Flattering Makeup For Older Hooded Eyes [with Video]
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Over 50? If your eyes have become droopy and starting sagging as you've aged, we've got the answer! Here's a complete tutorial on how to do your eye makeup for older, hooded eyes. This tutorial includes tips on blending and highlighting the crease of your eyelids so that you can look fresh and alert!
A few years ago, I looked in the mirror and realized that my eyes had become hooded and droopy as I got older. I panicked and watched a ton of make up videos to see if I could learn how to disguise the hooding and make my eyes look bigger.
Thankfully, I learned a few tricks to help my aging eyes look their best. Today, I’m sharing all my favorite techniques for flattering eye makeup for older, hooded eyes.
Mục Lục
What are Hooded Eyes?
As we get older, our eyes can become hooded, where the skin of our brow becomes heavy and droops over our eyelids, covering our eyelids partially, or in some cases fully. This side-by-side comparison of me at 17 and then again at 50 shows what happens in painful detail.
As you can see, my eyes were always somewhat hooded, with very little eyelid showing. But as I’ve aged, the excess skin over my brow area (like so many other body parts!) has sagged and drooped.
As we age, we can also develop crepey eyelids which makes it harder for our eye makeup to go on smoothly. We can’t regain our youth, but we can, at least, update our eye makeup techniques to enhance our features as they are now.
How to Tell if You Have Hooded Eyes
Do you have hooded eyes? To determine if you have hooded eyes, hold a mirror in front of your face and lift your eyebrows. If the skin on your eyelids looks smooth without any creases or folds, then you don’t have hooded eyes.
If instead when you look in the mirror with lifted eyebrows, you have excess skin that covers part or all of your eyelid, then you have hooded eyes.
Are Hooded Eyes the Same as Droopy Eyes?
Hooded eyes are not the same as droopy eyes. Hooded eyes are a normal eye shape that many people have, regardless of their age. Blake Lively, Emma Stone, and Jennifer Lawrence are beautiful women with hooded eyes.
But if your hooded eyes are caused by aging, then they are caused by your skin sagging and this can make your eyes appear droopy and sad. (I know, ugh, gravity)
How to Do Your Eye Makeup for Hooded Eyes: Step by Step
Here’s a detailed video with makeup tips for hooded eyes. I describe each step of the process in depth below.
The eyeshadow palette I used in this video, Too Faced’s Chocolate Bar, has been discontinued! However, these palettes offer similar colors. (Update: The original palette is available again – you can grab it here!)
Eyeshadow Palettes Similar to Too Faced’s Chocolate Bar
Start with Your Brows
When you have hooded eyes, your brows are very important. They can visually lift your eyes and make them look more open.
You want to shape your brows so that the your eyebrow has a noticeable arch. That will make your eyelid area appear bigger. Don’t bring your brows down too low as that will drag your eyes down and make them appear droopy.
I have a tutorial on how to fill in skimpy, thinning brows to flatter hooded eyes.
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Always Use Eye Primer
Apply primer with a concealer brush or even your finger evenly over the whole eye. Then lightly set your eye primer with powder. If you try to apply eyeshadow over a sticky primer, your eyeshadow will skip and drag and apply unevenly.
You can use eyeshadow for this step (I used White Chocolate in the Too Faced Chocolate Bar Palette) or simply a translucent powder applied with a fluffy brush. This sets your primer and gives a nice smooth surface on which to apply the eyeshadow.
I used NYX Eyeshadow Base in Skin Tone.
Why Eyeshadow Primer is Important for Over 40 Hooded Eyes
Eyeshadow primer is crucial when doing hooded eye makeup for several reasons:
It keeps your eyeshadow in place. I notice more and more that my eyeshadow can tend to slip around the day. Eyeshadow primer keeps my eye makeup in place throughout the day.
It helps create a smooth surface for your eye makeup. My skin on and around my eyes is probably the most wrinkled and crepe-y skin I have right now. Creating a smooth surface is a quick anti-aging technique. If I put on eyeshadow without primer, it sticks to some parts of my eyelid and skips over other parts, leaving my eyeshadow looking messy and unfinished. I hate to use the word “spackle” in terms of the face, but primer really does act as a kind of spackle to even out the surface of the eye.
Primer gives your lids a consistent color and can brighten the eyelid. Like a lot of older women, my eyelids have freckles now, as well as other dark areas. Using primer helps keep my eyeshadow colors looking the way they do in the palette, rather than taking on an undertone caused by my uneven skin tone. I like to use a primer that’s slightly lighter than my lid color it helps to smooth and brighten my eyelid.
My absolute favorite eye primer is this one from Urban Decay, but there are a few great choices out there.
Eyeshadow Primers that Work Well for Women Over 50
Cover the Entire Lid with Powder to Set the Primer.
You can use eyeshadow for this step (I used White Chocolate in the Too Faced Chocolate Bar Palette) or simply a translucent powder applied with a fluffy brush. This sets your primer and gives a nice smooth surface on which to apply the eyeshadow.
Redefine Your Crease so It Can Be Seen When Your Eye is Open
Have you ever painstakingly applied eyeshadow only to discover you literally couldn’t see it when your eyes were open? I have and it’s frustrating.
On hooded eyes, the upper part of the eyelid hangs down over the crease of your eye and hides your natural crease and much of your eyelid.
Apply a Transition Shade Slightly Above Your Natural Crease
So, we’re going to fake a crease by applying a medium eyeshadow shade (just a little darker than your natural skin color) slightly above your natural crease to make your eyes appear bigger and to cause the hooded part of your eyelid to visually recede.
Apply a medium eyeshadow shade with a small, flat eyeshadow brush slightly above your natural crease. Keep your eyes open as you do this to make sure the transition shade is visible with open, relaxed eyes.
Extend it out only as far as the edge of your brow. Blend this down to your lid and up toward your brow with a fluffy brush.
I used Salted Caramel in the Too Faced Chocolate Bar Palette
Emphasize Your Lower Lash Line and Outer Corner of Your Eye
Using a flat brush, take the same color you used for your crease and line underneath your lower lashes. When you get to the outer corner of the eye, bring the color up toward your outer brow for just the width of the liner brush.
I used Salted Caramel in the Too Faced Chocolate Bar Palette
Add a Lighter Color to Your Eyelid
Apply a lighter eyeshadow shade over the lid, up to your transition color. It’s good to use a lighter satin or even slightly shimmery color on your eyelids. This will reflect light off your eyelids, which in turn will make the fold above crease seem less prominent.
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Can You Wear Shimmery Eyeshadow Over 40?
There’s a persistent myth that women over 40 can’t wear shimmery eyeshadow because it emphasizes our textured, wrinkled skin. However, shimmery eyeshadow is great for calling attention to areas you want to enhance or make appear larger. A little bit on your eyelids adds a nice pop of light that accents your eyes.
Remember the rule is to use darker, matte colors on areas we want to receded, such as the fleshy part of our eyes below the brows. Then we use lighter, shimmery shades on areas we want to enhance and enlarge such as our eyelids and the inner corner of our eyes.
I used Salted Caramel in the Too Faced Chocolate Bar Palette
Define the Outer Edge of the Eye
Take a darker color and further define your crease and the outer corner of your eye by applying a darker shade slightly under your original crease color. Use the same color to cover the outer third of your eye.
The blended look so far
Add a Bit of Highlight to the Inner Corners of Your Eye and Brow Bone
Using a small brush and a bright, light color, highlight the inner corner of the eye, then just under the brow bone to add definition. Don’t bring down the highlighter on your entire brow bone as that will only enhance the fleshy part of your eyelid.Instead, just add a tiny little bit under the arch and outer corner to highlight your brows.
I used Champagne Truffle for this step.
Should You Wear Eyeliner with Hooded Eyes?
Eyeliner is a tricky thing for those of us with hooded lids. The standard winged eyeliner look can end up taking up our whole eyelid and making our eyes look even smaller.
Instead of a winged liner, I like to enhance my lash line by dipping a flat brush into dark eyeshadow. Then, I press the brush into my lashes, giving the illusion of depth to my lashes and making them appear thicker.
I used the color Triple Fudge in the Too Faced Chocolate Bar Palette
Curl Your Lashes and Apply Mascara
Curling your lashes helps give a lifted look that helps combat the look of down-turned eyes. I like to use a waterproof mascara on my upper lashes so it doesn’t smear onto my hooded lids.
I used a more natural mascara on my bottom lashes to just give them a bit of definition.
I used IT Cosmetics Superhero Mascara on my top lashes and Maybelline Total Temptation Mascara in Blackest Black on my lower lashes
Apply Concealer Lightly Under Your Eyes
A bit of concealer can hide dark circles and further help life your eyes. I shared my favorite eye-lifting concealer technique when I reviewed my favorite TikTok makeup tips.
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The Finished Makeup for Hooded Eyes
And here’s the finished makeup look.
My eyes have a nice, defined crease that makes my natural eyelids appear larger. The lighter color on my lid helps draw attention away from the hooded part of my eye and up to the outer corner where I placed a bright highlight shade.
The dark shadow on the outer corner of my eye makes it look more defined and helps to create the illusion of a lifted eye.