General Discussions => Beauty => Fashion => Topic started by: Owllady on September 10, 2008, 01:46:25 AM Return to Full Version

Title: Too strong make up?
Post by: Owllady on September 10, 2008, 01:46:25 AM
I try to be passable when I am at the public areas. For make up I use ordinary only powder and lipstick. I have been said that my make up is too strong. Could it be so?
Title: Re: Too strong make up?
Post by: deniz on September 10, 2008, 01:52:29 AM
my personal experience.
lipstick is terrible for ts, unless they have undergone surgery to feminize chin and lips.otherwise the draw attention to the lips.(if leiser sessions are not over and there is some shadow, then stay away as well)
lip gloss without colour  is your best choice.
i would rather use liquid foundation, to your skin colour.it makes the result more natural and hydrated
best of luck.
Title: Re: Too strong make up?
Post by: barbie on September 13, 2008, 06:41:25 AM
Interesting. I wear strong lipstick when I really want to look like a woman. When wearing strong lipstick, nobody dares to call me 'sir' or equivalent nouns.

For powders and foundations, I have heard more commentation when I minimize the amount applied in my face. I think less is better when wearing powders and foundations. Mixing with natural facial colour and tone.

Barbie~~
Title: Re: Too strong make up?
Post by: Hypatia on September 14, 2008, 04:57:23 AM
On the contrary, I find that using sufficient lip color makes the major difference in passability. I never go out without a lip color that's sufficiently strong for my complexion, and for me it needs to be a dark rich purple-red. Constant experience over the years has shown me that this is how I pass the best. Less-bold colors like pink just look wrong on me. If you're a pale blonde, I don't know what to recommend, I just know what works for me. Makeup advice in America is geared toward Nordic white people by default, so those of us with darker complexions have to look a little harder to find what's best for us. I'm Sicilian and I found a lot of usefulness in the book Latina Beauty, which also provided statistics that Latina women use more makeup than white women. With our complexions and features, we actually look good with more of it than less. Even though conventional wisdom always warns us away from using more, I think that conventional wisdom mainly has pale washed-out blondes in mind.

I cannot stress strongly enough that there are no makeup rules that encompass everybody the same. Each individual has to find the best look for her. Get a makeover from a professional! I'm in luck because around here the makeup ladies are usually Iranian, so they are naturally expert at making up complexions like mine. Deniz, you're Greek but I don't know what you look like, I would have guessed we had similar needs. We share a lot of common heritage.

In my case it wasn't chin and lip surgery that allowed me to look good in makeup-- it was the laser hair removal. That's what made my life possible. With such strong features, people just assume I'm Arab. I've had American racists tell me to go back to the Middle East where I came from. "You people messed up your own countries, we don't want you over here messing up ours too" was the hate message.

As for liquid foundation, I agree, especially if you have lines and large pores, liquid is the way to go. It's imperative to blend your foundation perfectly, so that it has no visible edges. Liquid is the easiest foundation to blend. I use Clinique Perfectly Real powder over that to help set it, but again powder has to be blended perfectly too. Same goes for concealer, blush, and bronzer. Blend, blend, and blend some more.
Title: Re: Too strong make up?
Post by: Alexandra on September 14, 2008, 05:45:45 PM
Powder and lipstick?  It depends on what kind of powder and how it was applied.  If it's dusty or cakey, it can look really made up.  I think a better option would be to use some creme or liquid foundation, and set it with a LIGHT dusting of pressed or loose powder (I prefer loose, it's scary thinking about dropping the jar but it feels so much lighter on my face).

As far as lipstick, this just depends on many variables.  Perhaps you should play up your eyes and keep your lips a more natural or nude color?  I've found that even though I have full lips, my eyes just take up too much attention if I try a bold lipstick shade and the features of my face are battling with each other, so it appears too loud.  The key is pronouncing one feature and softening the others.  Plus, eyes are great fun to make up!