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Below, makeup artists break down iconic makeup looks that feel like they’re straight out of Studio 54 —read on to learn more on how to achieve these looks at home. Bold Cut Crease View this ...
Both styles of makeup continued into 1994, [131] but went out of style the next year. The trends in makeup shifted in the mid-1990s. In 1995, nude shades became desirable and women had a broader color palette in brown. Another makeup trend that emerged was matte lipsticks, with deep shades of red and dark wine colors worn as part of night ...
VSCO girl is an American clothing style that tried to emulate the style of the photo app, VSCO. These girls wear scrunchies on their wrists and in their hair with high-side ponytails and headbands. Footwear includes white sneakers, ballet flats, and sandals.
Way Bandy (August 9, 1941 [1] – August 13, 1986) was an American make-up artist. During the 1970s, Bandy became one of the most well known and highest paid make-up artists in the fashion industry. [2] Photographer and frequent collaborator Francesco Scavullo called Bandy "one of the great makeup artists of our time." [3]
The trend takes inspiration from a 2001 Hindi film of the same name, and it has creators styling themselves in Indian bridal hair, makeup and outfits to the beat of one of the movie’s songs.
In 2002, mineral makeup broke into the mainstream with Bare Minerals, a product of Bare Escentuals. This fueled the trend for natural looking makeup, and became the standard of the 2000s. [192] By 2004, the glittery looks had disappeared. By around 2005/06, retro-styled makeup from the 1940s had made a comeback, such as bright red lips and cat ...
The style was influenced by hip-hop, emo, Japanese street style, and indie pop fashion, especially skinny jeans, trucker hats, Nike shoes, mismatched neon green, fluorescent yellow, bright blue or hot pink socks worn with sneakers, Vans, Levi's 501 jeans, [191] Dickies shorts, pocket watches, [297] flannel shirts, thin ties, Nike Elite crew ...
This shifted towards a natural (lesser) style of makeup after the 2011 Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami, also known as the Great East Japan Earthquake. It was seen to express a softer beauty in a sensitive time of healing. [23] This style has continued until today, with lesser makeup being preferred over both heavy makeup and no-makeup styles. [23]