8/26/15

" BEAUTE BY ANNA B" OPEN MAKE-UP CLASS!!

OPEN CLASS!!


Beaute by Anna B's private makeup class is officially opened in my mini studio for both basic and pro+bridal categories. If you are based in Jabodetabek, you are more than welcomed to join. Contact me for pricelist and more details! (Line : annabrethoniere)

You guys can check out my portfolio on IG : @lipstickmurderer or ‪#‎beautebyanna‬

8/24/15

[UPDATE] New Haircolor & New Make-up Routine

Well hell-o everyone! 

So yeah I decided to give myself a pink ombre.

My foundation routine also changed ; I tend to lean towards the glowing and natural look nowadays as it gives off a younger effect to my face. How to achieve the look shown above :

1. Moisturize your face with any kind of moisturizer that matches your skin type and the weather ofc.
2. Take your liquid foundation (that matches your skin tone) and mix it with a bit of moisturizer to give it a more sheer coverage. If you have blemishes on your skin, you don't have to do this step.
3. Apply your liquid foundation to your face and down the neck also ; you don't want to look like a zebra!
4. Apply any kind of highlighter (I use Etude's Bling-bling Eye Stick in Gold) to the highest points of your face which naturally reflect the light ; which are your forehead, underneath your brows, your cheekbones, your nose bridge, your cupid's bow and your chin.
5. Set all the liquid and cream products with a baby powder to give off a natural finish.
6. Fill in your brows. Give it a slight arch for a more edgy feel ; or simply draw it straight (K-Pop brows) to give you a more soft & innocent look. Don't forget to color your brows with brow-cara to match your haircolor.
7. Apply a shimmery beige eyeshadow to your upper & lower lids.
8. Apply your black/dark brown pencil liner strictly on your outer corners and give it a slight feline flick.
9. Apply a bone-colored pencil liner to your lower waterline.
10. Apply your mascara to your top and bottom lashes.
11. Take your bronzer and apply it to the area you'd like to recede ; which are the top of your forehead, the sides of your nose, underneath your cheekbones, also underneath your jawlines.
12. Apply a powder-type highlighter to the top of your cheekbones and the bridge of your nose to give more of a glowing effect. I use Etude's Secret Beam Highlighter in Gold.
11. Apply your favorite coral liptint. I use The Saem's Saemmul Real Tint in #03 Pink

And you're done. Good luck peeps :*

10 Secrets I Learned at Make-up Artist School

Lesson No. 1: Spend some bucks on your tools

At Napoleon Perdis' Makeup Academy in Hollywood, Rebecca Prior, NP's National Educator, begins the first lesson by introducing us to our tools. "To me, tools and products are equally as important as the makeup skills that you have," she says. For example, let's say you were using mediocre brushes, mediocre products, and had average skill. Just by improving the quality of your brushes and using richer pigmented products, the application would immediately be better, even without improving your technique. So if you really want to apply your makeup like a pro, Los Angeles-based educator Felicia Alva says, "Do what the professionals do: Use the proper brushes for application."

Here are the eight basic brushes you need: 

1. Foundation brush
2. Concealer brush 
3. Fluffy powder brush
4. Blush brush 
5. Small blending brush 
6. Flat eyeshadow brush 
7. Precision angle brush 
8. Lip brush 

Once you have your tools, you need to know how to hold them. Make Up For Ever educator Lijha Stewart says, "Where you hold a brush on the handle affects your control. The closer your fingers are to the barrel (the silver section beneath the brush head), the more pressure you put on the brush head and vice versa." In general, if you want to apply color evenly, place your fingers on the center of the brush handle. Another tip: You can easily turn a fluffy brush into a flat, angled brush by wrapping your hand around the bristles and flattening them. 

Lesson No. 2: Mix primer with your foundation

I'm sitting in Make-up Designory's Beauty 101 classroom and I'm anticipating today's lesson to be quite the bore-fest. I'm barely paying attention as Lead Instructor Gil Romero goes through the three different types of foundation: liquid, powder, and cream.

"You can wear cream foundation as is for opaque, full coverage, or you can break it down to be more translucent by mixing it with some primer," he says. What? Isn't primer only supposed to go on before foundation? But Romero says this is a surefire way to retain the foundation's coverage without looking caked on. Plus, you get to reap the long-lasting durability that cream foundation has over liquids and powders. Prior says this also helps the makeup blend seamlessly with the first layer of primer on your skin. 

Make-up Designory Creative Director, Yvonne Hawker (who also wrote the school's textbook) says everyone can use cream foundation, but those with oily skin should use a damp sponge to apply it. Most foundations have oil in its formula to give the coverage blend-ability. Using the sponge will "pick up the pigment, but not the oil in the foundation." You'll still get great coverage, but not the shine. 

For dry or combination skin types, "use your foundation brush and buff the foundation onto the skin, concentrating on the center of your face, which is typically where your skin has the most discoloration," says Hawker. "The further you get from the center, the less coverage you want." 

Lesson No. 3: Love your flaws -- then conceal them

It's Day 3 at makeup school and there's a color wheel on the whiteboard. "The key to being a successful makeup artist is being able to identify someone's undertones and know how to manipulate the color wheel to get rid of unwanted color," says instructor Gina Sandler. 

And when Sandler says "unwanted color," I immediately tune in because I want to learn how to cover up my zits, the stubborn redness around my nose, and the bluish hues under my eyes. She says opposite colors cancel each other out, so green-pigmented concealer covers redness, and orangey concealer removes blue. "If you use your beige concealer, it'll only make those areas look muddy," says Prior. 

Lesson No. 4: Fix your face shape

"Contouring is the art of highlighting and shading," says Prior. "Anything that is lighter than the skin tone will make an area more prominent, anything darker will make that area recede." Here's how you can easily alter your face: 

If you have a round face and want to make it look more oval: Apply a bronzer a shade or two darker than your skin tone in a "3" shape alongside your face: on your temples, the hollow of your cheeks, and your chin. 
If you have a prominent forehead: Shade around the outer edge of your forehead along your hairline to minimize the area with bronzer. 
If you have a flat or wide nose: Shade alongside your bridge starting from your inner brows. Then highlight right on the center of your nose. 
If gravity is taking a toll and your cheeks are sagging: Apply a highlighter just above your cheekbone all the way to your temple. Use a blush directly on the cheekbone, then use a bronzer in the hollow of the cheek, underneath your bone. 

And if you really want to make your contouring stand out, use a sparkly highlighter, which will reflect the most light. Then for your bronzer, go for a matte finish, which will absorb light and create a stark contrast. 


Lesson No. 5: Make your eyes pop by changing their shape

Just like how I learned to use highlights and shadows to contour my face, I found out that I can use the same info to alter my eye shape, too. Whether you have drooping lids, narrow-set eyes, or they're simply too small, you can use your knowledge of light and shadow to change them. 

If you want to add definition: Sweep a light bronzer through the crease of the eye, which is halfway between the lashline and the eyebrow. "As you age, the eye area loses elasticity, and things aren't as shapely as they used to be," says Prior. "This technique is great for mature skin, to give the face more definition." A tip for you blue-eyed girls: An orange-y bronzer in your crease will make your eyes even bluer. 

If you have narrow-set eyes: To elongate your eye width, apply a black liner to the outer half of both your upper and lower lashlines, connecting at the outer corner. 

If you have drooping, heavy lids: Use what you just learned about highlights and shadows to lift your eye. Apply highlighter above your crease, from the inner to outer lid. Then blend a shadow to the area that you want to push back, which would be the heavy fold. Make sure to blend the edges from the shadow to the highlight. 

If you have small eyes: Apply a beige-colored eyeliner to your lower inner rim, which will help make eyes look more open. Then use a black pencil liner along your entire upper and lower lashlines, connecting the lines at the outer corner. The key is to blend the liner with shadow, going outwards. Wherever you place the darkness is where your eye will go, so by smudging the lines, it gives the allusion that your eyes are taking up more real estate on your face. 

And the tip I love most for natural definition: Apply a black pencil to your upper inner rim. "It lengthens the eye and it also sharpens the appearance of the eye, giving more fullness to the natural lashline without seeing the hard edge of a liner," says Prior. 


Lesson No. 6: Think opposites when it comes to color

Remember how I learned that opposite colors on top of each other cancel each other out? OK, well today I learned if you place them side by side, they help each other stand out. Simple, but super important when you're trying to pick the most flattering eyeshadow colors. Here's a cheat sheet:

For blue eyes: Since orange is the opposite color of blue, anything with orange in it will make blue eyes stand out more. "It doesn't have to be a blazing sun color -- it just has to have orangey undertones like gold, apricot, or peach," says Prior. 

For green eyes: Red is the opposite color of green, which isn't to say you should apply a cherry red-colored eyeshadow to your lids. But you'll help your green eyes pop if you use colors that have red undertones, like deep plums and wine. 

For brown eyes: Brown is a neutral color, so any color will work well, says Prior. "But the most standout colors are blue and purple." 


Lesson No. 7: Stop applying eyeliner the wrong way

In Chapter 7 of the Make-up Designory textbook, I learned that you're actually not supposed to draw your liner all the way across your lashline in one motion. "You'll get bumps in your line with your brush catching on loose skin," says Prior. Instead, you're supposed to go from the inner corner to the center of your lid, then reload the brush (if you're using one) and start from the outside corner until you meet the existing liner. 

And as for my wonky winged tips? Prior gave me a smart tip to make sure a wing is always in the right place. "Napoleon Perdis always starts with eyeliner on the lower lashline, because it goes up at the outer corner, which gives you the angle that you should follow on your top lashline," says Prior. "Usually when you do your top liner first you end up in no-man's-land, because you don't know how far to take the line or how curved it should be." 


Lesson No. 8: Get Angelina Jolie's lips without injections

Step 1: Apply foundation to your entire lip, says Napoleon Perdis. Not only does this help remove the natural pigments of your lips for truer lipstick colors, but it can also help you realize where your liplines actually are. 
Step 2: Using a white eyeliner pencil, very softly feather the pencil over the natural contour of the lip. Or use the pencil to make lips fuller or thinner by drawing it past your natural lipline or within it. 
Step 3: Redo the line with a lip pencil in the color of your lipstick. 
Step 4: Apply lipstick with a lip brush in a downward motion. So, from your cupid's bow to each outer corner, then from your outer corner to the center of your lower lip. This ensures an even application of the product, says Hawker. 
Step 5: Apply a light shade of base foundation around the new lip line, blending to a soft edge with a lip brush. 

Remember, light colors reflect light, so using lighter lip colors will give a fuller appearance. Dark colors absorb light, so they will make lips look smaller/thinner. Finally, try this popular trick used on Victoria's Secret Angels to give the illusion of a fuller pout: Apply a dab of gloss to the top part of your Cupid's bow and to the center of the bottom of your lip. 



Lesson No. 9: Make fake brow hairs look real

I've heard this a million times: Your inner brow should line up with your eye's inner corner, your brow's arch should be above the outer edge of your iris, yadda yadda yadda. I honestly zoned out during most of the brow lesson, but then we got to the good stuff: 

Stewart says the biggest mistake women make with brows is choosing a color that's too dark. Dark brows can make you look older, she says, so pick a color that's a couple shades lighter than your hair. 

If you're using a pencil: For a realistic look, apply more pressure at the bottom of the stroke where the root would be. Ease off on the pressure as you flick your stroke upward, using small strokes to make it most look like hair, says Hawker. 

If you're using a powder: Brush the powder starting from the outer corner of your brow and work against the direction of your hair growth. This ensures a more natural finish by allowing the brow hair to sit over the powder, so that your brows don't look drawn in, says Prior. Make sure to emphasize the arch with your color, and taper off at the inner corners so you don't look angry. 



Lesson No. 10: Know how to conceal those under-eye circles

Since dark circles are such a sore spot for most of us, we took a lot of time mixing just the right blend of orange-tinted concealer with a beige-colored concealer that matched our skin tones. The Napoleon Perdis Paparazzi Makeup To-Go class teaches how to remove under-eye circles with the "Hollywood V." With your concealer brush, swipe the color-correcting concealer under your eye in a "V" shape from your outer to inner corner. Then, buff the concealer into your skin, until you get to the center of your lower lid, where you'll want to feather the concealer for a lighter application. 

While it seems like a lot of work, customizing a color-correcting mixture made especially for your skin tone can actually erase stubborn bags instead of highlighting them.



(Source : http://www.totalbeauty.com/content/gallery/makeup-school/p101162/page1)

8 Make-up Mistakes You're Probably Making

When you're used to doing your makeup a certain way, it's pretty hard to break out of your routine. That is until you catch a glimpse of your reflection in a store window and notice things aren't as they appeared in your bathroom mirror.

Whether you got too heavy-handed with the blush or your face powder has given you "clown face," celebrity makeup artist Mally Roncal and Simple advisory board makeup artist Gita Bass explain the eight makeup mistakes you're probably making.

1. Over-powdering. Many women think translucent powder is their best friend and it is not, according to Roncal. Not only will so-called translucent powder leave you looking dry, white and cakey, but it will also settle in all of your fine lines and wrinkles. Bass adds, "By over-powdering, you create a flat mask-like look and destroy your natural radiance."


Choose a light powder and use it only where needed. Never powder over excessively oily skin without using blotting papers first; you will end up with a chalky appearance. Control your oil with the right oil-free skincare and makeup products. We like the Evercolor Poreless Face Defender because it sets makeup, reduces shine and creates a satiny-matte finish.


2. Drawing on exaggerated eyebrows. Not every girl is born with a naturally thick set of brows like Cara Delevingne. However, that doesn't mean you should pick up the darkest brow pencil you can find and fill away. You'll just end up looking really awkward.

Instead, take a spooly brush, direct your brow hairs upward at a 45-degree angle and set with brow gel. Brunettes should use an eyebrow pencil that is one shade lighter than their hair color, while blondes should fill in sparseness with pencil that's one shade darker. Be sure to focus on the outer half of your brows (from arch to tail).



3. Choosing the wrong under-eye concealer shade (or illuminator). This common makeup mistake can actually end up bringing unwanted attention to what you're trying to camouflage. Test the concealer on the back of your hand. If it's too light there, chances are it's too light for your face. Generally, orange concealer works best on most skin tones to conceal darkness.

Gently dab the concealer to the under-eye area, working from the outside to the inner corners. Then even out your complexion with foundation and set with a yellow-based powder.



4. Practicing bad bronzer application techniques. Roncal recommends concentrating on the perimeter of your face when applying bronzer -- starting behind the ear and working down along the jawline. Lightly sweep across the forehead (along the hairline), bridge of the nose, cheeks and tip of the chin. To prevent your face from looking "muddy" or "dirty," make sure that you also apply a great pink blush on the apples of the cheeks and a sweep of highlighter on the tops of the cheekbones.



5. Putting on too much blush. "Nothing will make you look crazier than too much or poorly applied blush," says Bass. Always keep in mind your skin tone -- olive skin looks best with warmer tones, fair skin with pink or rosy tones and dark skin with plum or berry.

For perfect placement, use the old smile technique and swirl the blush directly on apples of your cheeks blending back towards the temples. Make sure the blush is well blended and that it almost melts into your skin. When applied correctly, blush can brighten any complexion and make you look years younger.



6. Skipping primer. To bring down the shine on oily skin when wearing makeup, smooth on a mattifying face primer before applying foundation. Always have touch-up products in your purse like the Simple Radiance Cleansing Wipes to ensure you stay polished throughout the day. Or you can grab a toilet seat cover from the ladies restroom and blot.



7. Wearing mismatched foundation. Bass believes that your foundation should look invisible and leave people wondering if your skin is really that perfect. Pro tip: Always test your foundation on your jaw line in the day light. If it disappears, it's the right shade. "Don't try and bronze your skin using a darker shade, save that for bronzers themselves and always make sure you bring the color down to your neck to blend," she says.



8. Applying foundation on top of dry, flaky skin. No matter how creamy your foundation is, it's not going to hide dryness or flakiness. It will only exaggerate it making your skin look old and tired. Bass suggests exfoliating regularly and moisturizing day and night. For extra dry skin, use a moisturizing primer before applying foundation.



Source : http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/08/29/makeup-mistakes-fixes_n_3831518.html

8/19/15

August 2015 Favorites


1. NYX leopard bronzer
2. Etude House highlighter
3. Ultima II creamy foundation
4. Lashes applicator from @youlee88 (IG online shop)
5. Paris Gold upper falsies no. 04
6. Dailamei lower falsies no. 629
7. Etude House "Dear Darling Tint" no. 01 (Berry Red)
8. Giordano Gold translucent powder

P.S : They're really worth trying on guys! Super cute, affordable, and high-quality products✨