Showing posts with label eyes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label eyes. Show all posts

Monday, June 23, 2008

Dark Circles Under The Eyes

Most dark circles are caused by the veins beneath the thin skin under the eye. As we age and receive more sun damage to our facial skin, the thin skin under the eye can become thinner and wrinkled, which allows the veins in the fat pad under the eye to become more prominent. These veins also become more congested in people with allergies, and people with a history ofeczema, hay fever or asthma often develop dark circles referred to as "allergic shiners." Of course, dark circles often become more apparent with a lack of sleep as well. In some people with dark skin and certain conditions, the dark circles under the eye may actually be due to superficial pigmentation of the skin, and not the veins under the skin.

Common sense measures such as getting plenty of sleep and treating allergies can often help. Short-term tricks used by some models, such as applying cool cucumber slices or cool tea bags to the undereye area, reduce swelling in the short term. For those in whom the dark circles are due to true skin pigmentation, lightening agents -- used with care in this sensitive area -- can help. However, be sure to check with your dermatologist first, to determine whether your circles are due to superficial pigment or veins beneath the thin lower eyelid skin.

The definitive treatment for those with sagging undereye skin and dark circles is blepharoplasty. This surgery removes the excess skin and fat pads under the eyes. It is one of the most common aesthetic procedures performed by plastic surgeons. Blepharoplasty is often combined with laser resurfacing, depending on the amount of wrinkling around the eyes. This surgery does not actually remove dark circles, but once the bags are gone there will be less shadowing and the circles will be less noticeable. Your overall appearance will be more youthful and rested. The recovery time is one to two weeks.


source from http://beauty.ivillage.com

Flawless Eye Makeup 101

If you're over age 25, you'll probably remember (try not to cringe when you do) a time when you happily hit the streets with at least three different bright colors splashed around your eyes. Thankfully that look ‑- along with wedge-shaped shoulder pads, too-tight curly perms and Madonna-inspired crucifix necklaces ‑- died with the 1980s.

Today's eye makeup trends are radically different, ranging from a "nude" look to a "smoky" effect to a "clean" style. But while the colors and textures of makeup may change, one thing always remains the same ‑- the basic construction of the eye.

Darrell Redleaf, a celebrity beauty expert based in Hollywood, California, says the key to a modern look is following five simple but elemental steps of eye makeup preparation and application.

"Most women will always end up applying makeup in the style that was in fashion when they came of age," he explains. "So if you started wearing eye makeup in the 1980s, then yes, you'll favor the three-color look that was popular then ‑- a light color on the lid, particularly the inner corner, a dark color in the eye crease and then a highlighter on the brow bone. That's a completely outdated style."

Redleaf suggests women do a little self-evaluation in front of a mirror with their eye makeup on and then compare their look to what's in the most current magazines appropriate for their age group. Also, he says, pay attention to what other women around you are doing ‑- if you see someone with a look you'd like to achieve, break down her application style so you can copy it.

The 5 Basic Steps

When working on celebrity clients, Redleaf saves the eyes for last. Before putting on any makeup, he says, prep the skin first.

Start with a clean canvas

Wash your skin following your normal routine. If you've got the time, Redleaf suggests putting some cold compresses on the eyes for 10 minutes to reduce puffiness. Cold tea bags are great because they contain caffeine (which tightens capillaries, reducing blood flow to the area), or anything cold from the refrigerator (cucumber slices or an ice compress). There are also creams to reduce puffiness.

Once you've cleaned and prepped the skin, apply a very light moisturizer around the eye. Even oily complexions need this, Redleaf says, because the eye area has almost no oil glands. If the moisturizer seems too heavy for the delicate skin around the eye, blot it gently with a tissue. Never use a hand or body lotion. "They're too greasy, for one, and also aren't meant for that, so you can tear up if they get into your eye," Redleaf warns. Let that set while you apply foundation and/or concealer to the rest of your face.

Assess your eyebrows

The most underrated element of a successful look, says Redleaf, is a good eyebrow: "They are the frame of the face, and particularly of the eye area. There are trends in eyebrows, of course, but you always have to follow what's best for your features. There's a way to modify the brow so you are in style but also in harmony with your face." If you've got Brooke Shields brows circa 1980, he says, get rid of them.

In fact, Redleaf tells women who want a new look to consult with a brow expert before they start buying new makeup or trying to design a new style for themselves. The latest look in eyebrows is the gentle arch, a great asset for anyone over 30, he says, because it provides an automatic lift to the face.

Once you've got the right look, you need to work on upkeep. So, for step 2, take a look at your newly shaped eyebrows. Redleaf works with a clipped-angle brush, a simple tool found in any beauty store, to brush the hairs down. If you see any strays that have grown in, pluck them out, but be judicious ‑- overplucking is a major no-no. Take some taupe eye shadow (never use black, says Redleaf, even if you've got black hair or are dark complexioned; he swears you'll look like Groucho Marx) and, using the brush, apply a little bit of color to the top hairs of the brow, dotting it along the high edge at the top of your arch. Do the whole brow, and then brush the hair back into place. Fill in any bald spots if necessary. If you've got unruly brows, set them with some eyebrow gel.

With your brows done, says Redleaf, you're 50-percent finished. "You can do your brows and a little mascara, and walk out the door with a great 'clean' look," he notes.

Before applying color, make sure you've put a little concealer or foundation (the same shade you used on your face) across the eyelid, blending gently up toward the eyebrow. If you've got dark circles under the eye, concealer can go there as well, but be sure to blend carefully. This will hide any discoloration around the eyes and help "set" the color you're going to apply. Now it's time to open that compact.

Most eye-color kits come with three, four and sometimes even five different shades inside. They are meant to be used together, says Redleaf, but not all at the same time.

He explains: "The old look, as we mentioned, was highlighter on the brow bone, which is the area right underneath your eyebrow, then the darkest shade on the crease of your eyelid ‑- that's the area underneath your brow bone. And then a midrange light color went on the lid itself, with a little bit of darker color on the outer edge to give that kind of wedge shape to the eye. Now, the opposite is done. We don't put a dark color where we have a natural shadow ‑- and the crease creates a natural shadow. So the dark color goes on the lid itself, with a little gentle blending upward, and a taupe or some other lighter color goes on the brow bone. We're usually only using two colors, not three."

For a clean day look, good for the street or the office, Redleaf uses a medium-tone taupe or other neutral color on the lid, blending gently upward into the crease. For women over 30, he says blending upward right above the middle of the eye ‑- where the iris is when you're looking straight ahead ‑- will give you another automatic lift to complement the arch in your eyebrows. He uses a lighter tone for the brow bone and blends it carefully, stopping at the eye crease. If you like eyeliner for the daytime, Redleaf suggests using it sparingly to create a gentle curve of emphasis that follows the contour of your lash line.

If you're going out for the night, you might want to take the darkest shadow and apply it on the lid, blending it a little bit into the crease, and then use a neutral tone for the brow bone, blending it downward into the crease. For added dramatic effect, Redleaf suggests lining your eyes with a kohl pencil. The basic tip for nighttime eyeliner is to keep it right at the base of your upper lashes and line across the upper eyelid. You can also add more pop by lightly lining around your lower lashes. If you want to do the rim of the lower eye, stay right on top of your lower lashes ‑- don't pull the eyelid out and line inside on the delicate tissue.

"For nighttime," says Redleaf, "the idea is to really go crazy, have fun with that eye compact, find out which colors you want to use and enjoy them ‑- but while mixing and matching, don't break the cardinal rule. Darker color on the lid, not in the crease!"

Curl those lashes

An eyelash curler, far from being the medieval torture device it resembles, is among the most effective and underutilized tools in a woman's beauty arsenal. There are numerous brands that range in price from $5 to $35. The difference, says Redleaf, is minimal but important.

"The more expensive curler has the same basic mechanism and achieves pretty much the same effect, but it's wider; it gives a gentler, more natural curl; and it won't pull your lashes out on the sides," he says. "The less expensive ones do sometimes pinch and pull, and that's not good ‑- eyelashes take a long time to grow back."

When using the curler, insert your fingers into the handles like you would with a pair of scissors. Open the handles as wide as possible and bring the curler, which is contoured to follow the brow bone, to your eye. Your eyelashes fit through the small aperture at the base of the handles. Maneuver your lashes through the opening and then close the handles, squeezing firmly.

Redleaf first goes to the base of the lashes and gives the curler a good squeeze. Then he slowly opens the handles, brings the curler farther along the lash just a fraction, pumps it again and continues doing that to the end of the lash. The effect, he says, is a natural but enhanced upward curve ‑- not the harsh "crimped" look that comes from applying the curler just to the base of the lashes and squeezing hard. Don't curl the bottom lashes.

Apply mascara the right way

Once you've got the curl, you need to emphasize it with mascara. Redleaf goes for the straight stuff ‑- no lengthening, thickening or curling mascaras needed, thank you very much. He wants a simple mascara that puts on color for definition, and that's it.

"When you see a mascara that's saying it can thicken or lengthen or curl your lashes, what they're doing is making something that's got a lot of fibers that cling to your lashes," he says. "That makes clumps and can give a very gloppy look. It's also prone to flaking and falling off, which makes women look tired and aged."

For the daytime, says Redleaf, don't apply mascara (or eyeliner if you can avoid it) to the bottom lashes or lid. It will give you a cleaner look without as much flaking, and at the end of the day you won't look exhausted.

For the nighttime, go all out and accentuate every lash you have.

The best way to put on smudge-proof mascara is to tilt the chin up slightly and the head back slightly and lift your eyebrows up, like you're asking a question. That makes it easy to run the mascara brush along the length of the upper lashes from the base to the tip without smearing.

Follow those basic step preparations, says Redleaf, and no matter what the trends ‑- glossy versus matte, nude versus smoky ‑- you'll be able to apply any type of makeup.

His final tip for women: "It's lid or lip. You can't have both." In other words, if you're going to go for a glam eye, use a subdued lipstick. If you want a big red kisser, downplay the eye makeup. "If you don't, you're going to end up looking like a showgirl," Redleaf says, "and unless you really are a showgirl, that's never a good thing!"

Recommended Products

Product Name: Revlon ColorStay 12-Hour Eye Shadow Quad
There are four different matte powder shades, all based on the same color, crammed into these kits.
Price: $7.95
Available: Drugstores or Revlon.com

Product Name: Revlon Illuminance Cream Shadow
Four different shades, all based on the same color, can be found in these cute little kits. They look like kindergarten paint sets but are far more effective in creating beauty! Cream-based colors give lids a subtle shimmer that's not quite a gloss.
Price: $12.50
Available: Drugstores or Revlon.com

Product Name: Maybelline Expert Eyes Eyeliner and Eyebrow Pencil
An easy way to get natural-looking eyebrows is to use the same color that you've put on your eyes. Maybelline makes an eyeliner/eyebrow pencil in several neutral colors that works great for both jobs.
Price: $8
Available: Drugstores or Maybelline.com

Product Name: Shu Uemura Eyelash Curler For great curl without hurting eyelashes.
Price: $18
Available: Sephora.com

source from http://beauty.ivillage.com

Friday, April 25, 2008

Quick Fix For Undereye Circles?

If you suffer from undereye circles, you know what a huge pain they are to cover up. A new product that Marie Claire editor-in-chief Lesley Jane Seymour swears by (in the June 2005 issue of the magazine) is Hylexin ($95) which is billed as the first eye cream created to treat & combat undereye circles.

Compare Prices

This cream is specially formulated to treat the problem, not cover it up (undereye circles are caused by broken capillaries, not lack of sleep, the makers say). Here's what their Website touts: 'Serious dark circles (the kind that make you look old, tired and exhausted) are about, of all things, the oxidation of hemoglobin (blood) in the capillary matrix of the peri-orbital eye area.' Huh?

Anyway, don't want to splurge on this 'miracle' cream? I show you simple, daily fixes with concealer in this article.



source from http://beauty.about.com

What Causes Undereye Circles?

Oh if only we could take a magic pill to cause the blue veins under our eyes to recede back into our heads, or the dark circles under our eyes to magically lighten to match the rest of our skin.

Unfortunately, there is no magic pill to combat dark, undereye circles, which you were likely born with. Yes, it's true. Your parents are to blame for your dark undereye circles, according to dermatologist David J. Leffell of Yale School of Medicine, in "O" magazine.

So, now that we have them, is there any way to get rid of them?

Three Types of Undereye Circles

There are basically three types of undereye circles:

1. Hyperpigmentation. Hyperpigmented undereye circles can be dark circles often found in women with darker skin tones (African, East Indian or Latin descent). This is caused by the over-abundance of melanin in skin.

2. Blue-ish veins. As we age, the skin around our eyes thins out, causing the veins underneath to show. This is typical in women with lighter skin.

3. Poor circulation. These undereye circles tend to be puffy or baggy. This is usually caused by poor blood flow or water retention under the eye. Large bags that don't recede in time are hereditary.

To determine the cause of your undereye circles, press your thumb on the shadows. If the shadows momentarily lighten, the cause is poor circulation. If they don't lighten, the cause is hyperpigmentation, according to dermatologist Macrene Alexiades-Armenakas of Yale University in the November, 2007, issue of Elle Magazine.

How to Treat Undereye Circles

Dark circles from hyperpigmentation can be treated with lasers in a doctor's office. However, Alexiades-Armenakas warns that lasers don't always work well on darker skin. "The laser may turn on melanocytes to produce more pigment," she says in Elle Magazine. For dark skin, she prefers topical solutions made with kojic acid, such as Skinceuticals Phyto+ gel. Creams with hydroquinone are also commonly used to treat undereye circles. Both kojic acid and hydroquinone brighten hyperpigmented skin, according to "Getting Gorgeous," a book by the editors of InStyle magazine.

If you suffer from puffy eye bags, sleep on your back with your head propped up. You can also treat puffiness with black tea bags. Chill steeped tea bags in the fridge first. Place chilled bags over the eyes. The tannins in black tea help reduce bloat, according to "Confessions of a Beauty Editor," a book written by the editors of Allure magazine.

If bags are constant and never go away, see a doctor for treatment options.

Camouflage Undereye Circles With Makeup

To cosmetically camouflage dark undereye circles, use eye creams that contain mica or other light-diffusing particles. For darker circles, you'll want to use a creamy concealer.

To apply concealer, first prep eye with an eye gel. Dot concealer over the blue veins or dark circles and tap, never rub, concealer into the area surrounding the eye.


source from http://beauty.about.com

How to Fix Puffy Eyes

Woke up with puffy eyes? While a washcloth soaked in chamomile tea works great, as does the teabag itself applied to puffy bags, I find a bag of frozen vegetables does the trick in less time. Simply place the bag (Real Simple Magazine suggests corn or peas -- I prefer peas)over eyes for a couple minutes and watch the puffiness disappear.


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Thursday, April 3, 2008

Before You Buy Blush

The right blush during the right time of day is key. But how to pick the perfect blush? Should you go powder, cream, tint, shimmer or gel? There are many different types out there so here I run down the 5 main types so you can choose what kind you need & when (day or night?)!

Powder Blush

Powder blush is great for all skin types, but best for oily skin and anyone looking for long-lasting color (it's the densest of the blushers).

Cream Blush

This type of blush is best applied with the fingers. It's also dense, but lets your skin show through. Cream blush is particularly suited for dry skin because of its rich, moisturizing ingredients.

Gel Blush

Gel blushes provide a sheer glow. They work best on oily to normal skin and are hard ot spread onto dry skin since they are fast-drying.

Tint Blush

Like gel blush, tints are fast-drying and can look streaky over foundation. If you're going to use it, blend it fast and blend it well. Once it's set it won't budge until you wash your face.

Shimmers

These are great for giving a light gleam to your cheekbones. These are best for nighttime. The great thing about shimmers are you can dab them on your forehead, in the bow of your upper lip or in the inner corners of your eyes. But avoid your highly wrinkled spots, since these will accentuate them.

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How To Fix Under-eye Circles

Q: I have dark under-eye circles. Is there any way to get rid of them?

A.: Dark circles are famously annoying and unfortunately, there's no way to get rid of them. However, you have 3 basic options for concealing them:

Option 1: Use a proper concealer. Test out the best colors at a department store counter or at Sephora. (Tip: Tell the makeup artist you are looking to correct the undereye circles and are testing several different types before purchase). Choose concealer that's a shade lighter than your foundation. And if your circles are very dark, go 2 shades lighter. You might be choosing a concealer that's too light if you are getting a 'raccoon look.'

Great concealers include:

Revlon New Complexion Concealer
Estee Lauder Smoothing Skin Concealer
Cover Girl Smoothers Concealer
Neutrogena Smoothing Skin Stick

We find it works best to apply stick concealers with your finger dabbing a few dots under your eyes.

Option 2: Invest in a vitamin K-based eye product Eye creams such as Vita-K Solution gel or Peter Thomas Roth Power K Eye Rescue can help strengthen capillary walls so dark circles and veins become less visible.

Option 3: Laser treatment If you have a chronic case of undereye circles, you should contact a doctor about lasers. Lasers can thicken the skin by increasing collagen production, so you are less likely to see veins, according to Los Angeles facialist Kate Somerville in June 2005 issue of InStyle magazine.

source from http://beauty.about.com

How To Apply Blush

Many women avoid blush but it can be your beauty secret weapon. For healthy, natural color, nothing beats blush. However, blush tends to overused as well. To avoid looking like a clown, try these steps to choosing blush & applying it.

Difficulty: Easy

Time Required: 2 minutes (once you get past the first couple steps below)

Here's How:

  1. First choose the color using nature as your guide. According to InStyle, the trick is to find a color that matches your cheeks when they're flushed after exercise or being out in the cold. For a quick test, 'spank' your cheeks & use the resulting color as a guide. (We suggest doing this in the comfrot of your home away from other people, wink). Another trick is to match your lip color. Fair skin looks great in rose, olive in peach & dark skin in apricot or even red.
  2. Now that you have the color, choose the right formula for your skin type. Powder is typically best for oily & combo skin. Cream is great for dry skin. Liquid and gel are great for oily skin. For even better results, combine cream & powder together. "It helps my blush stay on longer & looks more luminous," said makeup artist Laura Mercier in O Magazine. Keep in mind stains -- great for well-moisturized skin, not dry skin -- tend to dry very fast so blend well & fast.
  3. Apply foundation, eye color & lipstick. While blush is usually your 2nd-to-last makeup step (before powder), you should experiment with what works best for you. Some makeup artists like to apply blush BEFORE foundation for a more 'natural' look.
  4. Throw out the freebie 'Barbie-size' blush brush that comes with the blush. Use a professional full brush instead (I like MAC's blush brush No. 116), but don't use the same brush you use for your powder.
  5. Put the blush on your brush, tapping off any excess or put a dab of gel on your fingers.
  6. Look into the mirror and smile. This helps you figure out where the 'apple' of your cheek is.
  7. Since you want a healthy flush, it's best to apply blush only to apples of your cheeks. Keep color light & blended. If you're using gel or cream, NYC makeup artist Carlo Geraci (in O Magazine) suggests dabbing it on with your middle finger, then blend with your ring & middle finger. The clean finger will pick up any excess blush.
  8. If you've gone a bit too heavy on the powder blush, a bit of translucent powder over it will calm it down. For cream blush, blot the color off with a tissue. Since gel & liquid blush 'stain' the cheeks, the only way to lighten them is it wash your face, moisturize and reapply your makeup, this time more sparingly.
  9. Finish your look with a sweep of translucent powder.
  10. Extra tip: For a sun-kissed sheen dab bronzer powder on your forehead, chin & nose BEFORE you apply the blush. To make sure it doesn't look like a stripe, use "a big brush & a light hand," suggests makeup artist Bobbi Brown in Lucky Magazine. Those with darker skin tones should try a caramel-color bronzer (not orange) paired with a yellow-based blush, suggests makeup artist Jeanine Lobell in Elle Magazine.Lobell suggests Stila Sun Gel bronzer
    She also recommends Dr. Hauschka Bronzing Powder.
  11. Expert tip: Feel free to experiment with different ways of shading. Makeup artist Shane Paish suggests in the May, 2006, issue of InStyle, to try a C-shape shading. To do this, apply a sheer highlighting powder in a c-shape from your temples to your cheekbones. It should go from the center of your brow bone to the center of your cheek, Paish said, "like the shape of a parenthesis."

Tips:

  1. Clean your brushes with baby wipes. If you don't keep your brushes clean, they'll gather bacteria and transfer it to your skin.
  2. For a sexy look, dab a little shimmery blush on the highest point of your cheekbone nearest your eye.
  3. Using powder blush? Always sweep it in one direction. Going over & over or around and around causes streaks & can hurt your brush.
  4. Cream blush is great for mature skin. It blends easily & therefore looks very natural. For gel or cream blush, dab a dot on the apple of the cheek and two smaller dots up the cheekbone. Blend the dots together up to the hairline.
  5. Dusky pink blush will warm up any tired-looking skin.

What You Need:

  • blush
  • professional blush brush
  • mirror
  • translucent powder
  • bronzer blusher

source from http://beauty.about.com

Thursday, March 27, 2008

How To Shape Your Eyebrows

Few things make you appear more groomed than well-plucked eyebrows. Many women have their eyebrows tweezed or threaded professionally and the trend is so hot, eyebrow boutiques are popping up in big cities across the country. I recommend you have a professional do your eyebrows first to set a 'blueprint', then all you have to do is pluck where the hairs grow in. (A pro waxing should set you back about $20 depending on where you live). Here's some tips on how to tweeze your own eyebrows.

Difficulty: Average

Time Required: 10 minutes

Here's How:

  1. The biggest mistake people make is to tweeze too much. Avoid overplucking as it can take months for brows to grow back. Here's a simple trick to remember: The space between your brows should be equal to, or a little wider than, your eyes. To find where your brow should go, take a long eyeshadow brush or pencil and hold it parallel to the side of your nose. Where the brush meets your brow is where your brow should begin.
  2. To find the end of your brow, extend the brush diagonally from your nostril, following the outside edge of your eye toward the brow. Where the inside edge of the brush hits is where your brow should end.
  3. The best brows have a slight arch. To find yours, hold the brush parallel to the outside edge of the colored part of your eye (the iris). Where the brush meets the brow is where the highest part of your brow should be.
  4. Cleanse your skin. Exfoliating with a gentle scrub (I like Biore) helps prep the area as well. Worried about pain? Expert aesthicians suggest applying to the brow Anbesol, Orajel or any teething gel for babies. Brush brows up and out.
  5. You'll want to invest in a good pair of tweezers with a slanted edge (my favorite, hands down, are Tweezerman slanted tweezers
    You also want to make sure you're near a window with light pouring in or under a bright light with a good mirror (magnifying mirrors are best, but be sure and flip it over to see your overall effect in the regular mirror).
  6. Make sure to pluck hairs in the direction they grow. Don't grab too many hairs at a time. You can hold skin taut as you pluck.
  7. It's a myth that brows should never be tweezed from above. You want both the bottoms and tops to be smooth. So be careful, but tweeze the top AND the bottom.
  8. Stop every few hairs to step back and look at the job you're doing. If you overpluck, you're stuck. Unlike most hairs on your body, your brows won't always grow back once they're yanked.
  9. Once you're done plucking, you can apply aloe vera gel, which will calm the redness right away.

Tips:

  1. To ensure your tweezers maintain their firm grip, regularly wipe the tips with alcohol to remove any oily build up. Also, keep in mind that Tweezerman will sharpen your tweezers for free when they dull. (I always lose mine before they become dull).
  2. If your brows are sparse or spotty, you can fill them in by pressing a brown shadow into your brow. Chanel's Perfect Brow Compact is the ultimate brow shadow. It's expensive, but worth the price. Plucked too much? Ji Baek, owner of Rescue Beauty Lounge in Manhattan suggests in Elle Magazine that you stimulate hair growth by massaging brows with a toothbrush.
  3. If you use a pencil to fill in sparse brows, apply with short, feathered strokes from the inside of the brow out. Then carefully rub brows with a brush or your fingertips to soften the effect.
  4. Brow gel helps keep your brows in place all day. Or if you don't have gel, apply a dab of hairspray to your finger and use it to keep unruly hairs in place.
  5. I've saved the best tip for last. The ideal time for brow-shaping is the week after your period begins.

What You Need:

  • A great pair of tweezers. My recommended choice: Tweezerman
  • A mirror, preferably magnifying
  • Anbesol or children's teething gel if you're afraid of pain



source from http://beauty.about.com

Best Mascaras on the Market from Cheap to Steep --9. Lancome Hypnose

Lancome sent us this mascara and we must admit, at first we were skeptical. After all, it had an odd shape and we are addicted to Lancome's Definicils. Why mess with a good thing? After trying it, we have to say the odd shape of the brush takes some getting used to, but the color goes on smooth and silky without clumping. Another great mascara from Lancome.
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Best Mascaras on the Market from Cheap to Steep --8. L'Oreal Voluminous

InStyle Magazine named L'Oreal Voluminous it's Best Beauty Buy mascara in it's 2005 issue. Enhanced with hair conditioners panthenol and cermide-R, this product is a must-have. Makeup artists love it because, like the other best mascaras, it adds volume without clumping.

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Best Mascaras on the Market from Cheap to Steep --7. Maybelline XXL Volume+Length

This mascara can be found in many a makeup artist's box. Celeb makeup artist Troy Surratt swears by this in Elle Magazine. Surratt piles this stuff on to complete his famous smoky eyes (you may have seen them on Hilary Duff or Maggie Gyllenhaal).
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Best Mascaras on the Market from Cheap to Steep --6. Rimmel Volume Flash Mascara

Lucky Magazine named this a must-have beauty buy in it's April 2006 issue. Why? As an ultra-volumnizer, it makes your eyes look super big.
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Best Mascaras on the Market from Cheap to Steep --5.Revlon Luxurious Lengths Mascara

Allure named this mascara a favorite in their January 2006 issue. At $6.99 you get a lot for your money: A flat side that layers on gel-based color and a curved side that lifts and separates lashes.

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Best Mascaras on the Market from Cheap to Steep --4. Best Waterproof Mascara: Maybelline Great Lash

Now, we're getting into the budget mascara. Maybelline Great Lash waterproof mascara is a classic and reputed to be the best-selling waterproof mascara ever created. It doesn't clump, lasts a long time and won't come off easily.

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Best Mascaras on the Market from Cheap to Steep --3.Bobbi Brown 'Everything'

In the September, 2006, issue of Marie Claire magazine, Serena Williams, a self-avowed 'total beauty junkie' gives a big plug to this mascara.
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Best Mascaras on the Market from Cheap to Steep --2.Best volumnizing Mascara : Prescriptives 'Lash Envy'

Another favorite of makeup artists and beauty experts, Prescriptives 'Lash Envy' Mascara has a Volumatrix Polymer that keeps lashes full and plumped all day


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Best Mascaras on the Market from Cheap to Steep --1.Lancome Definicils

Named the best mascara several years in a row in InStyle magazine's Best Beauty Buys issue, this Lancome Definicils not only lengthens lashes, but won't clump. I use it every day, having tried many mascaras. Keep in mind: Mascara is one beauty product you don't need to spend money on (see other best buys below). However, I happily spend the $20 or so this product costs.
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Is it OK to Wear Blue Eyeshadow?

Remember the old days when beauty editors and experts swore off blue eyeshadow (in fact, we had an article on this site that called jewel-toned blue eyeshadow a 'no-no')? Not anymore.


Deep jewel colors continue to be trendy and blue is the hottest shade of them all. It also looks gorgeous with all eye colors.

Even better news! According to the Ladies Home Journal March, 2006, issue, makeup companies have come up with a new way to compress more pigment than ever into their eye shadows. Now you can pick a shade that looks the same on your eyelids as it does through the plastic cover on the container. In the past, shadows went on lighter or in some cases, muddier. Not anymore. Now you can buy without fear of hating the color.

Just remember when applying deeply-hued shadows to blend well and keep the rest of your makeup light.



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How To Wear Vibrant Eyeshadows

Yes, those jewel-toned eyeshadows are in, but how to wear them? Here are some basic tips to consider:

Blending is key The richest colors should stay closest to the lashline, fading as it reaches your eye's crease, according to Barneys New York makeup artist Carlos Geraci in the April 2006 'O' magazine.

Pick colors that flatter your eyes & skin color Blue shadows make blue eyes pop, while lilac & purples are gorgeous on brown eyes & black-skinned & olive-skinned women. If you have pink skin (as opposed to a yellow base), avoid pinky-purples.

Use 2 shadows, a light & a dark Pick a soft color for the entire eye area up to the browbone & then use the darker color only up to your eye's crease.

Keep the rest of your makeup light Nude lips with gloss suits these strong eyes perfectly. Avoid colors on lips, they'll not only compete with your strong eyes, but the colors could clash.



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