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In the beauty community, highlighter has always been a big player. It's your call if you want to go for a strobed look that lasts all day, or if you're going to refine the look for a lighter complexion. However, it's also one of the most underestimated tools because it accentuates your cheekbones even more than it should.

After achieving that perfect highlight, one step-out in the sun gives your skin a natural shine that glows just right. Regardless of the level of skill, highlighting is something you can do at home effortlessly. If you got a bit overzealous with the shimmer stick, we gathered tips to help you reach glowy perfection, including a simple way to tone down the shine. You can go to Boddess Beauty’s website to pick the best highlighters.

Undertones come in three distinct categories: cool, warm, and neutral. Opt for a highlighter to match with the tone of your skin. Go for a highlighter that has a bluish-pink tinge if you have a cool undertone. Highlighters sorted according to undertones can be easily found in an online beauty store.

It is enthralling to see the number of makeup brushes for a highlighter that line the beauty aisle. And the right brush depends on the nature of the formula you're using when it comes to highlighters. Look for a thin, fluffy brush for powdery products that helps you to focus on the region of the small cheekbone.

Liquid highlighters can give you an incredible glow, but with a brush, they are challenging to apply. You usually want to use a sponge to buff the highlighter onto the skin and shimmer it out if you are using a liquid highlighter.

To get the ideal highlight, you wouldn't have to add any product to your list. To get a subtle glow, you can use oil or serum that you already own. Without incorporating any glitter or sparkle, oil or serums give you a fresh glow. To accomplish the dewiness, many makeup artists from the runways have used tricks like Vaseline.

The whole point of focus is to make your skin appear good and glowy, as though you were drinking eight glasses of water a day. That said, with proper skin setup, the most significant step in achieving safe, glowy skin is in order to wear a highlighter.

You don't need to wear a foundation, but if you like a bit of coverage, now is the time to add it. And if you're really trying to shine like anything, you can add some drops of essential oil or liquid illuminator into your makeup before adding it to your skin.

After your foundation is set, you're ready for the important bit, selecting your highlighter. However, it can be a little challenging to find the right shade and amount of shimmer, so remember this, a creamy highlighter works really well on dry skin and can be added before or after foundation.

On the other side, for oilier skin types, powder formula is safer and should be used as the last step in your makeup. Liquid highlighter has a potential during implementation to break up the foundation beneath it, so use these before your foundation or just blend them for a cool, all-over glow right in with your face makeup.

Three things rely on selecting the right applicator: your highlighter formula, the amount of glow you like, and where you place it on your face. Creams are best applied with your fingertips, while either a brush or a sponge may be used with powders.

Use a brush with small dispersed bristles, like a fan brush, for the lightest coverage. Using a denser brush, such as a curved or stippling brush for extra shimmer payoff. Use a dampened makeup sponge for much of the pigment payoff. Use a lightweight, compact tool, like a pencil brush, for the most effective positioning when applying the product in smaller areas.

Essentially, highlighting is the opposite of contouring. The aim here is to put the high points of your face forward and make them really pop out the tops of your cheekbones, along with your brow bones, the top of your cupid's bow, and down your nose bridge.
Word of advice: avoid your T-zone as it is naturally sticky and vulnerable to excess shine.

Use your brush for wider areas, such as your cheekbones, to brush your highlighter across the skin in a windshield-wiper motion. You can set it with a setting spray. If you want to use a sponge, use it to leap or press the highlighter onto the skin.

For tighter areas, such as the inner corners of your eyes, the cupid’s bow, and the tip of your nose, press the highlighter exactly where you like it and blend it with your finger, using your tiny pointed brush.

Like said before, highlighting is the exact reverse of contouring. You use a colour darker than your skin tone when you contour to produce the illusion that those features are being moved. This results in the impact of those parts being chiselled.

On the other side, highlighter uses a lighter hue than your skin tone to capture light and force out features to make them appear more noticeable. You will also be given the same look by light-reflecting products, which is why certain highlighters are also called illuminators.

Highlighting will help your face add dimension. And the results are doubled when paired with contouring, which is particularly useful when a full coverage base has washed out the features.

You'll want to stick with the high points of your face for the most natural-looking highlight. Your high points are the places on your face where the sun hits, like the tops of your cheekbones, your brow bones, the cupid’s bow, and down the nose bridge. Go for it if you want to add a touch to the very tip of your nose, too.

You can get inventive and step it up once you've got the basics down. Wherever you want to stand out, highlighters will do just fine. The next time you go to buy cosmetics online, don’t forget the hero of the makeup, highlighters!

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