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Opinion | What has Instagram done to make-up? How it became intimidating and lost individuality as influencers and bad advice took over

  • The internet is full of make-up tutorials, so-so celebrity launches, influencers’ advice and ridiculous hacks
  • Complex, overdone make-up examples intimidate faithful followers, and homogenise our individuality

Reading Time:3 minutes
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The internet has messed up make-up. Would Kylie Jenner’s range be as successful without her name behind it?

Let’s talk make-up.

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Aside from being a lifelong beauty enthusiast, I also trained as a make-up artist, and had Rae Morris, the longest serving make-up director of L’Oreal Paris, as a guest instructor. The training gave me the confidence to do the make-up for my friends’ weddings and photoshoots, but it’s also made me critical when it comes to make-up I see online.

Robert Welsh, a professional make-up artist and YouTuber, says it best: “Individuality and creativity have no rules, but make-up most definitely has a theory.” And it’s this theory that’s being butchered online, along with the understanding of cosmetics.

The proliferation of bad advice on social media has resulted in a misunderstanding of how make-up works, and people have forgotten there’s a science to it. Sure, some of the beauty hacks will work, but many are click bait-y thumbnails. That’s about it.

Kylie Jenner with a heavy, complex make-up look.
Kylie Jenner with a heavy, complex make-up look.

Seriously, it’s hard to go on Instagram without seeing ridiculous hacks or tutorials. I particularly hate the ones that use way too much product, or unconventional tools as beauty aids. Sometimes it’s not only excessive, it’s unhygienic and harmful.

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