![]() Contour along the outer edges of your forehead, at your temples, and under your cheekbones, then continue the contour around your jawline, avoiding the chin. In general, you want to stick to the 3 contour framework. Then add a subtle contour underneath your cheekbones, bringing it up to just below your temples.įace Shape: Facial width and length are roughly the same size.Ĭontour Guidelines: If your face is a little round, contouring can add major definition. Most importantly, remember to blend, obvious lines never look good! How to contour to flatter your face shape:įace Shape: Forehead is slightly wider than the chin, with high cheekbones.Ĭontour Guidelines: Oval faces really suit the basic 3 contouring outline: sweeping your contour shade in the shape of 3 from your temples to below your cheekbones to the outside of the upper jaw.įace Shape: Forehead, jawline, and cheekbones are all the same width.Ĭontour Guidelines: The goal here is to create a more oval shape, so add more contour to the corners of your face (the outer corners of your forehead and jaw). ![]() If you have a larger forehead, adding more contour here can help to give the illusion of a smaller forehead. The classic rule is to ‘draw a 3’ that will frame your face so your bronzer or contouring shade should be swept from your forehead around your hairline, under your cheekbones, and back around and under your jaw, just like if you were to draw a 3 shape on either side of your face. The Basic Rules: Think light in the center of your face, and shadow at the edges. For a more natural shadow, use ashy shades that have cooler, grey undertones – if the contour shade is too bronzey or orange, it won’t look natural. While there’s no perfect face shape (it would be a pretty boring world if there was), if you do want to slim or manipulate the shape your face, this ultimate guide to contouring your face shape will give you the same clever sculpting knowledge as any makeup artist.įind your shade: One of the most important steps of contouring is finding the right shade: Go one shade darker than your foundation, or for a more dramatic look, you could opt for two shades darker. For example, if you have a long face shape you should contour in completely different places to someone who might have a round face. Contouring is all about using shade and light in different areas to sculpt your face, and depending on your unique face shape, you can use contouring in different areas to fake a different face shape. In minutes you can have cheekbones Naomi Campbell would die for, and you can create the illusion of a slimmer, more chiseled face. If there’s one makeup trend that’s quite literally defined our beauty regime for the past five years, it’s contouring.
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