Do Guys Wear Makeup On Their Wedding Day?

Groom makeup is a growing trend in the wedding industry, with grooms now considering it to look their best on their special day. It is essential for both the bride and groom to feel confident and photogenic. Men’s makeup for weddings is a subtle yet transformative world that ensures grooms can walk down the aisle wearing makeup with confidence.

Men should wear their wedding rings during the ceremony and reception, as well as every day as a symbol of their commitment and love. In professional settings, wearing a wedding ring is a personal choice but can help establish credibility and trust with clients and colleagues. Lip color was another essential aspect of ancient Chinese makeup, providing a healthy color to the lips while protecting them from dry winds.

Adorning oneself privately, not publicly, is permissible and rewarding for a woman. It is also permissible for a woman to adorn herself in a gathering where no non-mahram (marriageable) men are present. The makeup does not prevent the validity of her Wudu/Ghusl, as elaborate hair took hours to prepare and became a conspicuous display of wealth and rank.

Grooming and makeup for the groom have become increasingly prevalent, not only to camouflage blemishes but to amplify their natural features, ensuring they are photo-ready for the duration of the event. Actors wear makeup most during weddings, but it can depend on the culture of the wedding.

In conclusion, groom makeup is an essential part of the wedding experience, as it helps both the bride and groom feel confident and photogenic.


📹 Guys Wear Makeup For A Week

Zach, Jonny, and Jimmy are taking on the challenge of incorporating makeup into their daily routine for an entire week. Will this …


Do grooms get makeup for a wedding?

Groom makeup. On their wedding day, the groom’s appearance is as important as the bride’s. Groom makeup and hair are now popular choices for enhancing the groom with natural features, exuding confidence, and ensuring a polished look that complements the wedding theme. In this article, we’ll explore groom makeup, hair, and natural looks. We’ll also offer tips for a sophisticated, camera-ready appearance on your special day.

The Evolution of Groom Makeup. Wedding makeup and groom up were traditionally about the bride. However, as beauty and grooming standards change, more grooms are using makeup. It’s not about heavy makeup. It’s about enhancing your best features while maintaining a masculine, healthy look.

Groom Skincare Before the Wedding. Start early: Start a skincare routine well in advance of the wedding. Cleansing, exfoliating, and moisturizing will make your skin ready for makeup. If you’re new to makeup, ask a professional makeup artist who specializes in groom makeup. They can recommend products and techniques that match your skin type and look.

Is it okay for guys to wear makeup?
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Is it okay for guys to wear makeup?

Sometimes it can feel scary to do things that other people might think are wrong or unmanly. Makeup is for any man who wants to wear it, gay, straight, masculine, or feminine.

You don’t have to wear makeup. If you’re thinking about trying makeup, I’ll walk you through the basics and what to avoid.

Dos of Men’s Makeup for Beginners. It’s now more accepted for guys to use makeup. It’s time to share our secrets with curious men. They can contour their beards, but that doesn’t mean they don’t have vanity issues.

Is it necessary to wear makeup as a groom?
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Is it necessary to wear makeup as a groom?

Some might think, “Why wear makeup?” Isn’t that just for women? Guess what? Groom makeup is a big trend! Grooms used to rely on good lighting and their natural charm. Grooms want to look fresh and ready for wedding photos. Makeup can even out your skin tone, hide blemishes, and make your eyes stand out in photos. Before we get started with the makeup tips, let’s cover some pre-wedding basics. First, take care of your skin! A consistent skincare routine before the wedding can improve your complexion. Clean, moisturize, and use sunscreen. This isn’t just for brides. You deserve glowing skin too!

Skincare Routine. Have a simple, consistent skincare routine. Wash your face twice a day. Moisturize to keep your skin hydrated and use sunscreen to protect against UV rays.

Do guys like girls who don’t wear makeup?

Most men like a woman to look her best, but there’s nothing wrong with putting in a little extra effort. It’s not the makeup itself, but how a woman uses it. Makeup can help you look and feel better.

When did men stop wearing makeup?
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When did men stop wearing makeup?

For a long time, makeup was only for girls. For thousands of years, men used makeup in many ways. In the mid-1800s, makeup was only for women. Queen Victoria I of Great Britain and the Church of England thought cosmetics were vulgar. In the Victorian era, makeup was seen as sinful by the Church of England and the royal family. This led to strong associations between makeup, vanity, femininity, and the devil. As religion spread, ideas about what it meant to be a man changed. By the 20th century, makeup was seen as a girl’s thing.

Today, people are finally accepting different gender expressions. We hope the trend continues, but we can’t move forward without looking back. Read on to learn about makeup trends for men over time. In ancient Egypt, makeup was important to masculinity. Men used black makeup as early as 4000 BCE to create cat-eye designs. Later, kohl eyeliner, green malachite eye shadow, and red ochre stains for the lips and cheeks were also popular. The purpose was not to look more attractive. Green eye shadow was believed to ward off illnesses. Dramatic eyeliner was worn to show wealth and status.

Do men secretly wear makeup?

There’s still a stigma. Even Sawyer, who uses makeup several times a month, feels shy about it. “I don’t advertise it,” he says. Not just straight men primp in private. Some gay men say shopping for makeup still makes them uncomfortable. “I’d be embarrassed to go to the makeup department in Bloomingdale’s because I think it screams ‘gay’ or ‘feminine,’” says Kyle Lee, a hat designer who runs his own brand, Henri Hats. He is gay but doesn’t like being stereotyped. The 26-year-old Midtown resident buys his go-to face powder at Duane Reade, where it’s discreet.

What percentage of straight men wear makeup?
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What percentage of straight men wear makeup?

Brands need to know how to reach this audience to grow.

15% of heterosexual men in the U.S. currently use male cosmetics and makeup; 17% would consider using it in the future, doubling the size of the market. Ipsos found that men under 35 and over 50 have different attitudes and motivations for using grooming, cosmetics, and skincare products. The data is from U.S. males 18 who are heterosexual and use cosmetics. Another Ipsos study looked at more details about the men’s cosmetics market. It also looked at thoughts and concerns about cosmetics, the purchase process, attitudes toward masculinity and cosmetics, and thoughts on brands and retailers.

What percent of straight men wear makeup?
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What percent of straight men wear makeup?

KEY FINDINGS: About 15% of heterosexual men in the U.S. use male cosmetics and makeup, and another 17% would consider it. Ipsos found that men under 35 and over 50 have different attitudes and motivations for using grooming, cosmetics, and skincare products. Roughly one-third of all men are open to using cosmetics. Most men don’t use cosmetics. Men aged 18 to 34 are more open to using cosmetics.

New research shows that younger men are interested in male cosmetics. This is an opening for brands to target this group. It also shows that the definition of masculinity is changing. Brands need to know how to reach this audience to grow.

Is it normal for straight guys to wear makeup?

There should be no gender stereotypes about skin care. Men and masculine-identifying people have worn makeup for thousands of years.

How common is it for men to wear makeup?
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How common is it for men to wear makeup?

A 2022 study by Ipsos found that 15% of heterosexual American men ages 18 to 65 use makeup, and 17% would consider it.

Everyday Man Makeup. It’s not unusual to see men wearing makeup. Who can forget Pete Wentz and his MAC eyeliner in the early 2000s? In the 2010s, YouTube beauty gurus like Manny MUA and Gen-Z trailblazers like Bretman Rock emerged. Now we have popular TikTok creators like Jesse Jaggers who are normalizing the movement. Male-driven brands like War Paint For Men haven’t received as much attention from men as female-focused brands like e.l.f. Cosmetics, Rare Beauty, and Charlotte Tilbury.

A change is coming. The bold looks popularized on social media won’t go away. A new group of men are being targeted.

Should men wear makeup at their wedding?
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Should men wear makeup at their wedding?

Men’s makeup on the wedding day shows how important it is for the groom to feel confident and look good in photos, and for the bride too. This shows that everyone at the wedding should feel included and equal.


📹 How I Did My WEDDING DAY MAKEUP | Modern, Fresh & Romantic | Annie Jaffrey

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Do Guys Wear Makeup On Their Wedding Day
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Christina Kohler

As an enthusiastic wedding planner, my goal is to furnish couples with indelible recollections of their momentous occasion. After more than ten years of experience in the field, I ensure that each wedding I coordinate is unique and characterized by my meticulous attention to detail, creativity, and a personal touch. I delight in materializing aspirations, guaranteeing that every occasion is as singular and enchanted as the love narrative it commemorates. Together, we can transform your wedding day into an unforgettable occasion that you will always remember fondly.

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  • Zach, a thing to consider extra with makeup is doctors! As a fellow chronically ill/pained person I have to be careful about not putting makeup on to make sure that my pain is taken seriously cause with makeup on it immediately makes health care professionals and the world perceive you as “alive” and “awake” and “healthy.”

  • Jimmy talking about how to put on eyeliner on his Asian eyes is SO FUCKING RELATABLE bc SO many youtube tutorials I used to follow, the person did NOT have my eye shape and eyelids!!! It’s SO IMPORTANT that if you’re gonna follow a makeup tutorial, find people whose features are similar to YOURS! It helps SO MUCH!

  • 3:31 As an Asian woman, I CAN confirm that learning how to do eyeliner and eyeshadow on east asian eyes is a definite learning curve, ESPECIALLY when you have monolids, an eye shape portrayed as unideal in eastern culture (fewer articles except on ea specific platforms). I remember experimenting with it as a younger teen and being so frustrated since I couldn’t follow the same tutorials as other western tutorials. After years of trial and error I finally figured out what works for me, and even still it’s not the most practical lmfao

  • I don’t think makeup is inherently bad (I’ll occasionally wear some wild stuff to make an outfit more dramatic), but I do think makeup culture under capitalism is insidious. Sad hearing generations of women & femme-presenting ppl feeling insecure about their unaltered faces and being compelled to wear makeup to leave the house/go to work/exist in public…all for the profit of makeup corporations and cisheteropatriarchy 😢

  • This is so interesting to watch as a young adult woman who doesn’t wear makeup. I used to wear a full face at 14 because I thought I had to for being to think I was pretty. A decade later I’m a lot more confident and just wear makeup for fun, but that transition was not easy, especially as a teenager

  • Zach’a comment at the end! So sweet! But also I think Zach didn’t fully commit to the assignment of doing makeup before you get to work like when he’d been up for 45mins in the middle of the night and was tired 😆 you know how many moms are waking up multiple times throughout the night then getting up early to put on makeup before work

  • I love hearing from the try staff, especially in these “men experience things traditionally applied to women”. It’s just so relatable and almost heartwarming Also (edit) I also absolutely feel lazy and like I’m being perceived differently without makeup. It’s gotten better as I’ve gotten older, but as a teenager I hated going out without makeup

  • I am a woman but I am also Zach. I don’t wear make up because I’m lazy. I’m sure I could look better with make up but I just really can’t be bothered. My profession doesn’t require me to be made up, so 🤷‍♀️ I’m going to get 15-30 minutes extra sleep in the morning and also be able to leave the house with minimal effort.

  • While the first day application was hilarious, as the 3 got better at it, they indeed looked more refreshed and healthier. Assuming I am not rushing out the door, my time of makeup application is almost zen, even hypnotically calming. The correct foundations, creams, toners and exfoliators can improve and protect your skin so why not do it no matter who you are. BTW LOVED Eugene’s cameo, his makeup is always on point.

  • The thing about no one teaching you and it being overwhelmed is so real. Whilst it’s great and everything that makeup can feel empowering for some people the idea that women’s faces are not done, or cannot be in professional space, without makeup is wildly corrosive and taught very early. Even now in my late twenties I struggle to leave the house without wearing makeup and I wish I could just not

  • I’m someone who doesn’t wear makeup. My acne, pores, and eye bags are on full display. I get told constantly that I look younger than I am just because of not looking “put together” like an adult apparently would be. We’ve definitely come a long way in this area, but it is still considered the standard for women not to be seen in society without a full face of makeup on.

  • I am all for body positivity and I work in manual labor with a group of the sweetest kindest most supportive men on the planet. I’ve been doing this for ten years. And three days ago was the first time I didn’t wear any makeup to work at all and I was NERVOUS. I have no idea why!!!?!?? No one said a word and honestly they wouldn’t have noticed if I walked in with full glam on either but it just made me super self conscious for the first hour Edit: someone mentioned down below as a plus-sized person they feel more pressure to put makeup on and since in my profession I wear heavy work pants and tshirts and no jewelry for safety reasons maybe this is why I feel so pressured to make my face look feminine? Like I can’t soften the rest of my appearance so that’s my one area to say hey no I’m a pretty woman? BRB texting my therapist 😂

  • I used to do my makeup every morning to cover up high pigmentation from when my acne was super bad. But then covid hit, and the only people who saw my face were the people I lived with, so I just stopped doing it and never got back into it. Will probably start doing it again when I go back to work (but also having a powder foundation for daily wear and liquid foundation for proper nice makeup is an absolute lifesaver)

  • I’m dying perusal this. It takes me about an hour to two hours depending on the complexity of my eye makeup (training to be a makeup artist) so it cracks me up seeing you guys try makeup 😂 I just had to watch this. Yeah she’s right, 20 minutes is fast for a daily makeup routine! I think it’s good for guys to understand the reasons why a lot of us wear makeup and touching on the insecurities we try to hide. Luckily as a makeup artist to be, I’ve been able to realize that I only want to wear makeup to make myself happy. Not my husband or anyone else. But for a long time, it was a way to hide my insecurities and it felt like a chore. Now it’s an art form for me, it’s about showing my creativity and expressing myself as well as enhancing my natural beauty, I just wish I realized that as a teenager! Anyways, you guys did a good job!

  • 4:27 this was me when I started buying makeup. The anxiety I felt when I walked into that drugstore just to look for the basic makeup stuff. Good thing the saleslady was so helpful in answering my questions. I really like that they didn’t go to a professional to teach them natural makeup because that is seriously how people learn about makeup – research the internet then approach friends who knows about makeup

  • This article is so fascinating 😂 I’m still early in, but I appreciate the commentary about your relationship with makeup. I feel so much prettier with makeup so I rarely ever wear it. I know if I wear it everyday (not just going out with friends, events, etc), I’ll start seeing my own face as ugly and “wrong.” I never want to feel obligated to doing my makeup as part of my normal routine. On the flip side, there’s people that never wear makeup then do for their weddings and get so much hate bc they don’t look recognizable or whatever. Women get so much hate about their appearance whether they do/don’t wear makeup

  • Honestly loved perusal this! As a nonbinary person I definitely have a complicated relationship with makeup. I hardly wear my makeup anymore because it felt too much like performing “girl” but I do love playing with makeup. I am starting to get to a place of acceptance with my gender and working to tear down the judgements I place on things like clothes and makeup. For everyone else I confidently state that nothing like clothes, makeup, or activities are gendered, but for myself it always felt like a road block.

  • It was great seeing so many of the staff sharing their perspectives on why they wear makeup and how they feel about it! And yeah, as a “plus-size person”, you can’t be plus-size and sloppy in public, as that will turn into you being treated doubly-inhumane. I love the whole, “wear makeup to have fun and because you want to, not because you feel you have to” movement. Makeup should be fun! Not a chore. Also, I swear that looked like it was Trixie Cosmetics’ eye topper? The frosted lilac eye?

  • I’m a woman who doesn’t wear makeup, and it hurt to hear other women say they don’t feel “put together” in their own, natural faces. Enjoying makeup for the artistry and fun self-expression of it all is one thing. But feeling obligated to wear makeup because you don’t feel your own face is enough is really sad. I kinda wish y’all had spent more time exploring that. I also wish the inherent theme of the article wasn’t “makeup makes you more presentable to the world.” I’m kinda disappointed, tbh.

  • As someone who has a skin picking disorder who used to hate my own face and still, to an extent, feel insecure about it, my pure laziness and extra 30 minutes of sleep prevents me from putting on makeup MOST days lol. I probably wear makeup like, 10 times in a year when I’m really going out to have some fun or for special events. It’s EASY to shame women and make them feel bad about FEELING BAD about themselves when the REASON why they feel that way in the first place is directly due to reactions of other people around them if they DON’T wear makeup. In the most subtle or loudest of ways, people DO TREAT you differently.

  • If anyone out there who has never worn makeup is considering trying some minimal amount, I highly recommend a BB Cream with SPF or some other light, translucent product that won’t feel weird on your skin. All it’ll do is even out the natural variations in your skintone to give you a different look, which on some days you might want. Also? A little bitty bit of eyeliner looks hot on most people, try it out at home if you’re curious. A great way to change up your style.

  • A few years ago my dad off hand told me that he was self conscious of the redness on his face, so i mentioned that a tinted moisturizer or bb cream would help fix that, not really thinking he’d take my suggestion seriously, but he was amazed that there was a product like that and he asked for recommendations. He’s had to rebuy tinted moisturizer many times over the years and even has preferred brands, he just uses it on the days he wants to look extra good, or when he feels extra red. Men should embrace makeups ability to help you feel more confident in your skin and manage insecurities like acne, redness, or anything else!

  • I haven’t worn makeup consistently in years. Beyond just fun lipstick, the time spent putting makeup on and then taking it OFF is just not time/effort I’m willing to put in. Also the whole beauty industry just pisses me off lmao. Like the argument “for” makeup is that it’s a choice and helps people express themselves, but the women in this article are saying they wear makeup literally because they don’t like their face without it. It just pisses me off that women feel like they can’t leave their house without looking like someone else. LIKE! The makeup industry is profiting off your insecurities!!!! Literally makeup that’s made to look like it’s not even there is so insidious to me. We were not made to look airbrushed in real life! We should not be shamed just because we don’t look like a freaking Instagram filter. Ughhhhhh it drives me nuts

  • It’s such a weird time being expected to wear makup to look socially acceptable. I had to learn to be comfortable being the only woman presenting person in the room without makup on out of financial necessity when I began living on my own for the first time, and while I still love to glam it up and have fun with makup, i wish society didn’t demand it. I still struggle to find myself attractive without it, but i do love the money i save by not wearing it everyday 😅

  • This is a fun article and make up can be an important part of self expression/artistry. But the idea behind the everyday “natural” look is really harmful for multiple reasons. 1. Women are often expected to wear make up, especially in professional settings. 2. The obsession with covering imperfections (like needing completely even skin) perpetuates troubling beauty standards. 3. The make up and skin care industry accounts for so much environmental damage and waste. 4. Makeup is super not regulated (in the US) and can have negative health implications. 5. It’s so expensive, in part, due to the “pink tax”. The culture around make up is a strain on women’s finances that are already limited by the patriarchy.

  • I’m so glad that I have good enough skin to just moisturize and walk out the door. Even when I “do” my makeup it’s diy eyelash extensions (which I do wear on a regular basis) with some fluffed brows and lipstick if I’m really wanting to. I’ve never liked the feeling of makeup on my face and my eyes water and ruin most eyeshadow. We are all beautiful, makeup or not 😊 However you feel the best is best!

  • So enjoyable, as always! I have been sans makeup for some time now. My Korean mother came over, and said my “looks broken down,” and made a Doctor’s appointment for me! I am an adult! I don’t know if my experience could be of use; as in general pressures for women, but also cultural expectations, just as the beautiful “plus sized” lady shared her story. Either way, all the loves ❤️

  • I started wearing makeup when I was 13-14 & for 35 years wore it daily, even if I wasn’t going anywhere. It took the lockdown for the pandemic to break the habit. I like how I look with makeup on since I have sparse lashes & brows but finding a good base with full coverage for an oily complexion without breaking the bank is hard! The good thing is that I don’t have wrinkles, just fine lines around my eyes. I’m more comfortable now going out without a full face on so I save it for special occasions.

  • As a fellow light-skin Asian, here are my makeup tips for Jimmy: 1. Both my primer and foundation are made by Korean brands. I’ve gotten close with western brands, but my Korean makeup is a near perfect skin tone match (usually the western brand foundations are slightly too pink for my face, I have more yellow undertones) 2. Eyeliner is hard. The only way to figure out what works for different eyelid shapes is lots of trial and error 3. If I’m perusal a makeup tutorial to actually learn something, I try to find Asian YouTubers who look more like me.

  • I like the idea of it being self expression vs fitting a narrow beauty standard. I know I personally fall somewhere a bit in the middle, I feel like I have to wear it to look professional at work but I also love my bold eyeliner and lipstick. I also really felt the woman who said she feels as a plus sized person there’s more of a feeling like part of you has to look put together if you’re going to be more casual in other ways such as your outfit. Societal standards and pressures are weirdly fascinating, terrifying and saddening all at once.

  • i see Johnny and Jimmy, i click I love that the Try Guys have been incorporating so many hilarious and talented people like Johnny and Jimmy more regularly. They vibe so well with the group “$100 seems like a lot of money.” Oh sweetie… Also when Johnny said he was nervous at Michael’s, he looked so cute! He did a wonderful job

  • I like that this is interspersed with clips of women talking about their experiences. Love to see the men appreciating themselves with makeup hehe. Tip: I’ve taken makeup off with olive oil when I was on a trip and forgot to pack my makeup remover. I use a homemade pure oil blend anyway; olive oil is a bit less suited to skin (and expensive) but it works in a pinch!

  • I’m genderfluid but afab and spent the first 30ish years of my life trying to be a woman. I never really cared about makeup but would wear it to go out or for work. I worked as a server for many years and tried this experiment at 3 different restaurants, in 2 different cities, and 2 different states. For a week I wouldn’t wear makeup and then the next week I would. I made sure the level of business was the same and my performance also. I averaged the tip percentage per week. Every time I’d get tipped more when I wore makeup. It made me so angry because I like my face without it but because of my perceived gender I got tipped less if I wasn’t conforming to it. I’ll occasionally wear it now but just because it can be fun and also I’m disabled so I don’t have to worry about my pay relying on it. But it still makes me angry that woman or woman presenting people are still seen as “supposed” to wear makeup. It makes me sad when people say they don’t like their own faces without it.

  • i love make up and put on make up especially eyeshsdown it just feels realy fun to have this self care routine and be able to play with colors and enhance my beauty its sad that somr days my allergies are soo bad i csnt put make up in cause i just sneeze so much and my eyes itch a lot 😭 on those days i feel so insecure cause my face us red and makes me wanna put make up on even more

  • I used to never leave the house without some form of makeup on during my teens but truthfully I hated it. I hated the way it felt, I hated how annoying it was to remove and I wore it because it was what I was “supposed to do”. And then I turned 20 and threw away all of my makeup products and for the past 10+ years the only times I wear makeup is during October for Halloween lol. I’m chronically tired and if I look that way then so be it, at least I don’t have to have crap all over my face to pretend that I look like I slept any.

  • I had a reaction to my birth control that gave me really horrible acne and I didn’t like how makeup looked on top of it so I stopped wearing it, and while I hate the acne, I am glad it broke me of the habit of wearing makeup everyday. On days where my acne isn’t so bad I actually like my natural face. It made me pretty sad to hear these beautiful women say they didn’t like their face without makeup.

  • I love that you all dig a little deeper with this “puff” articles. I appreciate you take every opportunity to help your audience to be curious of how others live. Especially when you all started discussing filters and the blackmirror future of having smart mirrors in homes so you only see a certain version of you reflected back and while that sends chills up my spine bc we are perceiving that future through the lens of capitalism and drug-like consumerism; it wasn’t until you shouted “dysmorphia” did I think…how potentially wholesome and gender affirming a place like that could be IF we controlled what was considered beautiful and not marketing companies. That’s when it shifts from a sci-fi horror dystopian warning tale to a futuristic grandmother’s magical attic giving your heart a hug story instead. Technology is merely a tool. Like the wheel, it’s shifted how we do things. So until we start implementing policies to better safeguard against the truth/inevitability that power corrupts, tools like technology that have such an immense potential for good and healing, will continue to be weaponized and scapegoated to helps those in power to stay in power. OUR greatest power is our love and our imaginations/creativity and solidarity ♥️✊🏻Here’s to a sci-fi future that Miss Frizzle would be proud of! 😆🥳

  • I remember as a kid perusal my mom put on her makeup and was enamored by it. As a teenager and in my early twenties I thought I had to always put on makeup and now that I’m in my 30’s I have grown to like my natural self. Don’t get me wrong makeup will always be my ride or die. I love it! Makeup definitely gives me a confidence I don’t have when I’m not wearing makeup, strangers treat me more in positive way when I have makeup on versus when I don’t. I’m not saying when I don’t have makeup on I get treated badly. I just think that the confidence boost I get from makeup helps me interact with strangers more in a positive way.

  • My takeaway from This article is that it shows that not many people notice your makeup. Sure it does give you a bit of a glow-up but for the most part most people don’t care or notice it. I can see some people getting a message that “go get you makeup done so you can look cuter” bit that’s far from it. Natural look all the way.

  • Even women who wear a lot of make up can’t always tell other women are wearing make up which is kinda crazy to me. I just started uni and had worn make up everyday. Brows done, mascara on, liquid blush and highlighter. One day I showed up to a party with red eyeliner and one of the other freshers that wears pretty intense eye makeup everyday complimented me on my makeup and said it was fun to see me in something else than just natural. Then I told her I had been wearing make up everyday, I’m blonde my lashes aren’t magically black 😂 She was shocked and told me she had no idea and just thought I looked like that.

  • My girlfriends and I are the opposite. We wear make-up so rarely that people legit get confused when they see us in it. I personally feel weirder with it since I’m always worried my liner is going to smudge or ill get lipstick on my teeth. Going bare faced means I know it looks the same as it did when I left home.

  • as a 19 year old who only can do mascara and am way too broke to begin doing makeup, this article is very interesting to me. would people look at me different if i could do makeup? would i appear more refreshed and put together?? just makes me wonder. but i also think even when i am financially stable enough to learn i will refuse to start as then i wouldn’t stop.

  • I honestly would love to see a article where women/people used to wearing makeup every day go for a week without makeup on. I’d be fascinated to see whether or not that helped them with their image and seeing their naked face. Don’t get me wrong, I love how makeup can be a fun way to express ourselves, or be fancy for a party/event, and I also think that more men should feel comfortable in using makeup as an option, both for glam/expression and for general Skin Appearance, BUT BUT BUT! I am a firm believer that we should NOT have to feel ugly/unhygienic/lazy for not wearing makeup every day. My face is my face, and it looks how it looks. If I look tired, it’s because I AM tired, it’s the opening shift, y’all are tired too. I really like what Jimmy said about makeup being a tool in your kit that you can pull out, because I think that’s a really healthy way to approach it. Let’s keep that toolkit for those who want it while dismantling the standard/expectation that women HALF to wear it to be seen as “presentable” 👏

  • When the guys started noticing blemishes for the very first time being over 30yo it was surreal, my first thought was “lol they’re like children” but then I was like… wait a minute… then I realized although it’s natural for women to look closely in a mirror daily, it’s not for them! OF COURSE women tend to notice tiny flaws everywhere in themselves, we’re just so used to looking for them! Only it’s actually not natural to worry about how uneven your skin is!

  • I appreciate that you all tried this out and the honesty of some of the women about why they wear makeup. I am an adult woman that never started wearing makeup – mostly due to laziness/cost/I’d rather sleep – so it’s something I’ve never had to deal with, but I love perusal makeup tutorials and seeing how much makeup can transform someone.

  • I appreciate that they included some women talking about how they think their face isn’t complete without makeup because that’s really the truth for so many women and it’s real fucked up when you think about it. I rejected makeup in my teens because I fell for the “i’m not like other girls” toxic attitude which is also bad. Society will judge you for wearing it, and it will judge you for not wearing it.

  • I used to be obsessed with makeup, feeling that makeup is a symbol that I’m a grown-up and “put together”, the feeling grew stronger when I started working in retail because it was a “requirement” for my job. After covid, I finally learned to accept myself as the way I’m. Sure I’m not “beautiful” by social standards, but who cares? I wear makeup when I feel like doing something different for myself, but most days now I only wear sunscreen. I’m glad now makeup is more like a personal expression rather than a “requirement”, people are free to do whatever they want, and no one should feel compelled to change their face, everyone is beautiful the way they are.

  • I am teeeerrible with names even though I watch the Try guys all the time lol, but what I wanna say is that when the woman ( I’m so sorry bc of the name) said she didn’t feel comfortable without makeup I kinda got reminded of past me. I definitely get the pressure of looking put together through wearing make-up and stuff but my boyfriend has really helped me to see that I am a beautiful woman with and without. He always hypes me up when I do a nice make-up look as well as when I go all natural. I always assumed others didn’t define whether I felt good without makeup or not, but I realised that the pressure was there all along. Nowadays I feel so happy and confident with and, thanks to my boyfriend who is always so supportive and shows me how beautiful life is. I now think Make-up should be something you do for fun, to actually enjoy, but you should never forget that everyone is beautiful naturally.

  • 10:15 “But then I was awake for 45 minutes in bed thinking of every anxiety I’ve ever had. I’m not gonna to do my makeup today”. 😂 That is ME!! I hate to say this, but when I first began perusal Try Guys articles, I wasn’t a huge fan of Zach. I don’t know why! I must have been taking crazy pills, because he is actually the best! Incredibly funny and lovable!! Jonny Cakes is another favorite, and I love it when he and Zach are in the articles 2gether!! ✌️💚💄💋

  • As a 36 year old woman who never learned to wear makeup when I was younger, and have been struggling to figure it out for the last year, I am deeply envious that these three guys just picked up makeup in a week and have perfectly colour matched concealer and foundations and they look great 😤 I still can’t even figure out if I’m a cool or a warm tone.

  • When they were talking about how some people can just not leave the house in a full face of makeup it reminded me so much of my aunt. When covid was tough she got sick and couldnt breath but refused to go to the hospital until she had all her makeup perfectly on even though she was strugling to breathe still had to call an ambulance but she had to put her makeup on. My sister asked her why and she just replied with “i gotta look good for the hot firefighters” i love my aunt

  • omg i FELT that when zach was like “i’m exceptinally lazy, even doing my hair is a burden” FR!!!!! for work i used to put foundation and under-eye concealer, and at some point THAT was too much and i just did the concealer…now i WFH and i just dont do anything (cuz i’m LAZY!!) honestly i just can’t be bothered to learn 🤷‍♀

  • Zach getting the makeup bag was so sweet 😊 I don’t wear “face” ever but when I do it’s a natural look and somehow I look like a fking goddess 😂😂😂 but it’s just too much (plus rebelling against imposed insecurity as an elder millennial first daughter😂) it makes me soooooooo sad that our naked faces just aren’t enough. And it’s okay to be, and therefore look, tired. ❤❤❤❤❤ great article in so many ways.

  • Dear Annie, your wedding make-up was a real dream. ❤️ I wish you all the best for the exiting new married chapter in your lives. I always loved your tutorials on make-up and beauty products, and I wish we could watch a fresh article on your daily make-up routine, a simple yet beautiful make-up when you are short on time but still want to look your best. Thank you so much in advance. Sending lots of love, Christina❤️

  • Congratulations to you and Mo. Everything looked so beautiful and elegant and the view was fabulous. You are a natural beauty and all of it came through in the choice of your dress, the location, the gorgeous table setting and the magnificent flowers. Perfection to be remembered! Many years of blessings to you both. 😎❤️💄Kathy 😷

  • Great article! And you made the right decision… I took friends’ rec to have my wedding makeup done even though I know how to do makeup and what a mistake… it was too heavy, too colorful. I was frantically wiping it off right before the ceremony and my face was red after!… if you know how to do your own makeup always best to do you own so you feel like yourself on such an important day… CONGRATS!

  • hy annie, do you wear contact lenses? because I wear the hard lenses and would also like to do bridal make-up, but I’m afraid that my eyes or the lenses won’t take something. I have read, for example, that the lenses do not tolerate eyelash glue, although I would like to wear false eyelashes. do you have a tip for me? Greetings Sara ❤