![]() ![]() ![]() Apply this SMASHBOX COSMETICS Photo Finish Reduce Redness Primer all over your face before going in with any face makeup to balance out your skin tone and prevent red patches from popping up later. In many cases, it can be helpful to use a color-correcting primer in addition to your color-correcting concealer. This color correcting shade will eliminate any dullness and sallowness in your skin tone, for bright, refreshed skin. To color correct dull skin: Feeling dehydrated? if your skin is lacking its usual liveliness, try using lilac and purple tones, like OFRA COSMETICS Corrector Pot in Lilac. The bright yellow color in this PACIFICA BEAUTY Blemish Banish or this OFRA COSMETICS yellow corrector pot will illuminate any signs of hyperpigmentation until they're no longer visible. To color correct dark spots: Discoloration and age spots are no match for yellow. They melt into skin seamlessly and work on any skin tone. Try this mint green corrector pot from OFRA COSMETICS or the green concealer from this complete BELLAPIERRE Color Correcting Palette. To color correct redness: Green is the antidote to all things red and rosy, like blemishes, inflammation, and blotchiness. Peach shades are the best for neutralizing dark colors on most skin tones: try the PACIFICA BEAUTY Dark Circle Rehab Concentrated Correcting Creams. To color correct dark circles: When it comes to correcting pesky under-eye circles, think sunny colors. Before you start color correcting, identify exactly what exactly you want to correct: dark under-eye circles from lack of sleep? Redness from rosacea or blemishes? Dark spots from aging or sun damage? Dull skin patches from poor circulation? Whichever you decide to target, we’ve got you covered below: What makes color correcting so effective is how targeted it is: certain colors work best with very specific corresponding forms of discoloration. Step 1: Identify where you want to color correct. Continue reading below and be on your way to flawless skin in no time. Ready to try your hand at it? We put together this complete guide to color correction with step-by-step instructions for you to start color correcting like a pro. Makeup artists have been relying on this handy trick for years, but only recently has it found its way into the mainstream cosmetics world. ![]() Color correcting is a makeup technique that uses pastel-tinted concealers (think: green, yellow, and lilac) to blur and erase any apparent skincare woes. If you haven’t heard of it, you’re not alone. Sure, full-coverage concealers and foundations do the trick to hide most dark spots and hyperpigmentation, but sometimes you need a little bit more for those days when it seems like that one pimple just won’t cooperate or those pesky post-all-nighter dark circles just won’t fade away.Įnter: color correcting makeup. You might have thought there was only so much you could do to mask under-eye dark circles, acne scars, and other forms of stubborn skin tone discolorations. ![]()
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