The diva lookWhy it works: "What makes this look so pretty is that Zhang Ziyi pairs it with a pretty cheek and a pretty lip with a hint of pink in it, so it makes [the eye makeup] a little softer," says Babaian. Also, "since [the shadow] isn't going into the brow area, it helps [open] her close-set eyes," while her naturally filled brow keeps the look glam instead of goth.
Who should do it: While she has thin, almond-shaped eyes, this look would work on any eye shape. However, Babaian says, this look is best for fair skin (to keep it fashion forward), and close-set eyes as "it will make them look further apart."
How to get it: Step 1: Apply foundation to your lids. Step 2: Sweep a neutral brown shadow on your eyelids, creating the shape you want using a small, fluffy shadow brush. Extend it out a bit to create the cat eye shape. Step 3: Blend a soft black pencil liner over brown shadow allowing just a little of the brown to peek through. Step 4: For the outer corners, hold a business card up to the end of your eyes (to help create a perfectly straight line) and, using a black eyeshadow, extend the tails out a bit. Trace over the shadow line with black pencil for lasting power. Step 5: Smudge the lines slightly with a brush. Step 6: Line your waterline (inner rims) and lower lashlines and smudge along your lower lashline to create smoke. Step 7: Apply a black matte shadow over all of the pencil you just applied to "mattify everything," says Babaian. Step 8: Curl lashes and apply lots of mascara. "Lashes are key to soften a dark eye," says Babaian. Step 9: Apply a silvery shimmery highlighter to the inner corners of your eyes.
Bonus tip: Do eyes first, then foundation," says Babaian. This way you won't need to clean up any black crumbles afterward.
It's hard to find a good article on Asian eye make-up, so I really appreciate this. The last two looks are my favorite. However, when I returned to Total Beauty to find this article, I couldn't get past the first page. The new search has been tripping me up in other ways too. I ended up using Google to locate this and other Total Beauty articles.
This is a great article, but I would of liked some more variety in the asian looks. I am asian, also I am fair skin, i wish there were more suggestions for asians with fair skin because I feel like it is hard to use colors on my skin tone. These looks are very pretty, and I feel like this article was very helpful. I do hope for more articles relating to Asian Americans. Thank you very much Sharon!~
I loved this article, and I think it provides great tips for Asian Americans. Personally, I'm going to be trying some of these. I think the only way that this article can be construed as racist is if you consider all makeup misogynist - after all, makeup is meant to enhance the way a woman looks, to make her conform more to accepted standards of beauty.
To the previous poster: I'm absolutely aware of Asians being racist towards their own race. I have seen it before. I don't understand it. Asians are fantastic, beautiful, wonderful, hard working, super intelligent, strong willed, kind, well mannered, determined, confident, outstanding members of society and if I were Asian, I would feel blessed. I don't see why everyone doesn't like them as much as I do.
Whether or not it was written by an Asian is moot. People can be discriminatory toward their own race. Ever heard of the "brown paper bag test?" The question is whether it's disrespectful or offensive toward Asians, which I think this article should be. It's describing Asian eyes as problematic/undesirable/flawed/etc. and suggests that making them less Asian or non-Asian (i.e. faux-creasing, bletharoplasty) would make them better. Perhaps another problem is that this author views non-Asian eyes as "normal" and Asian eyes as "abnormal," because instead of trying to work with or enhance the natural shape of the eye, they are suggesting that destroying what makes it Asian is an improvement.
To Grimm: The reason why I found this at least a liiiitle bit racist, is "The monolid is to blame". monolid....in other words, Asian people's eye shape. I am someone who has TONS of respect for the Asian community. I'm only looking out for them.
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Older comments
How come Bingbing Fan's eye makeups are not included at all? She has some of the most diverse and AWESOME ones. Guys should look her up.
by Hannahpiao Friday, April 26, 2013 at 04:55AM Report as inappropriate
It's hard to find a good article on Asian eye make-up, so I really appreciate this. The last two looks are my favorite. However, when I returned to Total Beauty to find this article, I couldn't get past the first page. The new search has been tripping me up in other ways too. I ended up using Google to locate this and other Total Beauty articles.
by kittymarmalade Sunday, February 24, 2013 at 01:59AM Report as inappropriate
This is a great article, but I would of liked some more variety in the asian looks. I am asian, also I am fair skin, i wish there were more suggestions for asians with fair skin because I feel like it is hard to use colors on my skin tone. These looks are very pretty, and I feel like this article was very helpful. I do hope for more articles relating to Asian Americans. Thank you very much Sharon!~
by Misselizabeth Saturday, January 19, 2013 at 03:21PM Report as inappropriate
I loved this article, and I think it provides great tips for Asian Americans. Personally, I'm going to be trying some of these. I think the only way that this article can be construed as racist is if you consider all makeup misogynist - after all, makeup is meant to enhance the way a woman looks, to make her conform more to accepted standards of beauty.
by schien Thursday, December 27, 2012 at 11:23AM Report as inappropriate
I messed up sending messages to this website so soon. Please delete all messages I sent here, and any replies to my messages. It's an OCD thing LOL
by david_fromohio Friday, May 18, 2012 at 11:26AM Report as inappropriate
Beautiful!
by lisiana_de_bem_justino Saturday, April 28, 2012 at 08:23PM Report as inappropriate
These are great tips for accentuating natural beauty.
by beautybody Thursday, April 5, 2012 at 10:07AM Report as inappropriate
To the previous poster: I'm absolutely aware of Asians being racist towards their own race. I have seen it before. I don't understand it. Asians are fantastic, beautiful, wonderful, hard working, super intelligent, strong willed, kind, well mannered, determined, confident, outstanding members of society and if I were Asian, I would feel blessed. I don't see why everyone doesn't like them as much as I do.
by david_fromohio Wednesday, March 7, 2012 at 05:57AM Report as inappropriate
Whether or not it was written by an Asian is moot. People can be discriminatory toward their own race. Ever heard of the "brown paper bag test?" The question is whether it's disrespectful or offensive toward Asians, which I think this article should be. It's describing Asian eyes as problematic/undesirable/flawed/etc. and suggests that making them less Asian or non-Asian (i.e. faux-creasing, bletharoplasty) would make them better. Perhaps another problem is that this author views non-Asian eyes as "normal" and Asian eyes as "abnormal," because instead of trying to work with or enhance the natural shape of the eye, they are suggesting that destroying what makes it Asian is an improvement.
by emozemoz Wednesday, February 29, 2012 at 01:58PM Report as inappropriate
To Grimm: The reason why I found this at least a liiiitle bit racist, is "The monolid is to blame". monolid....in other words, Asian people's eye shape. I am someone who has TONS of respect for the Asian community. I'm only looking out for them.
by david_fromohio Saturday, February 25, 2012 at 02:37AM Report as inappropriate