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The Best Eye Makeup for Hooded Eyes, According to Experts

It took me years to understand the best eye makeup for hooded eyes. While my gaze isn’t completely hooded, I definitely have less upper lid space than most. Too much eyeliner, and it smudges onto my eye crease. Too thick of a mascara coat, and suddenly my gaze droops. Too smokey a lid, and my eyes looked heavy. Over much trial and error (including several failed eye makeup looks), my solution these days is to keep things simple—a subtle flick on the outer corner of my eyes, thin enough for a slinky siren look.

Vogue’s Favorite Makeup for Hooded Eyes

The Eyeshadow Palette

Chanel Les 4 Ombres in Clair Obscur

Read moreThe Kajal Liner

Victoria Beckham Beauty Satin Kajal Liner

Read moreThe Single Shadow

Merit Beauty Solo Shadow

Read more

As it turns out, this is the correct approach. “Heavy dark shades across the entire lid, thick eyeliner, and dramatic cut creases can weigh hooded eyes down,” pro makeup artist Catrina Breitweiser tells Vogue. “Keeping depth focused on the outer corners helps maintain an open, lifted appearance.”

The key is understanding that eye makeup for hooded eyes requires a different strategy to create lift and light. “On non-hooded eyes, you’ll see shadow placement of darker shades right in the natural crease. However, when you do this on a hooded eyes you’ll end up creating more visual weight and heaviness,” pro makeup artist Kasey Spickard adds. Ahead, four failsafe steps that make the most of limited lid space, according to the pros.

Opt for Gradient or Single Eyeshadow

“Eyeshadow placement matters so much on hooded lids because the natural crease isn’t fully visible when the eyes are open,” says D’Amelio Ventre, who recommends applying your eyeshadow while looking straight into the mirror. She opts for matte or satin shades, placing the eyeshadow brush slightly above the eye’s natural crease. “Keeping depth focused on the outer third of the eye and blending a deeper crease color upward and outward helps the eyes look more open, especially for anyone recreating a look at home,” she adds.

To achieve this effect, Spickard recommends opting for a single or gradient eyeshadow look. “Keep in mind that whatever you’re applying onto hooded eyelid will ‘disappear’ from certain angles,” he says. For a gradient look Spickard prefers to keep the lid a single, nude shade, and play with the lower lash line for added drama. “I love a rich chocolate brown in the waterline and then smoking it out with a similar color in the lower lash line,” he adds. Both Chanel and Ilia offer satiny palettes with a tight curation of cohesive shades. For a quicker approach, apply a single shadow shade (like Merit’s solo shadow) to the recommended placement above the crease, then use the residual product on your brush to sweep across the lid and lower lash line.

Vogue’s Kiana Murden uses Merit’s Solo Shadow.

Chanel

Les 4 Ombres in Clair Obscur

Ilia

Ilia The Necessary Eyeshadow Palette

Brighten Up Your Inner Corner

Another hack to awaken hooded eyes? Brightening up your inner corner with a nude pencil or shadow. “A soft, light-reflecting inner-corner highlight brightens the eyes and enhances openness without drawing attention to the hooded area,” says Breitweiser. The key, according to D’Amelio Ventre, is keeping your application subtle and precise. She prefers to avoid anything overly glittery and stick to finely milled shimmers or satin finishes. “When applied just at the tear duct, it adds light without distracting from the overall eye shape, which is especially flattering on hooded eyes,” she adds.

For something subtle, Chantecaille’s cream pencil and Laura Mercier’s eyeshadow stick do the trick. For a more opaque nude color, try Jones Road’s eyeshadow in the shade cream or Victoria Beckham Beauty’s brightening pencil.

Chantecaille

Eye Brightening Kajal in Nude

Jones Road

The Best Eyeshadow in Cream

Victoria Beckham Beauty

Instant Brightening Waterline Pencil

Get Specific With Eyeliner Placement

Don’t be intimidated—you can, in fact, sport winged liner, regardless of visible eyelid size. “With hooded eyes, eyeliner should enhance the eye shape, not overpower it,” says D’Amelio Ventre. She recommends skipping a thick liner across the entire lash line and focusing on the outer corner instead. “A soft, subtle flick that lifts upward can make a big impact without closing off the lid space.” Breitweiser agrees, adding that tight-lining the upper waterline “adds depth at the lash base while preserving lid space for shadow.”

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