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Beauty Tips for The Big Day Ready
for Your Close Up?By Paula
Begoun |
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Whether getting ready for your wedding day or another
momentous occasion, the following tips and reminders will
ensure that you look beautiful in person and in
photographs:
- Keep in mind that regardless of the product, shade, or
application technique, makeup is only as good as the skin it
covers. Take time in the months leading up to the big day to
treat your skin well and avoid using products that cause
irritation or can cause side effects such as dryness,
flaking, or redness. Anticipate your skin’s needs based on
its history and the weather (is the event in a location
where it will be more humid, arid, or cold than your skin is
used to?) then choose products accordingly.
- Do not have a facial, microdermabrasion, peel, or any
other spa or dermatologist treatment within two weeks of the
event, especially if you have not had such procedures
performed in the past. The last thing you want to deal with
is the complications that could result. If a trip to the spa
is part of your bridal bliss, use the time to get a
stress-relieving massage or manicure and pedicure rather
than a facial.
- Anticipate being photographed and take into account the
lighting. Outdoor wedding photos demand different makeup
than indoor photos. Outdoor lighting is most flattering in
late afternoon as the sun begins to set. If possible, avoid
scheduling an outdoor wedding ceremony and photos for midday
when the sun is directly overhead. This casts unwanted
shadows on your face and is universally unflattering. Less
makeup is preferred for outdoor weddings. Use a sheer,
satin-matte foundation, a light dusting of pressed powder,
powder blush, soft eyeshadow colors that are matte or barely
shiny, and eyeliner that is dark brown or slate gray rather
than black, which can look too harsh in daylight. Lips can
be any color, but keep in mind that opaque lipstick with
sheer makeup can look too contrasting. Generally, outdoor
makeup looks best with creamy lipsticks. For mascara, choose
brown if you have blonde hair (dyed or not). All other hair
colors should stick with black mascara, preferably
waterproof unless you’re sure you won’t cry!
- For indoor ceremonies, you must take flash photography
into consideration. A camera's flash tends to emphasize pink
or ruddy skin tones, so proper camouflage with a neutral- to
yellow-toned foundation is a must. Avoid foundations and
powders with sunscreens in which titanium dioxide or zinc
oxide are the active ingredients. Both of these mineral
pigments have an opaque, reflective quality that can make
your face look whiter than the neck in photos. A small
amount of titanium dioxide in your foundation or powder is
fine; it just shouldn't be an active ingredient where the
concentration is considerably higher.
- Be sure your foundation matches your skin color exactly.
Check to be sure there is no line of demarcation at the jaw,
hairline, and temples. In general, liquid foundations with a
soft matte finish work best because they are versatile and
let your natural skin tone show through. Cream-to-powder and
stick foundations tend to offer heavier coverage that,
unless carefully blended, can look mask-like. It may be
tempting, but do not mix a liquid shimmer product with your
foundation to make skin look more radiant. In photos, even
when used judiciously, shimmer can make skin look slick and
greasy instead of luminescent, especially after wearing it
for a few hours. And once the event begins, stealing away
for touch-ups is unlikely.
- Seek a powder that closely matches your skin tone.
Pressed powder is more portable and easier to use than the
loose version. Look for a pressed powder with a silky
texture and skin-like finish. Today's modern powder formulas
(particularly those from Estee Lauder, L'Oreal, M.A.C.,
Prescriptives, and Maybelline) make skin look beautifully
polished, not powdered or ultra-matte. Apply the powder with
a professional brush, not a puff or sponge. If you have
normal to dry skin, only powder the T-zone (forehead, nose,
and chin) and leave the cheeks with the soft matte finish
your foundation provides.
- For blush, powder formulas tend to photograph best and
hold up over the long haul. If in doubt about which shade to
choose, opt for those in the rose or pink family if you have
fair to medium skin and choose rosy-plum tones if your skin
tone is medium to tan. Do not make the mistake of
under-applying blush, especially for indoor photos. Wedding
makeup is formal, and requires more color than you may
normally wear. Make sure your blush is in the same tonal
family as your lipstick (for example, pair a pink blush with
a pink, berry, or rose-toned lipstick).
- The color of your makeup design should come from your
blush and lipstick, not your eyeshadow. Keep tones muted and
matte so that they emphasize, not compete with, your natural
eye color. As a general rule, you can't go wrong with
eyeshadow colors that have a brown, tan, taupe, or neutral
base. Think earth tones (slate, shell pink, bronze) and
"food" tones (cream, caramel, coffee). If you want to add a
touch of shimmer to your eye makeup, find the sheerest
product possible, apply sparingly to highlight your brow
bone or the inner corners of your eyes, and make sure you
like how it looks in photos before the big day
arrives.
- Pay attention to your eyebrows. Do not attempt any new
tweezing techniques or patterns, but do see a professional
brow groomer who has loads of experience shaping brows so
they frame your eyes as attractively as possible. A brow pro
can also show you how to make the most of sparse, thin, or
barely-there eyebrows. For wedding makeup, use brow powder,
a matte powder eyeshadow, or tinted brow gel rather than
traditional brow pencil to shape and define.
- Be sure to carry your lipstick and lip liner with you
for touch-ups after the ceremony and before the reception.
It is also helpful to carry a pressed powder and small
powder brush, as well as a clean makeup sponge in case you
need to buff or smooth any aspect of your makeup, especially
lipstick marks from over-zealous relatives or friends.
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