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8 Next-Level Beauty Tips We Learned From Celebrity Makeup Artist Kara Yoshimoto Bua

Use these genius tips to take your makeup application game to the next level
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How to naturally fill in a brow

"Use little short strokes to fill in the brow and shape it," explains Yoshimoto Bua. She creates tiny, feathery strokes that follow the natural direction of the brow hairs, which she blends out using a spoolie. To finish off, she fills any gaps using a brow powder. For this purpose, she recommends the Shiseido Brow InkTrio, $24, as it conveniently includes a pencil, a spoolie and some powder.

Image via Emma McIntyre/Getty Images for Turner



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How to add a natural contour

Take a look at Yoshimoto Bua's Instagram account and you'll find that she's the master of understated glam (take Saoirse Ronan's fresh-faced look at the 2017 Academy Awards, for example). That's all to say, her take on contouring tends to be subtle and eminently wearable.

She uses a big fluffy brush to "pat on a little bit of product" (after shaking the excess product out). She's also careful with how she wields her brush: "Instead of poking the face with the bristles, hold [your brush] flat to the face," she explains. "Then you can do little back and forth feathery movements."

Image via Matt Winkelmeyer/Getty Images



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Your perfect contour placement

As for placement, Yoshimoto Bua recommends "aiming from the center of the ear to the center of the mouth." She also deposits a tiny bit of color along the jawline and at the temples, as well as along the sides of the nose. "You can lightly blend the edges from that initial placement and you can also scoop it under the apple of the cheek a little bit," she adds.

Image via Gabe Ginsberg/Getty Images



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Where to apply blush

After completing the contour, Yoshimoto Bua goes in and adds in a little color with some blush. She applies color to the apples of the cheek, even sweeping color upwards to the orbital bone (aka the upper cheekbone).

Image via JB Lacroix/ Getty Images



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How to choose the perfect blush shade

Does anyone else have trouble finding flattering blush colors for their skin tones? Yoshimoto Bua's advice is genius: "I like choosing a color that might be a little lighter than you think you might want for blush — because it actually shows up and it's much easier to blend and use," she says. "Then, you can go in later with a deeper tone if you want to punch it up."

Image via Frazer Harrison/Getty Images



BY ROSIE NARASAKI | NOV 7, 2018 | SHARES
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