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Health And Beauty Tips
How To Shape and Groom Your
Eyebrows
Well-shaped
and groomed brows can make your eyes look bigger and open up
your face more naturally than a load of makeup will. Similarly,
heavy brows can overpower your face. Shape your brows by
plucking hairs from underneath, not from on top; that distorts
their natural line. To determine the shape that best
frames your eyes and face, the time honored method is
to hold a pencil vertically alongside one nostril; the point
where it meets your brow is a natural starting point. Tweeze
stray hairs between brows beginning there. To find an end point,
angle the pencil past the outer corner of your eye; it will hit
your brow at the best end point. Pluck stray hairs beyond that
spot, and from below the natural arch. Don't overpluck;
pencil-thin brows look dated and leave you looking startled. You
may want to have your brows shaped professionally one time, then
all you have to do is tweeze to maintain their shape. Clear brow
gel can help fix wiry brows where you want them.
*Hint: Tweeze after you shower. It'll be less painful.
Eye Liner
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Use an eyeliner brush with powder because
it gives better control and the ability to create a little
or a lot---- of drama. Pencils tend to run on the skin and
make it more difficult to get a smooth, clean line, of
course, if you’re happy with a pencil, there’s no need
to change.
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Line both top and bottom lids when you
really want the eye to standout, of if the eye is small and
needs to be opened up.
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If you want a more modern look line only
one lid, it should be the tip.
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Get liner as close to the lashes as
possible, and don’t line the inside rim of your eye.
Extend the line from one corner of the eye to the other –
never stop halfway.
HOW TO
CHOOSE EYE LINER
Which eye liner you
use is a matter of the look you want and what's easiest for you.
Liquid, gel and felt-tip-type pen liners
create strong, well-defined lines. Powdery pencil and fat
crayon liners are better when you want a softer, smudgier
effect. Creamy ones create a strong line and can also be
smudged into a smokier look. Many women find pencils easier to
use than liquid, especially for everyday use when there's no
time to fix mistakes.
*Hint: Chilling pencil liners in the refrigerator for a few
minutes before sharpening makes them less breakable.
Which color?
Dark brown is a universal- flatterer. Neutral
grays, khaki and browns are also good
staples. Black works on all but the fairest
complexions, though it's dramatic and intense, and may not be
right for everyday wear.
*Hint: It's generally best to apply liner after shadow. This
gives you the choice of smudging it into the shadow or leaving
it as a clean, distinct line.
HOW TO APPLY EYE LINER
For creamy
pencil, liquid, gel or pen, use the tip of the brush or
point for the finest line, getting right at the base of the
lashes. Angle the point for a heavier look. Extend the line from
one corner of your eye to the other. (If that corner-to-corner
look is too harsh, begin instead at the point near the inside
corner of your lid, where your lashes begin.) Creamy pencil may
then be smudged into a shadowy effect or left as a defined line.
For powdery pencil or crayon, begin either: at
the corner of your eye; at the point on your lid where lashes
begin; or at the outer third of your lid. (The starting point
isn't that critical since you'll be smudging the line.) Smudge
liner just enough to blur the edge, pushing color onto your lid
and/or just towards the corners. Smudging can be done with the
ring or pinky finger, a cotton swab or a sponge-tip shadow
applicator. Don't tug.
Lining lower lids should be done with a light
hand and never directly on the rim of the lid. Generally, liquid
liner is too hard looking on lower lids. Stick with one of the
softer effects. (If your upper lid is liquid-lined, your lower
lid shouldn't be lined at all.)
Tips for Lashes:
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If your mascara becomes thick put it in
warm water. That makes mascara thinner.
-
Always use less mascara on lashes
especially on lower lashes.
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If your lashes are shrubby or clumpy use
a lash comb or separate.
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If you have dark circles, wrinkle skin,
swollen skin don’t put mascara on lower lashes.
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Here are two approaches, your choice:
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Put on mascara before
foundation and concealer, so you can use them to cover
up any smudges.
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Put on mascara last,
so lashes won't get dusted when you put on powder.
Either way . . .
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Twirl, don't pump
the wand to coat it. Pumping allows in air, hastening
dry-out.
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If you prefer the
lightest possible touch, wipe the wand gently with a
clean tissue to remove excess mascara before applying.
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Hold the brush
horizontally for upper lashes. Start at the base and
wiggle it up to the tips to maximize separation and
lushness. Allow the first coat to dry completely, then
repeat.
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Hold the brush
vertically for lower lashes and sweep it lightly across
them.
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If lengthening is
your goal, fluff on an extra dash of lengthening mascara
just at the tips of lashes.
Before
applying mascara and using a clean lash curler:
-
Clamp the curler
at the base of lashes and hold it gently for up to 10
seconds.
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After #1, gently
"walk" the curler up along the length of your
lashes.
Repeat either step
until you get the effect you want.
*Hint: Warming the curler for a moment with a blow-dryer
helps to "set" the curl. Be careful - don't let
the curler get too hot!
Eye shadow:
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If you have small eyes and you want to
look bigger eyes use light shade of eye shadow.
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If you have big/protruding eyes and if
you wouldn’t want to show them use dark shade of eye
shadow.
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Apply little foundation to avoid creasing
eye shadow.
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Use a good quality eye shadow brush and
apply a light color of shadow on eye lids from lash line to
brow.
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By using a fluffy brush apply medium
color shadow on your lower lids from lash line to crease of
eye.
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Then apply dark color as a liner along
lash line
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Damp your eyeliner brush before using to
make it last longer.
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Use colors that blend naturally together.
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For
brown eyes: wear eye shadows shades like gold, mustard,
charcoal, camel.
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For green eyes: wear eye shadow shades
like espresso, chocolate, heather.
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For blue eyes: were eye shadow shades
like egg plant, amethyst, cinnamon, rust.
HOW TO
CHOOSE EYESHADOW
Eyeshadow comes as powder, stick or cream;
all three formulations come in matte, iridescent and satiny
finishes. Powder goes on soft and often has the helpful
advantage of being packaged in palettes of complementary shadows
and highlighter. Sticks glide on fast and are a good
choice for quick a.m. makeup routines, especially in neutral
shades. The sliced angle of the stick in the tube makes it easy
to cover your lid in one swoop.
*Hint: A thin layer of foundation beneath your shadow can boost
its staying power and minimize creasing. Let foundation set for
a few minutes before applying shadow.
HOW TO
APPLY SHADOW
For a simple wash of color, apply shadow from the inner
corner of your lid up and across the entire lid to just above
the crease.
Use highlighting shadow to brighten your eyes and lift
the look of your whole face, whether or not you're wearing
another shadow. It can be a lighter, complementary shade of the
one you use on your lid, or an all-purpose pale ivory; frosted
highlighters are great for p.m. Blend a touch of highlighter
upwards from shadow on your lid, toward the arch of your brow
and, if you like, extended out a bit --- but no further than the
outer tip of your brow.
*Hint: To help prevent shadow from creasing, put foundation on
your lids first, wait a second for it to penetrate, then apply
shadow.
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