencil such as Circle of Beauty’s ‘Silver Shine’. Blend it slightly then dust with powder. Add a dot of neutral taupe eye shadow below the tip of the nose if you’re going for a shortening effect.

Hide Zits

We’ve been doing it since we were kids but it’s still not easy. Sonia Kasuk’s daring alternative — turn an imperfection into a beauty mark for a night. Just apply a light colored brow pencil and a tiny bit of powder! If that doesn’t work for you, remember to use yellow-based concealer and foundation to counteract a pimple’s redness.

Hollywood Hair
Creating those trendy up-dos and twists takes practice and, in most cases, extra hands. Kristi Furhman, often under the gun to prep stars at MTV, loves Revlon Spare Hair — tiny, clever pieces that add oomph to dull locks. Her favorite is an elastic covered in synthetic hair with little spikes and loose strands to give a sleek pony tail that rumpled runway look. She advises finding an exact color match or a sharp contrast for best effects. Another option — slick hair back with gel, then add a faux chignon at the nape of the neck for a starlet effect.

I Want Cheekbones
Not everyone is born with the sculpted features of Gwyneth Paltrow. For the subtlest way to accent your cheekbones, try a sweep of shimmery highlighter just above the “apples” to add a little depth.

Plump Up Lips

No Gore-tex implants for you? Use lip liner to create the fullness you want. Begin at the outer corners and work inward, filling in with a pale-toned lipstick. Avoid shiny glosses, which draw attention to the areas where you “cheated.”

Brighten Red Eyes
Maria Verel recommends a combination of allergy eye drops and black eye liner to bring out the whites of the eyes. Apply drops on dry eyes with a tissue. Apply liner to upper lid corners only and smudge.

Marilyn Monroe Bedroom Eyes
For that smoldering effect, Sonia Kashuk recommends individual clumps of false lashes. Pick up a section with tweezers, dip the roots into lash adhesive and attach to the base of your natural lashes. Focus on the outer corners — this is where you’ll want extra volume. Once you’ve finished applying, curl the entire row of lashes then coat with mascara to bring uniformity.If you can’t find individual lashes, buy a full set and cut them with manicure scissors.

My Nails Are a Wreck
You’ve got two options. For the short term, whip out your nail buffer and keep ‘em short and neat. Paint with a flesh-toned opaque shade that practically makes the fingertips disappear. The long term solution is fake nails — no, not the awful press-on kind from TV. Thanks to companies like Creative Nail Designs, you can have natural-looking tips applied at a salon in about an hour.

May 182012
 
asd

Everyone thinks that men’s grooming is easy. You know, a little powder, some concealer and if things are
really bad, maybe a hairbrush or a shot of Aqua net. Wrong. What looks easy is often not, and photographers are on the lookout for experienced and trained artists who know the difference between makeup and grooming.
In the last 7 years I have built up a men’s grooming portfolio that represents 40% of my income. Some of the men I have groomed include Prince, Bruce Springsteen, Dick Clark and Ronald Reagan as well as countless models for editorial and advertising clients. As with other gigs, every job is different,
and communication with the photographer or director is key when deciding what grooming needs to be done.
Some men need piles of paint to cover up late nights and too many margaritas, while others are so genetically perfect, I have had to do mock grooming just to look like I am earning my $800 a day. Now a word about male mannequins. Male models are notorious for not taking care of their moneymakers––skin and hair. It never ceases to amaze me when a model who commands $10,000 a day shows up with a sunburned face,
tan lines from sunglasses and hair that hasn’t seen a pair of scissors in months. Never one to mince
words, I often look them straight in the eyes and utter, “How much are you making on this job––and you show up like this.” Continue reading »

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox

Join other followers