Prevention (Australia)

The better-than-Google guide to finding the right foundation

Confused about your base? We’ve got it covered.

- BY AMA KWARTENG AND VICTORIA JOWETT

We’ve got all your bases covered.

You could be wearing the wrong foundation and not even realise it. And who could blame you? With so many different shades, finishes, formulas and coverage types to choose from, finding the right one for your skin type has never been more confusing. The good news? You don’t have to spend hours Google searching – we’re here to help you figure it all out.

SHADE MATCHING 101

Step 1:

TRY ON SOME JEWELLERY

You probably already know where you fall on the basic foundation spectrum – light, medium, olive, deep or somewhere in between. The right undertone, though? Trickier. “It’s the secondary colouring – warm, cool or neutral – that determines which shade best suits your skin,” says make-up artist Robin Black. To find yours, pull out your necklaces and bracelets. If gold looks best against your skin, you have a warm undertone. (To confirm, check your veins. Greenish? Yup, you’re warm.) If silver suits you better, and you have blueish veins, your undertone is cool. Able to mix metals? You’re neutral.

Step 2:

DECODE THE LABEL LINGO

Brands often organise their shades using numerical scales, which, for example, might be 100 for fair tones and go up to 500 as shades deepen. Packaging can also include undertone letters: W, C or N (for warm, cool and neutral). So a ‘200N’ is generally for someone with light-medium skin and neutral undertones. Some brands, such as M.A.C, spell it all out to make it easier to understand: “NW25 rosy beige w/rosy undertone for light to medium skin.”

Step 3:

MEET YOUR MATCH

Buying online can be overwhelmi­ng if you don’t know what you’re after, so be sure to check out shade-matcher sites like Findation.com (simply enter the brand and shade of your current foundation and the site generates a selection of the closest shades in alternativ­e brands). Online shopping is also evolving in our post-COVID-19 world. One example? Charlotte Tilbury (charlottet­ilbury.com/au) offers free 15-minute one-on-one virtual consultati­ons with a beauty expert for shade matching, shopping assistance and more.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia