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As
women continue to gain more freedom and confidence in themselves,
attitudes toward makeup are moving in a healthy direction. More
than a decade ago the makeup artists for the world’s most gorgeous
women transformed prominent movie stars with makeup that was easy,
simple, and didn’t need to be reapplied.
Most women instinctively know what looks best
on them. They don’t need to be told. If we stopped for a moment and
take an honest look in the mirror, we can trust what our instincts
tell us. Fortunately, the desire to accentuate our natural beauty
is being achieved through the application of unwashable makeup.
For over ten years the creation of natural looking brows, soft
eyeliner, and colorful lips has been available. The same simple
application of permanent cosmetic makeup the stars were doing is
the solution.
Permanent cosmetic makeup should be simple and
look very natural. The look should be one of glamour, that which
makes us look our best, not fashion. Fashion is a trend. The
pendulum swings both ways. We broke out of the fifties and into the
sixties when makeup was about heavy lines. During the sixties and
seventies, makeup was pretty unnatural but the hippies went the
other way, no makeup. As the pendulum swings back, we search for a
middle ground, which is discovering who we are. We should play down
what we like the least, and enhance that which we like the most.
It is exciting to know that it is possible to
enjoy the confidence of looking good all of the time. It’s her
self-assured step, the grace with which she moves her body, the way
she holds her head as if she has a special secret that makes her
feel great about being alive.
The procedure of permanent cosmetics is a
simple solution. It is the secret for those who don’t have the time
to not only apply their make-up in the morning but to maintain their
“look” during the day. No reapplyhing eyeliner, shadow, blush, lip
pencil and lipstick . Just look good and be you.
“Beauty is in the eye of the beholder. The
right makeups makes you one of the beholders,” Garry Marshall,
director of Pretty Woman
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