Anonymous wrote:I’d kill for nice enough skin to not have to worry about foundation etc. but with rosacea that will never happen. If you have nice skin, you can get away with a lot less OP. A light sweep of blush and mascara, and you’re good to go.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Dabbing the foundation to fade out blemishes a bit, then lip stain.
Eyeliner is fine, no mascara.
Try the above, you should look quite naturally beautiful.
That looks so weird on women and makes the eyes look smaller. If you’re trying to cut down on products then skip the eyeline and just do mascara.
+1 unless you have naturally thick dark lashes - not many do - then this is bad advice.
Anonymous wrote:I've always never worn makeup. I use chapstick and sunscreen. That's it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I like to experiment with my makeup and love trying out different bold looks. However, as an RN in a hospital, I would look a litt!e silly wearing a full face. I use a tinted moisturizer, a lipstain and tinted lip balm, and mascara. It took awhile to feel comfortable being more bare faced, but I'm happy I did it
I gained a new confidence and appreciation for my natural look. I've always been fortunate to have great skin.
That said, I never leave the house without mascara on. I have soft brown eyelashes and I hate how washed out I look without mascara on.
If you must, you must. But mascara is a huge look-changer especially if your lashes are light color. In this case, you are made up, and not "natural." Which is fine.
The OP is going nearly no-makeup, so mascara is the first thing to go. Eyeliner if shes uses any, should be applied lightly (pencil), never those liquid harsh black liner.
How is eyeliner more natural than mascara?
It is not if you insist using the harsh black liquid eyeline along with the black mascara. They are both changing your look big time, hence "made up" and unnatural.
While you keep stressing black liquid eye liner, no eyeliner would ever look natural.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I like to experiment with my makeup and love trying out different bold looks. However, as an RN in a hospital, I would look a litt!e silly wearing a full face. I use a tinted moisturizer, a lipstain and tinted lip balm, and mascara. It took awhile to feel comfortable being more bare faced, but I'm happy I did it
I gained a new confidence and appreciation for my natural look. I've always been fortunate to have great skin.
That said, I never leave the house without mascara on. I have soft brown eyelashes and I hate how washed out I look without mascara on.
If you must, you must. But mascara is a huge look-changer especially if your lashes are light color. In this case, you are made up, and not "natural." Which is fine.
The OP is going nearly no-makeup, so mascara is the first thing to go. Eyeliner if shes uses any, should be applied lightly (pencil), never those liquid harsh black liner.
How is eyeliner more natural than mascara?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I like to experiment with my makeup and love trying out different bold looks. However, as an RN in a hospital, I would look a litt!e silly wearing a full face. I use a tinted moisturizer, a lipstain and tinted lip balm, and mascara. It took awhile to feel comfortable being more bare faced, but I'm happy I did it
I gained a new confidence and appreciation for my natural look. I've always been fortunate to have great skin.
That said, I never leave the house without mascara on. I have soft brown eyelashes and I hate how washed out I look without mascara on.
If you must, you must. But mascara is a huge look-changer especially if your lashes are light color. In this case, you are made up, and not "natural." Which is fine.
The OP is going nearly no-makeup, so mascara is the first thing to go. Eyeliner if shes uses any, should be applied lightly (pencil), never those liquid harsh black liner.
How is eyeliner more natural than mascara?
It is not if you insist using the harsh black liquid eyeline along with the black mascara. They are both changing your look big time, hence "made up" and unnatural.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I like to experiment with my makeup and love trying out different bold looks. However, as an RN in a hospital, I would look a litt!e silly wearing a full face. I use a tinted moisturizer, a lipstain and tinted lip balm, and mascara. It took awhile to feel comfortable being more bare faced, but I'm happy I did it
I gained a new confidence and appreciation for my natural look. I've always been fortunate to have great skin.
That said, I never leave the house without mascara on. I have soft brown eyelashes and I hate how washed out I look without mascara on.
OP here - what tinted moisturizer do you use? I've been thinking about using that too ... but I have darker olive skin, so it is so hard to find the right color match.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I like to experiment with my makeup and love trying out different bold looks. However, as an RN in a hospital, I would look a litt!e silly wearing a full face. I use a tinted moisturizer, a lipstain and tinted lip balm, and mascara. It took awhile to feel comfortable being more bare faced, but I'm happy I did it
I gained a new confidence and appreciation for my natural look. I've always been fortunate to have great skin.
That said, I never leave the house without mascara on. I have soft brown eyelashes and I hate how washed out I look without mascara on.
If you must, you must. But mascara is a huge look-changer especially if your lashes are light color. In this case, you are made up, and not "natural." Which is fine.
The OP is going nearly no-makeup, so mascara is the first thing to go. Eyeliner if shes uses any, should be applied lightly (pencil), never those liquid harsh black liner.
How is eyeliner more natural than mascara?