Fashion & Beauty
They are all starting to dress up.
In a trend fashionistas refer to as “doll makeup,” more makeup enthusiasts are enjoying flushed cheeks, glowing highlights, and flawless skin that looks airbrushed. The baby-faced aesthetic started on the runway, then spread to social media and the streets of the Big Apple.
Sexy celebrities such as singer Dove Cameron, rappers Cardi B and Megan Thee Stallion, and actress Julia Fox have all been paying attention to this style lately, but in a recent photo shoot for Skims magazine, she wore the style next door. Former Disney kid Sabrina Carpenter (24) is the embodiment of charm. 'Spring lingerie campaign.
The “Nonsense” singer can now thank Doll Makeup founder Dame Pat McGrath for her signature Skims look. The influential makeup artist and owner of Pat McGrath's Lab, he created the “ultimate porcelain doll look” at Maison His Margiela's haute couture show in Paris, France earlier this year. was unveiled.
Pencil-drawn micro-brows, intense eyeshadow, popping cheeks, and pouty lips are completed with a shimmering sheen for this glassy look.
“I've never seen make-up so talked about,” McGrath said during a ticketed Margiela Masterclass for make-up professionals. “Every member of my team's phone was blowing up with people from all over the world asking what was on everyone's face.”
Along with Carpenter's staff, celebrity makeup artist Erica LaPerle also shared her inspiration for the cover shoot for Cardi B's latest single “Enough (Miami)” in a behind-the-scenes post on Instagram on March 14th. praised McGrath.
Toronto-based artist Miles also recreated the viral look for her followers on social media. “I'm sure we'll continue to see different variations of Margiela's glass skins,” she told CBC. Early this month.
New York celebrity makeup artist Samantha James gushed to the Post about her “soft glam” look. She says, “I love incorporating on-trend doll makeup into most of my clients' routines.”
Despite the dramatic motif, beauty enthusiasts recommend using less cosmetics and applying them easily in order to achieve a soft, nailed face that looks natural, clean and supple. Masu.
James, who has been in the makeup industry for over a decade, has practiced various versions of the trend beat on influencers and models like Hailey Khalil and Samantha Brown.
“To prolong my client’s charm, I like to use just the right amount of powder…Topping my cheeks with a bright blush, a shimmering balm, or a cream blush gives me that glass-skinned, fresh-doll look. It helps to de-escalate – like it looks while still being held in place,” she told the Post.
James' contribution to the trend comes as the self-proclaimed MUA takes inspiration from Bratz and Barbie dolls to porcelain and china dolls to imitate the faces of their favorite dolls, with sweet faces promoting the #dollmakeup trend online. Part of tens of thousands of posts from fashionistas.
While makeup trends continue to expand the palette of beauty enthusiasts, some who adopt a romantic look have been compared to “Lolita,” after Vladimir Nabokov's 1955 novel of the same name. Some people expect that. The book describes the narrator's sexual obsession with and pedophilic behavior towards a 12-year-old girl, whom he codenames “Lolita.''
The trend embraced pale face powders, deeply pigmented cheeks, long eyelashes, soft lip colors, and created an audience that embraced taboo and twisted narratives. This look is often completed with girly flourishes like hair ribbons.
Despite the raised eyebrows, James loves to exude a feminine vibe to her clients.
“This trend has a way of creating a very wearable and comfortable next-to-skin feel that allows customers to feel 'like themselves' while still feeling like themselves.”