You really need two products--contour powder and blush. Contour powder is brown (regular pressed powder will work--one that's three to four shades darker than your foundation is good) and goes under the cheekbone; blush goes on the cheekbone.
purse your lips like you're making a fish face. put a line of blush into the shadow below your cheekbones (you can smudge a dark eyeliner for a more dramatic effect, but this is best under powder or foundation). To increase the contrast you can use a light or shimmer powder on top of the cheekbones.
If your face is round or heart shaped, apply blush in a V shape, starting at your cheekbones and ending at your ears. Those with square faces should also add blush to the chin. For a square face, apply blush to your cheekbones and sweep it to your temples. Then apply blush to the forehead. If your face is a long rectangle, sweep blush to the outer corners of your eyes rather than your temples. Long, thin faces look best with blush on the apples of the cheeks. If your face is oval, simply apply to the cheekbones and sweep outward, stopping short of the ears.
if you want to add tan to your face use a light or medium colored bronzer on. If you want a pinky glow put on a pink blush on your cheekbones and then highlight the top of your cheekbones.
no, blush is most certainly not a face powder it is used to either add colour to pale cheeks or to add definition to the cheekbones...anybody who tells u that it is,is a jerko...really now!!
You can have implants, other than that its pre-determined!
For most people, blush. It's more natural to use bronzer on dark-skinned folks, tho.
blush, bronzer should go on last, after everything elseAnswerThere are no rules to makeup. In fact I apply the bronzer first to myself and to clients as a contour and then blend it out with blush below the cheekbones and then blend that out with the highlight color. But whatever technique works to give you the affect you want is what you should do. Try both of our suggestions and see which works for you. Good luck and have fun!Answer>> Both bronzer and blush are meant to add color to your face. Women with fair or pale skin prefer using blush to brighten up their face, while those with naturally tanned skin get better results from bronzer. However, many women use both blush and bronzer. Which one you apply first depends on your choice, but many makeup artists recommend dabbing bronzer on your nose, forehead, and chin before you apply blush. You can choose from loose powder blush, cream blush, blush sticks, etc.Honestly, if you really want your blush or bronzer to show up, then you must apply last. Foundation always goes on first, then your eyeshadow, then your eyeliner, then your mascara, then your blush. Do you want your cheekbones to look high and your cheeks to look full of color? Then apply blush after you apply your foundation, and powder.
In Ancient Egypt Rouge was used for the cheekbones (it was used as blush) at times it was also used for lipstick. (": i found this information through books at my school library.
For applying blush, a fluffy, angled blush brush is often ideal as it allows for easy blending and control. The angled shape helps to apply product to the apples of the cheeks while allowing for a more defined look along the cheekbones. A smaller, dense brush can also work well for more precise application if desired. Ultimately, the choice may depend on the desired finish and technique.
Shader first (the best thing is pressed powder at least three to four shades darker than your overall face powder--for instance, if you wear Cover Girl Ivory, Cover Girl Creamy Natural or Buff Beige would be good) , then highlighter, which is that whitish-pink blusher no one ever wears because they don't know what to do with it. Shader goes under your cheekbones, highlighter on top of them and on your temples, blush (the pinkish-reddish powder most people put under their cheekbones) on the apples of your cheeks.
It adds a blush-like color to your face. A lot of people use it to raise their cheekbones, but that's not really what it's for; the best product for that is "contour powder" which is just a little darker than your skin is. If you look really close at a photo of an actress, you'll see they put blusher, which is the reddish product, ON the cheekbone and a brownish product UNDER her cheekbone.
race of people with high cheekbones continued actress Michele pfifer very high cheekbones..German heritage.