Sometimes waking up at 5am to go through travel, make-up, wardrobe, and direction is worth it, especially if your job is to be the STARZ network Blue Star Super Heroine for a weekend
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Yes it must. Fortunately I avoided some of that by wearing a blue lycra body suit. The paint does itch a bit, or likely I am super sensative to artificial adhesions. Im certainly allergic to enough things that I am mistake for being 'high maintenence' but ratherI should be considered handicapped.
I still found blue aqua paint paint in my ear today.
sounds like when I took make-up courses in college, I had to put liquid latex on myself to do artificial aging...good LORD that stuff itched, and I couldn't help but try to scratch at it! I was picking it off my skin, and out of my hair for weeks!
see, I've never done that. Wouldn't the force of the air-brush actually hurt or irritate the skin? As for intensity, the make-up we were practicing was "supposed" to be for theatre, though i was practicing for film & TV. There are slight differences, like it doesn't have to read all the way out, across dozens of rows, and under extreme lighting conditions...it allows more subtlty.
Airbrushed make-up feels like a cold wind across your face and body. The force can be adjusted depending on color saturation desired.
It's really cool, in fact they are using it in malls by make-up artists in place of traditional blotting of foundations and powders by sponge and brush.
It gives such a clean look. very manequinesque. (is that a word?)
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Fortunately I avoided some of that by wearing a blue lycra body suit. The paint does itch a bit, or likely I am super sensative to artificial adhesions.
Im certainly allergic to enough things that I am mistake for being 'high maintenence' but ratherI should be considered handicapped.
I still found blue aqua paint paint in my ear today.
Reply
Reply
I prefer airbrushed make-up.
It goes on easy, clean, and doesn't require much touch ups.
Of course you don't get as intense effects.
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As for intensity, the make-up we were practicing was "supposed" to be for theatre, though i was practicing for film & TV. There are slight differences, like it doesn't have to read all the way out, across dozens of rows, and under extreme lighting conditions...it allows more subtlty.
-K
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The force can be adjusted depending on color saturation desired.
It's really cool, in fact they are using it in malls by make-up artists in place of traditional blotting of foundations and powders by sponge and brush.
It gives such a clean look.
very manequinesque. (is that a word?)
Reply
Reply
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