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Eye Shadow

Cream Shadow: Cream eye shadows are used alone or with other eye shadow products. They can come in tubes, pots, wands, and compacts. Cream eye shadows can have a dewy, glossy, or frosty appearance, depending on the product. Some are formulated to be waterproof or water resistant.

Cream to Powder: Cream eye shadow that dries to a powder finish. Can be worn alone or layered.

Gel: Found most often in pots, gel products are used as eye shadow or eyeliner. They are quick drying, easy-glide application, and long lasting. They can be used in combination with other eye shadow products. Gels also come in glosses that dry to a shine that gives the eye shadow an appearance of being wet.

Liquid: Liquid eye shadow generally comes in a tube, usually with a wand or brush

attached.

Loose Powder: Comes in jars. It can be used wet or dry. Products are highly concentrated with color. They can be used alone or layered in combination with other eye products. They are messy—the loose powder tends to “float” everywhere. If using, do the eyes first, foundation last, to prevent shadow from dropping onto the foundation.

Pencils or Pens: Are highly pigmented, frosty or sheer. Some formulas are waterproof or water resistant in small or large pencil form. You will need special sharpeners for these.

Pressed Powder: Are usually in compact or drop-in disks to customize your eye-shadow palette. It can be used wet or dry.

Waterproof Eye Shadow Products: Are

usually found in jars, tubes, or pencil form. They contain a polymer ingredient. They are formulated to not crease or fade.

Eyeliner

Подпись: 79Cake: Applied with a brush that is damp. Cake eyeliner is great for smudging. Cake

Подпись: оПодпись: FOUNDATIONSproducts usually come in compacts or jars, and are creams or powder formulas.

Gel: Used like a liquid or cake, but is easier to apply. It is long lasting. Gel is applied with a brush and usually found in jars.

Liquid: Adds drama to your look, and a must for many “period” looks. It is applied with a brush and is quick drying, but needs a very steady hand. “Painters” work well with liquids.

Loose Powder: Highly pigmented powder that can be used wet or dry. Use a sealer on top for longer wear. Loose powder can be messy.

Pencils: Easy application and blending. They can be formulated in waterproof and water-resistant products, and come in frost, kohl, and matte, with either a fine point or thick.

Sealers: Products used to protect any eye shadow or eyeliner from smudging, smearing, or lifting. Sealers are usually found in liquid form, and can be mixed with eye shadow (or product) in the application (think watercolors).

Mascara

Cake: Is applied with an eyelash brush or small fan brush. Cake mascara and a fan brush gives you a thorough coat on the lashes, with no “clumps,” and works great to get the base of the lashes, particularly on light or blonde lashes.

Clear: Comes in tubes and is applied like regular mascara. It gives a nice sheen to the lashes, and helps to show off definition and length in the “Natural Look.”

Fillers: Are found alone or combined into the mascara formula. They thicken
and lengthen. They are usually made out of nylon fibers.

Top Coats: Applied to the eyelashes after mascara, they are used to add sheen and vibrancy to the lashes. They can also be used as a sealer for the mascara.

Primers: Act as moisturizers for the eye, and also prepare the lashes for mascara. They are helpful in creating a longer look and in protecting the eyelashes from mascara. Remember to apply first, before mascara.

Tinted: Colored mascara, usually in tubes.

Waterproof: Smudgeproof, creaseproof, and quick drying. You must have correct mascara remover in order to take off waterproof mascara. Primers can be used first, for ease of removal.

Blushers

Cream Blush: Can be highly pigmented. It can be used alone or with other products. Formulas come in cream to powder finish. Cream blushes come in jars, compacts, sticks, and liquids.

Pressed Powder: Can be used alone or in combination with creams. It comes in a wide range of textures and formulas in compact form. It is great for “on-set” touch-ups because it is pressed and not loose.

Loose Powder: Comes in a wide range of textures and formulas. It can be used alone or in combination.

Tints and Gels: Found in creams, gels, moisturizers, and liquids. Tints and gels are sheer translucent in color. Many are made to be an “all-in-one” product for cheeks and
lips. Some are water resistant and oil free. They can be used alone or combined.

Eyebrows

Cake: Powder form, pressed or loose, and come in jars, compacts, and pencil form. They are the easiest and most natural way to define a brow. Cake eyebrow definer is most often used with a stiff eye brush. It can be wet or dry.

Gels: Usually transparent, but are available in tints. Gels can be used alone or after brow color has been applied. They dry quickly, are often waterproof, and hold the brow shape in place.

Pencils: Eyebrow pencils have an extra-hard point for drawing, shaping, and filling in brows. They are very pigmented, and come in assorted colors, and can be used in combination with other brow products.

Thickening: Eyebrow thickeners are like mascaras for the eyebrows. They have hairlike fibers that are suspended in the formula to add volume and coverage to the brows.

Wax: Used to shape, enhance, or fill the brow while holding the brow shape. It comes in different colors and can be combined with other products.

Lipstick

Cream: Contains moisturizing properties and is highly pigmented. Cream lipsticks go on smooth, and some contain sun protection and vitamins. They come in matte, shine, and frost formulas.

Matte: Lipstick that is flat with no shine. It tends to be very pigmented. It is great for creating “period” looks. Matte lipsticks are long wearing because they are so dense.

Frost: Comes in lipsticks, pots, gloss, and tints, with different levels of frost or glitter.

Gloss: Sheer formulas with high gloss or wet look. Gloss lipsticks can be used alone or in combination as a top coat to the lips.

Treatments: Balms, conditioners, and treatment sticks for the lips. They are available with sun protection, natural plant extracts, vitamins, and moisturizing properties. They soothe dry lips and can come in tints. They may be used alone or in combination.

Lip Scrubs: Treatment products to exfoliate the lips (get rid of dry skin).

Lip Plumper: Contains ingredients for plumping the lip area. Sometimes there is a tingling sensation when applied.

Lip Wax: Wax formula used before lipstick application to fill in lines and wrinkles. Lip wax also preps the lips for lipstick.

Lip Liners: Come in pencil, pen, or stick form. They are used to reshape and enhance the lip line before lipstick application, and can be used alone with a lip moisturizer (like a tint) or in combination with all lip products.

Websites and Addresses

Frends Beauty Supply, www. naimies. com

Nancy Tozier, Take Up Cosmetics www. sephora. com

Suzanne Patterson, www. creativeartistryfx. com

Подпись: 84Подпись: BEAUTY AND BASICSMORE ABOUT PRODUCTS

At one time it was critical because of the nature of lighting and film technology, as well as theatrical custom, to eliminate as much detail of the actor’s face as possible and to draw in, often almost cartoonishly, those features meant to be seen. As film stock and lighting became more forgiving, and “reality,” rather than “theatricality,” became the accepted convention, beauty makeup has, too, evolved to appreciate a more naturalistic aesthetic.

—Richard Dean, Makeup Artist

Your imagination and your knowledge of shapes, the body, color, and lighting enable you to paint with endless possibilities. In this chapter, we will start with the basic skills and makeup applications that a Makeup Artist uses every day. We want you to excel in the basics before moving on to more advanced makeup applications and designs. This is why we started the book with the more technical aspects of makeup. In order to have the background needed to move forward and excel, you need to understand all the elements and aspects that affect your work. To make up the whole, you need all the parts. We will note “Industry Standards” throughout this chapter and the rest of the book for you to know and recognize. These are products that will be found in every makeup kit. Brand and name recognition are important to the industry. Once you know that a product works, photographs well, and does not cause skin irritation, you will rely on that product to always work for you when there is no time for discovery, experimenting, or testing. Industry Standards are trusted and proven—they
work. We will cover the testing of looks in Chapter 8, “Design.”

Within one day, a Makeup Artist could do any number of different makeups—for example, a beauty makeup, cover an actor’s tattoo, break a nose, apply a tan or sunburn, add 10 years to a character, apply a five o’clock shadow, or give the “homeless extra” the grime needed to sell the look. (An “extra” is a background actor, sometimes referred to as a “background artist”; these actors play a supportive but integral role in filmmaking, and need to have the same attention to detail as a principal actor.)

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We have our own slang in the makeup world. Makeup artists often refer to "a makeup" or "the makeup" when speaking or referring to a colleague. They are refer­ring to the specific look that is being done: a character or design of makeup. Example: "The makeup looks muddy." "Muddy" is unclean, not blended well, uneven appli­cation (not good), and "the makeup" is the finished application of the artist.

It could also be a day about creating natural looks that seem organic without the assistance of makeup. You need to develop a subtle eye and hand for the realistic looks. Believability to the eye is key. It is requested in all media, for all ages and genders, and is a frequent request by all Directors, Producers, and clients.

Understanding the many different interpretations of makeup is also important.

MORE ABOUT PRODUCTSMORE ABOUT PRODUCTSWhat is natural to one person is over-made – up to another. In the beginning of your career, this is one of the more frustrating situations: unclear communication about the makeup. It is subjective and at times difficult to communicate what a look should be. With experience comes the ability to assess the situation and decipher what is being requested. There is also time during the prep pause of a job for understanding what is needed. Prep is the period prior to filming, shooting, or staging when you have initial design discussions and even “test the makeup looks” (see Chapter 8: Design).

Take any opportunity to hone your talents and skills for all skin tones and types. The more faces you do, the better you will be. A great opportunity is working “the line,” or “bull pen,” for a film or opera company.

You are one of many Makeup Artists painting for the crowds, and you have little time to do it in. This exposes you to so many faces and corrective situations.

PRO TIP

I take one summer job in NYC each year during my time off from the Met to hone my skills at cranking out full makeups in 10 to 15 minutes, recalling my early days on "the line" at San Francisco Opera, where we were trained to complete a full makeup (on choristers and supers [supers are stage "extras": nonsinging background artists]) in 8 to 10 minutes.

—Steven Horak, Makeup Artist, Metropolitan Opera House, New York City

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Retail cosmetic counters also offer a chance to gain experience with a wide variety of skin tones, facial structure, and vanity, but you will experience doing only “symmetrical beauty makeup,” which is not always applied in film.

The camera loves irregularity. It photographs well, so we do not necessarily strive for symmetry in film (see Chapter 8: Design).

Makeup Artists use their artistry on the skin to create, but we do provide a service. We care for the person’s outer look or character, and in some situations for the person himself or herself, and that person’s skin.

We care for the looks we create and the person we paint on. Maintaining the look of the character takes place over the length of the film or project, one day or several months. Film and TV have long days: 12- plus hours per day—with 13 to 14 hours per day being normal, and the possibilities of going 18 to 19 hours per day.

Makeup applied in the morning needs to be maintained and many times reapplied thoroughout the day. It can be grueling and exhausting, but, we hope, creatively fulfilling.

Подпись: 85With film, there is a beginning, a middle, and an end to the story, with the character’s movement (and makeup) throughout. In TV, there is a continuing story line, with the same character movement (and makeup)— just a much longer, and sometimes seemingly unending, story line. Print shoots have a shorter day—8 hours is the norm— creatively driven by the Photographer, Art Director, and the client. On some exterior

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location shoots, they will split up the day: shooting in the morning sun, take a break from the midday sun, and start shooting again in the late-afternoon sun. Stage productions can have long hours in their rehearsal schedule: 10- to 12-hour days— this is the rehearsal and prep time before opening the show. Once a stage production has “opened,” the show calls vary between three and five hours per call (or show), with one day per week as a maintenance day, where you start work earlier to do repairs and maintain the show. Some days have 8 6 two show calls: matinee and evening

performance. Theatrical productions work six days per week. Opera schedules are continuous throughout their season, with every opera house maintaining a different “season.” Try all media available to you. It is great experience, and helpful in deciding where your talents, personality, and intuition work best.

Updated: June 28, 2015 — 7:14 am