Los Angeles Times

An organic balance

- By Alene Dawson image@latimes.com

Danish-born, New York-based makeup artist Kirsten Kjaer Weis doesn’t think you have to sacrifice luxury for non-irritating ingredient­s or settle for organic makeup that doesn’t deliver high-performanc­e color. The Paris-trained Weis set out on an eight-year quest to perfect natural and organic formulatio­ns that yield beautifull­y colored cosmetics and textures. The result is the well-edited Kjaer Weis makeup line (kjaerweis.com) filled with sophistica­ted, luminous modern hues housed in sleek, refillable packaging.

What was the catalyst for starting your own makeup line?

I just felt this great frustratio­n. There’s a big open gap in the market for a line that combined the green world — where you’d go to a health food place, where you do something good for yourself but you would really compromise in performanc­e and packaging. Then you go to like a Barneys and get the more highend, convention­al brands, but you would just then have to accept that it was almost all synthetic.

So it was sort of merging these two worlds, saying, “It’s got to be possible to have [makeup that’s] beautiful inside that can actually perform that looks good on the outside.” … I’m not a formulator, so I just started looking for formulator­s, and I found somebody in Italy that is phenomenal.

The toughest part of all of it is literally perfecting the textures. When people say “natural,” we know sometimes it can mean nothing and that even the word “organic” can mean nothing if it’s not legitimate­ly certified.

Definitely. There’s a lot of confusion and sort of miscommuni­cation around that.

In this case, our certified organic products are formulated with 95% organic ingredient­s. You grew up on a farm in Denmark and went on to live in big cities but have said you miss the countrysid­e. Sometimes I notice women who stay in the countrysid­e have fabulous skin. Can you talk a little bit about what women in L.A. and other big cities can learn about beautiful skin from your experience growing up?

Well, I really think good skin definitely starts from the inside and out. It’s almost like it’s your gut; you’ve got to control the toxins you take in because they’ll definitely show up in your face.

So it starts with, I believe, drinking a lot of water, fresh juices and just trying to think of your body as a holistic organ so that it’s not just skin care.

I would say a clean diet is essential. Try and not have it be too acidic.... I mean, I totally drink coffee and I drink wine, but it’s a fine balance. And processed food, I would just dump as much as you can. Do I have to keep your products in my refrigerat­or?

No. No, no. They have actually a long shelf life.... A lot of times there’s a lot of sort of stigma around natural pigments. With my products, like the eye shadows, you get amazing pigment. We use bamboo powder and that gives it a really blendable, silky-soft finish. And it really holds up. They last all day. I noticed many Danish women don’t wear a ton of makeup, especially compared with women in L.A.

I would say that is true. I mean, over there, there’s just sort of a general less-ismore. There’s a minimalist approach to beauty.

It’s definitely changing. I’d say my nieces are a lot more into makeup than I ever was. It’s the Internet, it’s Facebook, Instagram, all these things.

But as a whole, it’s a natural look. You can definitely have a beautiful smoky eye or a strong lip but you want your skin to be seen — not a pancake-y look.... Using cream base will always end up looking more natural than anything that’s powder because the skin can kind of be seen. Our [base] has a fine sheen, a fine glow — it’s a lot more youthful.

 ??  ?? “Earthy Calm” eye shadow.
“Earthy Calm” eye shadow.
 ?? Photograph­s from Kjaer Weis ?? Cream blush.
Photograph­s from Kjaer Weis Cream blush.
 ??  ?? “Sweetness” lip tint.
“Sweetness” lip tint.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States