It’s Not Always The Product
When your eye makeup turns out to be worse than your drawing, it’s easy to blame the palette.But most of the time, that’s not the real issue. The colour in the pallete looks fine. The texture feels fine. Something just goes wrong once it’s on the lid.
Usually, it’s small things adding up.
Look At Your Lids
Eyeshadow reacts to whatever it sits on. If the lids are oily, the colour moves. If they’re dry, it clings. That’s when you see uneven spots.
A light layer of concealer or eye base helps. Not thick. Not heavy. Just enough to smooth things out. Let it rest on your eyes for a few seconds, before jumping on to the next step.
Quantity Is The Key
Pigmented shadows don’t need to be heavy. A heavy first layer is often why blending feels impossible. The brush touches down, and the colour sticks right there. Using less actually helps. Lightly dip the brush. Tap it off. Add more only if needed. It sounds basic, but it changes the result.
The Aura Eyeshadow Palette has strong colour payoff, so building slowly works better than pressing hard. The shades show up without needing force.
The Way You Move
Big sweeping motions look dramatic, but they don’t always blend well. Smaller movements usually soften the edges better. A bit of back and forth. Small circles. No rush.
Blending takes a little time. Trying to finish it in ten seconds rarely works.
Different Finishes, Different Feel
With 21 shades in categories like matte, shimmer, and metalic, the Aura palette gives you options. But the trick isn’t using more shades. It’s using each one the way it behaves in the best way while suiting your skin tone.