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.
Highlighters and shaders are designed to contour the facial features. To use highlighter you want to accentuate certain features e.g. if you have a narrow face you would brush highlighter down the sides of the face near the hair line to give width. To use shader you want to deminish features e.g. if you have a broad forehead you would use shader near and above the temples to make it appear smaller.
the first highlighter was used in Ireland
you use a highlighter on every piece of text
No. You have to upgrade your graphics card to use this feature
You can try using a white eraser to erase highlighter marks. Alternatively, you can use rubbing alcohol or a mixture of water and vinegar to remove highlighter stains from paper.
Select the text you want to highlight, click the Highlighter icon (on the Home tab of the ribbon).
You have to upgrade you graphics card to use this feature
Oh, dude, a highlighter is typically around 5 inches long. But like, who really measures a highlighter, right? Just use it to make your notes pop and call it a day.
One easy way is to use erasable highlighter. Draw your design with the highlighter, then erase it. It will still fluoresce under UV light. Or if you don't have erasable highlighter, you can use alcohol to "remove" normal highlighter. Obviously the alcohol method doesn't work well with paper, but is great for skin and other surfaces.
Highlighter illuminates the face. Apply it to your forehead, cheek bones, your chin, and underneath your eyebrows. With this, your face looks instantly illuminated. I use highlighter every day. It looks fantastic on everyone.
One easy way is to use erasable highlighter. Draw your design with the highlighter, then erase it. It will still fluoresce under UV light. Or if you don't have erasable highlighter, you can use alcohol to "remove" normal highlighter. Obviously the alcohol method doesn't work well with paper, but is great for skin and other surfaces.
No Geforce 4's only support Pixel Shader 1.3 You need at least a Geforce FX 5 Series to use Pixel Shader 2.0