Welcome back to Eyeshadow 101. The first installment was all about purple shadows for hazel/green eyes. #2 is dedicated to finding the best suited eyeshadows for all of you blue eyed beauties. Whether you have more of a sky blue tone or an oceany navy-green darker eye color; men will melt when they catch a glimpse of your baby blues.
Let's begin with a short reiteration of the basics from installment #1. The goal of wearing eye make-up is to enhance/bring attention to your eyes. The rule of thumb is to wear the opposite color eye shadow of your eyes on the color wheel so that your eyes really stand out (or POP as they say in the make-up world).

If there’s one thing to remember when it comes to blue eyes it's this: Never match your eyeshadow to your clothing or your eye color! If you have blue eyes, wearing blue eyeshadow makes your eyes look duller - and complementing your clothing has been out since the 80’s. Imagine if you were wearing red or black? YIKES!
To specifically make your blue eyes traffic stoppingly bold, I suggest colors such as: browns, greys, golds, rusty peaches or plum colors. Right now the look is more of a bold eye as opposed to the old muted "Bobbi Brown" natural eye, so have fun and play with your make-up as you would with any other accessory.
To see my product recommendations and reviews read more
As we know metallics are hot right now and they are easy to use alone. Just apply them to the lid and crease. My bronze and gold pics for blue eyes are:
"Half Baked" by Urban Decay - a really rich gold,

"Amber Lights" by MAC - a shimmery golden peachy-brown (worn by model> and

"Beach"Fluid Iridescent Eyeshadow by Chanel - the perfect combination of bronze and gold.

MAC also makes an awesome eyeliner called Teddy which is a darker shimmery bronze that looks great with any of these shadows.

If you are going for the whole shebang (lid, crease and highlighter) these are my suggestions. Typically, the lightest color is applied to the entire eyelid and to the edge of the eyebrow. Select a deeper color from the same color family to do the crease and dust a highlighter just beneath the brow.

I love Done That by Make Up By Armando for the lid,

MAC's Trax (a burgundy-plum flecked with bronze shimmer) for the crease and

Smashbox's Butter a goldy yellow as a highlighter.

Don't forget to blend well; when you think you've blended enough, blend some more! The goal is not to have obvious edges of color. Remember, lighter colors highlight and darker colors recede and add depth and shading.


















Temperley London
Issa
Lancaster
can someone with brown eyes use this scale, take a picture and post it?
1Cant wait for the brown eyes edition
2So skin color does not cator in this equation? Just eyecolor and its opposite on the spectrum? Hmmmm
3I think complexion has a lot to do with how eyeshadow looks. I think this is good advice for a beginner, and the blue eyeshadow with blue eyes thing is a definate no-no. I always go to the chanel counter b/c i trust the ladies there. I ahve blue eyes and they have put green, deep purple, pinks, browns, beiges and all kinds of colors on me. I have been happy wiht it. i think it also depends on the UNDERtone of the coloring.
4i have blue green eyes and have been using trax and amber lights for years...they are awesome. i love browns and plums best!
5Awesome! Thanks for the suggestions!
6I really needed to read this....( I never looked like Mimi from Drew Carey, but my eyes just never looked "classy" just tarty. Thanks. My eyes are what I call cesspool blue, no pizazz.
7I have blue eyes and I have used blue eyeshadow and my eyes popped out way better than the purple. I used a dark blue on the crease with a shimmering light blue on the lid and under the brow a shimmery white. Gotta play with the makeup and see what works for you instead believing what the typical quota is. Go with a makeup company like Mary Kay to play with so you don't waste all your money trying to see what works for you.
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