Knowing how to contour is
an important skill as all makeup applications involve contouring on
some level. But to many, the thought of doing it at home seems
inaccessible and a little too tricky. But it's easier than you think!
“Basically, all makeup is contouring,” says Los Angeles-based makeup
artist Brande Bytheway. “When you contour, all you’re doing is
accentuating your natural features.” To get the technique down, we had
Brande walk us through the how-to's and tools to create a basic look
using contouring.
This approach will look different on every person, depending on the
shape of the features. Brande’s one piece of advice: practice, practice,
practice. Try it, play around, and discover what works on your face.
“It’s not as complicated as it seems,” Brande swears. “Some people do it
every day!”
When you learn how to contour there are two main techniques:
lowlighting and highlighting. Lowlighting refers to using a darker color
wherever there’s an area of the face or feature you want to recede or
de-emphasize. Brande recommends a hue about three shades darker than
your own skin—and making sure your product is matte, never frosted or
shimmery. The opposite of lowlighting is highlighting—this you do on
areas you want to emphasize or bring forward. For highlight, you can use
either matte or frosted/shimmery color, whichever you prefer.
Here’s how to do a basic contour on the cheeks, nose, eyes, and jaw.
For this tutorial, we used powder eye shadows from Inglot. Make Up For
Ever’s sculpting kits also get Brande’s thumbs-up; check out this quick
guide to contour kits at every price for more ideas, too.
Cheekbones
According to Brande, the first thing most people want to contour are
the cheekbones. To start, try receding the hollow of the cheek. You can
find the hollow of cheek right underneath the cheekbone—there, apply
your darker lowlight shadow using an angled medium or large brush. We
used taupe-y brown here.
Every area you lowlight, you want to balance with a highlight. After
receding the hollow of the cheek, counter that by making cheekbones
stand out. To do that, brush on a frosted gloss or light shadow along
the cheekbones, and blend out toward the temple.
Nose
This is a basic strategy to slim down the nose just a bit (which
remember, may not work on every face). For the nose, use the same
lowlight shade you used for cheeks. Start at inner corner of brow and
apply down either side of the nose.
Next, apply your highlight down the bridge of the nose. For the nose,
always use matte product, even for highlighting. “Generally speaking,
people don’t want the nose or T-zone to look shiny, so in those areas,
I’d stay away from frost or shimmer,” Brande explains. Finally, blend
the two together using a brush.
Eyes
To make the eyes pop in two simple steps, start with your lowlight. Apply into the crease of the lid and blend well.
Then, counter that with a highlight, brushed right along the browbone.
Jaw
To lowlight, apply your darker shadow below the jaw along the
jawline, right where the jaw meets the neck. Then blend down into the
neck using a clean brush, so you don’t have a line.
Then, highlight right on top of the jawline, and blend together. Be
careful not to go all the way around to the chin here. You want to
highlight on the sides, along the mandible. “If you go all the way
forward to the chin, it can make the chin look bigger, like it’s jutting
forward,” says Brande.
Blogger : Catherine Bell
Image : source
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