
Beauties, do you wear glasses? Ever wondered how to properly apply makeup with glasses on, and how to look your best while wearing frames? Here are some tips and techniques from Chanel Celebrity Makeup Artist Angela Levin on how to choose and apply the right kind of makeup to bring out your eyes from behind your glasses.
HOW TO Wear The Right Makeup for Glasses
"Consider your glasses as a filter," says Levin. "It's almost like realizing that people see you through a window." Here are 3 tips Angela recommends to make your makeup work with frames!
- Kick it up a notch Levin recommends subtly amplifying what eye makeup you're already wearing. Intensify your look by by adding another coat of mascara, a darker eye shadow, or more dramatic liner. Make sure to brush through the eye lashes so they don't look too chunky or heavy). "With most eye shapes, your liner and mascara are most visible--get those down right!"
- Ensure a flawless face "If you wear frames that sit on your cheeks, make sure to really blend your blush and bronzer, otherwise glasses will create that funky line on your face." If your glasses sit on your nose, they have a tendency to make the nose more greasy and red. In this case, take care to powder the sides of your nose more often and with heavier coverage. If your glasses leave an indentation in your skin, apply a concealer that matches your base right into the indentation and blend out. Top with powder and you've got extra coverage that will withstand the friction of wearing glasses!
- Have Fun with the Rest of Your Face Fortunately, glasses don't limit the shades and textures of lip color you can choose, so the sky is the limit! A clean, defined eye with a bold lip is the hottest way to show off your frames--have fun with i!!
When we asked Chanel celebrity makeup artist Angela Levin how women that need glasses to see should apply their makeup, she suggested investing in a magnifying mirror. "When choosing a mirror, you want your magnifying mirror to imitate what you're wearing with your glasses on--otherwise it's too exaggerated! Try out different lighting and see what works best for you to get the most accurate application," she says. (beautylish.com)
does anyone have any more advice???