As soon as i saw her..every bride i have seen in my life came into my mind 😂 like literally the darkest of women and lightest of women have the same skin color on their wedding..they look almost like a Geisha😅
@@muskan1036it's really disturbing how Asia is so obsessed with fair skin. As a caramel toned Indian, I have been told by a lot of fair skinned people that they wish they had my skin tone, while my family thinks I look like the night sky.
this is so true. i have a warm undertone, and during competition for dance, we were required to wear a mauve shade. it looked so weird on my skin, but amazing on people with cool undertones. it was kinda frustrating that we weren’t given several options for the lips tho lol, keep up the good work!
@@maggie7211 literally! Unless youre a makeup guru then you’re bound to look like that! I be looking like penny wise while we got some 11 year old Ariana grandes passing me by and it’s embarrassing 😂 plus a lot of studios already know this and switched from red lipstick to a more natural pretty color meanwhile I still got to wear it
@@Sometimesijust993 it's also super embarrassing going to eat somewhere when you have a break during the competition. like I wish I could just walk into McDonald's without looking like Ronald McDonald himself 😭
@@maggie7211 LOL SO ACCURATE!! I once walked to the rainforest cafe on break looking like mufasa himself 💀 There’s always people staring! I always make sure to keep my jacket on so maybe they know I’m from a competition and don’t think it’s just my every day style 😭
The problem is that when a white person paints their face in a darker color people usually say they're racist. Personally, I don't have any problem (unless the person is mocking the other one)
Actually it is bcs we still hv the 'white is pretty' standard. You will literally see so many bridal makeup don't use correct foundation for the bride instead they cake her up with fair color foundation. But this also highlights how much beauty industry is limited in India bcs it only hv what west hv. Anyways , her intention is definitely has nothing to do with rasicm.
I mean, technically it is half whiteface, because she made half of her face white. But whiteface is a description not a concept because fuck that, society is not dropping that low
When I was younger, I used to get frustrated when eyeshadows don't look the same on me as it did on the model. Realized part of it was because I had a deeper skin tone. 😅
@PoppyRenoku no, I mean the tanning bed addiction. Standing outside and getting a little olive is whatever, intentionally roasting yourself to a crisp or artificial tanning to a shade you can't obtain naturally is strange.
This is a great demonstration! It's wild how some shades look so "edgy" on light skinned people (like myself) but would look more like a nude on other people. Brands, please come out with more shades of... everything! Yes that means concealer too!
Exactly. There's this word in Bengali (my mother tongue) "Roktochosha" meaning blood sucker that I called my mom after she put on a really dark brown coz she looked like a vampire but when I used it, it looked nude and simple. Color theory is soo interesting.
Omg y'all need to wake up 🤦 Nobody is harmed it's just not fair how it can go one way and not the other for example if a white person did this with half black face ( even if it's not racially motivated) they would get so much hate and be called racist but vids like this most of the time get no hate .
This is for anyone who is learning to do their makeup for the first time. Honestly I would have appreciated the hell out of this when I was younger, and probably would have saved myself a lot of trouble and money.
@@opalizard understandable but it should be common sense not every color looks the same on certain skintones.. i mean u cant use a white crayon on white paper. nor can you really use a blue crayon on black paper. color theory was taught in elementary art class
“Imagine if it was a white woman doing this, they’d be cancelled ” … as a black person, I wouldn’t give a flying fuck if a white creator did this because there’s a big difference between demonstrating how products work vs. mocking/bashing dark skin. Y’all need to chill out.
Agreed, I think most people are just pointing out the hypocrisy of how most people will see a white person with darker makeup on and immediately accuse them of being racist.
I think the negative comments are being erased as either they've been reported or there is an auto delete on these comments that triggers the negative words being filtered by RU-vid. Also yeah I believe the content creator, thank you for demonstrating color and the point needed to get across.
She’s complaining about a kbeauty brand though for some reason?? The argument would make more sense if it was a complaint about more worldwide brands. There’s nothing wrong with companies catering to the dominant skin tone in their own countries.
Trust me. I'm about 0.5 shades darker than printer paper and every time I find a pretty pink lip, I put it on and look like a f'd up barbie doll that belongs to a little girl with access to sharpies. Relative color is SUPER important.
@@MonkeyBox331 I saw an Asian women showing a foundation that doesn’t leak or spread and dries nicely. People got angry that she was using a dark skin tone. I think it’s just her showing off the product since other skin tones that are lighter wouldn’t really show up on hers.
"Whiteface?" Yall wanna be offended so bad. Like a lot of yall are just looking to start a fight in the comments, sit down you're not actually offended. She's showing yall how color Theory works, how makeup looks on lighter skin vs darker skin, yt people wanna be 0pprezzed so bad. Yall are reaching for the stars.
Why are y’all bringing blk ppl into this, this lady is Indian and she just showing how the same makeup shows up differently on different skin tones and white face isn’t a thing btw💀
Those coments that don't believe you make me want to scream. It's literally BASIC COLOR THEORY that a color changes depending on the background color. If you put a light color on a black and white background, it will look darker on the white and lighter on the black. Our eyes don't perceive colors alone, they perceive them with the CONTEXT of the colors around them. There are so many images proving this 😭 it's not so hard to understand
My cousin did my makeup for prom because she went to school for cosmetology. After showing her what I wanted and gave her my makeup pallet, she told me we might have to do something slightly different because the models skin tone from the picture was a little bit more pale than I am, so she tried something that was slightly darker so it would match me better. It’s strange, yet amazing how that stuff works🤔
lmao also it didn’t even register that showing an example of a lighter color would be offensive to me, i legitimately did not notice before reading the comments that people would possible be offended somehow
"WELL WHAT IF IT WAS A WHITE CREATOR THAT DID THIS WITH A DARKER FOUNDATION" the reason that blackface is bad is because of the history behind it. If putting on darker foundation had no history in systematic racism, then it wouldn't be a problem. However, unfortunately it does. Putting on a lighter foundation was never something rooted in racism, in fact it was quite the opposite. Many cultures find paler skin "more beautiful" and lighten their faces accordingly. I hope this helps anyone confused!
Lighter skin being a beauty standard in some cultures is not a race thing, it's a class thing. Being fair skinned was equated with wealth, as the upper economic classes obviously did not have to perform physical labour out in the sun all day to make a living, and thus didn't tan like those who did. This resulted in rich people often having fairer skin, leading to the beauty standard. Fun fact: this used to be the standard even among white cultures, however, since the rise of the aviation industry, the script has been flipped. At that point, the working class was paler because they spent all day working under artificial lighting getting no sun, while the rich people were off getting tan on foreign beaches. This is why you often see western beauty influencers wearing foundations that are just a shade or two too dark. It's also the reason the concept of bronzer exists at all.
It’s still a double standard, no matter the history behind it. If one side is gonna ban it and throw a fit when people see it, then it should be respected equally from the other perspective. therefore either both should be ok or both should be banned because saying that black people can make themselves look white is ok but not ok the other way around is still discriminatory to one skin tone and hence a form of racism in and of itself
@@WalkingFishTaco second of all, there is no form of discrimination here, your comment is literally void and has nothing to do with this situation. Her entire video is to talk about how different colors look on different people. She isn't discriminating against anyone. You need to calm down and stop yelling about problems that don't exist. Things like this really make me feel like we must not have enough problems as it is, now we have to cry about apparent "double standards". Go do something else that matters, I assure you that this isn't it
This is so true. I’m Asian and I wear a coral pink blusher every it’s my favourite and my best friend who is White wore it one day and it was very orange on her😂
>a person of color making a video about how important is to have a variety of different foundations for every skin tone >white people in comments: imma make it about myself!
The thing is in many Asian countries companies like to pretend dark skintones doesn't exist, like I have medium dark skintone and I can't find correct foundation 😫 , this girl is just showing how different foundation look on different skintones ,people need to chill .
westerners are a different breed.. when I watched the video I opened the comments expecting people to agree/share their own personal experiences and the thought of "whitefishing"/blackfishing didn't cross my mind AT ALL. yall really need to sort out your priorities istg
@@catzzs Probably because a lot of people are insecure of being darker or more tan - racism and colourism is still rampant so some people might use lighter products because they want to believe they ARE lighter.
Do the haters not get tired of have a life She is trying to show what colours look like on different skin tones She a just a young girl leave her lone or don’t watch her ❤
What is your point here? I see pale skinned women use a tanned foundation that doesn’t match their skin tone and darker skinned women use a foundation too pale for their skin tone. This could be down to naivety on colour matching or lack of variety in shade ranges. This video is just showing colour relativity for educational purposes, she is not darkening her skin to mock anybody, that is her real skin tone and the paler side is not. Why do people fixate on derogatory intentions and racism instantly whenever someone mentions skin tone. What a strange thing to tell people to “imagine”.
@@itszenbaby ithink they meant, that if the same thing would be done with a paler coloured person's skin with darker shade, they would be canceled in like no minutes. Like there was a white makeup artist, who was doing make up on herself to make herself look like famous people. She did once Khaby Lame and got sooo much blacklash for it. There were no mockery in that either, yet it happened.
This is so true, especially with skintones that are more under represented such as dark ebony skintones and olive skintone and other ranges. As well certain colours make certain skintones look flushed or drained. It's also important to know which colours these are relative to the skintone...
This is what I was hoping people would talk about. The fact that a lot of makeup is more created to be focused on white and lighter skin tones and the underrepresentation in darker skin tones and how we need to do more with pigment and development. Especially based around color theory in darker skin tones since most makeup brands only have a few dark shades in foundation. BUT NO, INSTEAD everyone is talking about whiteface???
Why are you guys in the comments acting like white women don’t slather on fake tan like it’s sunscreen. I’m in indiana and so many girls are orange Save me
Apparently a bunch of people fell for some trolls whose comments have now been deleted. The first clue they were paid trolls and not actual human beings actually being outraged was when they were posing as white people who were offended by her use of "whiteface" 🙄
personally i think that second lipstick that you said gave you "concealer lips" actually looks super good on your natural skin tone. with the right eyeshadow i think you'll like it. it's a nudie pink it's rlly pretty
It does. If a black person can do a white face than a white person can do a black face. None should have more or less rights over the other. That would be racist.
@Cube Memes oppressed? Lmao quit trying to throw the word out there alot 🤣 you're not even offending me and don't make sense with the Congo we had you have no real facts 🤣
Me: “wow how interesting” Every other comment: “If she was white she would be canceling for doing black face” First of all the woman is neither white or black. If I am right about her nationality, the people in her country are as light as her right side and even darker than her. If she was trying to look white, you all would have a point but white people do not have a monopoly on light skin tones. Second, if a pale white woman did the same thing, in the same way she would not get cancelled. White women darken their skin all time. She could get her skin tan enough to make the point without it looking like black face. Lastly, people rarely ever get cancelled. If you guys mean negative comments or getting a profile deleted that has no impact on someone everyday life.
@@lily-ft5nj Darker than what, translucent? 😂 I'm only seeing white people getting pissed because "if a white woman" blah blah blah. No nonwhite person is angry at this.
@@BlakeGeometrio @Be Beautiful I meant..... There's some other person (white, she looks like Chinese) who did this kinds of video. I came across the other day. She used darker foundation (very brown) to show us the difference between the product she used other than the foundation. She used so the brown foundation because it shows the differences very clear for the viewer, and like me, I understand the reason she used the darker foundation after like 3 seconds watching the video (at the 1st second yes I was like wtf) people with common sense sould know that too. But in the comment section was filled with hate comments from non-white people. They are offended, because she used darker foundation.
This is why I can see a makeupguru use a beaaautiful eyeshadow, and when I buy it for myself it just looks ashy and too dark for the "natural look" I was going for. Cool to see it illustrated like this ☺️
the comments have such a hate boner for black people it’s insane. we weren’t even brought up in the video, the women isn’t even black, yet we are being attacked and used for crazy hypotheticals…
@@sonyasever7625 asians don’t want to be white lol. light skin has been engrained into especially east asian culture for millennia; it’s just a toxic beauty standard not really affected by eurocentric ones.
Color and relative color get even more fascinating when you bring in all of the different types of undertones a person might have and how much/little contrast a particular person might look gorgeous and natural in. Truly fascinating and extremely important for makeup companies to have a wide variety of shades (light to dark, different types of warm/cool/neutral-warm/neutral-cool undertones).
“if a white person did it-“ yes exactly. if a white person went out of their way to find a black foundation it would indeed be black face💀. the amount of times i’ve seen black women use pale BROWN foundation bc they could not find their shade it never crossed my mind that they were doing “white face”(not a thing)
People are so stupid nowadays, right? It’s so annoying. I’m white and I hate when people say stuff like “wHiTeFaCe” or “I-IF A WH-WHITE PERSON DID THIS”… it’s just annoying.
Difference is, there are many Black people with lighter skin but white people only come in different shades of beige (pasty pale - Jersey Shore fake spray tan) 🤷🏾♀️
tbh it looks like y'all never seen a white person that's tan or a white person that's super super pale. I have searched for a foundation for years on end and they were all too dark for me, the only makeup that could potentially be my shade is K-beauty makeup but that's super expensive because of it literally being from another continent so shipping costs. yes poc women struggle more w shades but there's a few of us at the other end of the spectrum and no one talks abt it. also I have seen comments here pretend like naturally tan white people don't exist. have y'all never seen people who r naturally tan, without any purposeful tanning, in fact most of the people I see (living in a predominantly white country) are almost as dark as the woman in the video. (I know she is not black but just for reference since she's not yt either)
I have brown skin, and I usually put a little foundation on my eye lids (in a lighter skin tone) and then apply my eyeshadow on. It makes it look so much more pigmented.
White face and Black face BOTH don’t matter but White face is definitely real, have you never seen videos…? Ether way we shouldn’t get upset over ether because who ever is doing it to insult someone is an idiot anyway and shouldn’t be taken seriously.
So glad someone talked about this! I’ve seen a few bad reviews of a product saying it doesn’t look as good as it looks on x so it’s a scam…but their skin tones are completely different!!
That’s actually a really good point but just to clarify would you be offended if even being as a south Asian woman and she put on a darker shade of foundation?
@@elifdemir9517 I mean she's just trying to show how products can change on different bases, so it's not something offensive, it's not like she's mocking a race, I'd feel okay about it even if it was a white perosn applying darker foundation. It's the intention that matters.
POV: you're looking for the comments everyone's flippin' out about Edit: I know if you look in the "Newest" comments, they're there, but I mean that everyone is acting like the mean comments are popular and everyone's agreeing. It's like people want to have something to be mad about. And that includes the people in the newest trynna make others mad.
This was really necessary, when I try to find make up inspo everything goes wrong because I never check if my skin tone is similar to the inspo girl, now this is something I need to start checking
I think that also show pretty well how important it is to follow beauty creators that have the same/similar complexion as you because color theory is real!!