The best mascara I've ever used (and I've tried several dozen as a makeup artist) is easily Cover Girl Lash Blast. It doesn't clump. It lengthens. It gives volume. You need one coat and you're done. Though I have spent virtually hundreds of dollars and received endless sample mascaras in the mail, I find that the $7 tubes of Lash Blast beat most other mascara brands I've used.
I hope this helps you.
Because the mascara forms hardish lumps and when you brush it onto your eyes it stays there. Use a clear mascara over the top to brush away the clumps.
When i use mascara, i have a spare mascara wand that is dry.. after the application is dry, i brush out any clumps :)
You have to take off mascara every night because you do not want to sleep with chemicals on your eyes. The mascara chemicals can dry out your skin and eyelashes, or clumps of the mascara can get stuck on the surface of your eyes and hurt them. It's safer for your skin, eyelashes, and eyes to take it off and give them the night off.
I would recommend Urban Decay, plus you can buy a spray from them that you spray on your make up and it makes it stick for 16 hours or so! making it impossible so flake etc. I think the colossal mascara from maybeline is a really good mascara for no clumps. But The max volume flash by rimmel London...Is also really good for thick lashes with no clumps :D
Well, to start, nothings perfect :) But i'll answer the best I can. What i tend to do is start by using an eyelash curler. This helps because your eyelashes will be easier to access with the mascara wand when curled. Then, using a mascara that is dark brown or black, and that guarantees "no clumps" or whatnot, open your eye wide and get to your eyelash roots and with every swipe outwards, shut your eye. so you start with the mascara wand at the eyelash root and work your way out. As you move the wand away from your face, slowly blink your eye. this always works for me :) hopefully this helps! good luck! :)
In a survey conducted on 212 women who uses this product it receieved a rating of 3.8 stars out of 5 stars. The Mac Mascara product has the ability to create a natural appearing volume, with no mess or clumps.
It depends how old it is, you can tell if it's old when it a little less liquid as it was before, or if it has more clumps. It really isn't good to keep wearing mascara that is old or has those tendencies because it can cause damage to your eyelashes (it will cause them to fall out). I suggest you purchase a new mascara every 5 months and don't forget to keep cleaning the mascara wand this will help with any clumping even if it is fairly new, it'll also prevent bacteria. Hope this helps :D
The darker your lashes look, the longer they'll look. Also it clumps itself and then when you brush it on it pulls out and appears longer.
I personally think that the Best thing to use for cat litter to have clumps is to use dry oatmeal because I have cats and that always works!
Just follow these simple steps.1. Open the mascara and take the brush out.2. Then slowly apply the mascara starting from the tip to the roots of the eyelashes. You don't need to put the mascara on top of your eyelashes.3. and then u have on mascara!! Great Job!Answer BIt really depends on what the curvature of your mascara brush is, but the basic idea is to apply the mascara by dragging the wand (brush) carefully through your lashes from the roots to the tip. It is also recommended to achieve a more natural look that you push the brush gently from side to side as you do so (though not very much), and that afterwards you run an eyelash comb gently through your eyelashes to remove clumps and prevent the lashes from sticking together.
Because there poop sticks to the litter.
Get people to pay more. It's just a marketing gimmick."Nanoparticles" means, basically, "really really small bits." So a company advertising that their mascara has "nanoparticles" is really just saying "we powdered up the black stuff in our mascara really fine, so you won't have clumps of it the size of peas hanging off your eyelashes." While I suppose this is better than the alternative, the nanoparticles really don't do much of anything, other than (presumably) not form clumps large enough to be seen.(Soot, from a candle flame? That's pretty much ALL nanoparticles. So it's not like this is some exotic space-age material.)