Checking for mistakes

After using powder eyeshadow as eyeliner, check for drippies under the eye and on the cheek. Drippies are those little powder flakes that fly off the brush and land on the cheek. Knocking off the excess from the brush every time helps prevent drippies, but there will s be flakes that end up where they don’t belong. The best way to go after drippies is to use your sponge or a cotton swab and simply wipe them away. If you do this, your next step is to touch up your foundation if it has become smeared.

Some makeup artists recommend applying a thicker layer of loose powder under the eyes and onto the upper cheekbone to catch the inevitable drippies, allowing them to be whisked off with a powder brush. If you have relatively smooth, unlined skin in this area you may want to try this. Otherwise, it can make the under-eye area look dry and enhance lines and wrinkles.

Always double-check the intensity of your eyeliner application and blend away any thickness or color that is more dramatic than you intended. It is not possible to blend or correct mistakes with liquid liners, which is one of the reasons I generally don’t recommend them. The gel eyeliners have a similar tendency, but you can fix some mistakes if you catch them before the liner sets.

If you do choose to wear pencil eyeliner, check for smears under the eye as the day goes by. This is annoying, but letting it go without blending away the smears can make any well-applied eye-makeup design look like a mess.

eyeliner mistakes to avoid

1. Do not use greasy or slick pencils to line the lower lashes; they smear and smudge.

2. Do not use brightly colored pencils or eyeshadows to line the eye; they are distract­ing and automatically look like too much makeup. All you’ll see is the color and not your eye.

3. Do not extend the eyeliner beyond the corner of the eye (no wings).

4. Do not make the eyeliner the most obvious part of the eye-makeup design.

5. Do not line the inside rim of the lids, between the lash and the eye itself; it is messy and can be unhealthy for the cornea.

6. If you do use pencil to line the eye, apply a small amount of eyeshadow over your pencil eyeliner to help set it and keep it from smearing.

7. Do not apply a thick line to small or close-set eyes.

8. Do not use eyeshadow as eyeliner unless you use the proper brush.

9. Do not line the eye with a circle of dark or bright color. Both are too obvious and create an eyeglass-style circle around the eye.

10. Do not overblend, spilling your eyeliner onto the skin under the lower lashes; it makes dark circles look worse.

Updated: October 8, 2015 — 3:07 am