Thanks! This was great. I've used Saint for awhile and it takes some getting used to. I have more mature skin (mid 50's) You can always do more or less. I like to see the different ways people do it. I am able to wear sunscreen/mosturizer under mine no problem.
She has cool toned skin, put on a yellow (warm) foundation, then mashed everything together on her face with reckless abandon with the same dirty brush. I don't know what else you could expect to happen haha. Seint is a bad, bad idea. The "artists" are sales people, they don't know a thing about makeup theory or technique. If you want to learn cream makeup buy actual professional cream products from RCMA or Make Up For Ever and then watch tutorials from actual makeup artists. It would be a third of the price of Seint, higher quality, and you wouldn't end up looking discolored.
I’ve been working with Seint for about 8 months. I mean just on myself as a customer. I wanted to say that many of you who are looking for a natural no make up look or those who have mature skin, will need to know a couple of things. 1) Get colour matched and don’t try and do it yourself using the website collection pre matched selections. 2) less is more. I feel this person used a lot more than necessary. Now make up is personal but this may not be the greatest demo if you’re new. I’ve watched many tutorials and as someone who stopped wearing make up at 40 and decided to try again at 54 (just because I’m feeling a bit more drab with normal aging changes to my skin) I do have to say that I love this make up but it has taken me time. Start with a 4 palette. The brush she recommends is great. I started with the buff brush because I’m only applying a small amount. The buff brush is nice and dense for stippling as opposed to sweeping. But let’s not get confusing here, going with the 3D brush that she used is a great brush to start with for sure. I noticed she had an obvious line on her forehead too and that doesn’t reflect the best blending but in her defence it could just be lighting and cameras. I highly recommend trying Seint Make-Up but get matched, start low and go slow. Lower spending (get the basic 4 tin palette) go slow (less is more when applying). The makeup is very forgivable and easy to blend out as it’s not going to destroy everything you’ve done unless you’re using way too much. Yes depending on where you live the make can get cold and harden slightly and could use some warming up. It’s a different concept but so worth the effort. Just have fun with it. It’s make up not magic. Good stuff!
Hi, I was wondering if you've tried Demi by Seint, especially covering up blemishes..I see a lot of videos with regular Seint but not too many about Demi. Thanks so much. 🥰 love your look btw
I have a question, what do you recommend to a customer who has never tried Seint. Would like to try it, but in no way, shape, or form, can afford to buy everything from highlight to eye shadow and everything in between? What are the staple products for a first time buyer? As a single mom to a special needs six year old, I can’t afford to spend $200+. Thank you!
Make Up For Ever, an actual professional makeup artist brand, and not this MLM garbage has a palette with everything you need for $85. If you're not ready to invest, TEMU has a knock off of the MUFE palette called Carla's Secret for less than $10. As a professional licensed makeup artist, I'd tell you that you probably don't want to wear cream makeup everyday. It's a steep learning curve, a lot of work to apply properly, and doesn't last long if you don't know how to set it properly. Liquid or powder products are much easier and less expensive for normal daily wear.
Grease paint will sit ok on alcohol or oil/wax based sunscreens. It will breakup or pill a lot of silicone based sunscreens. You have to find the right products. And as a hint, Seint is never the right product.
When you're charging people $20 for 1 small pan and you're not an artist but a sales person you want to make sure they really cake it on so you can get your next commission cheque.