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The Spring Makeup Trends of 2026 Are a Lesson in Art History

1 month ago 37

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They say nothing is better than Paris in the spring. Flowers are blooming, yes, but it’s also still cool enough to start your day with a warm croissant and a café au lait before an afternoon of museum-hopping. In this scenario, you’ll also find a treasure trove of ideas for spring 2026 makeup looks.

Start your day at the Musée d’Orsay, where dreamy, impressionistic Monets and van Goghs will inspire cloudlike blush and ballet slipper-pink lips. Toulouse-Lautrec’s passionate lovers and can-can dancers will encourage feverishly romantic, smudgy lips. You can then visit the Louvre and get bronzer inspo from Rubens’ golden hour light or the sculpted Venus de Milo. And just when you’ve been swept fully into Parisian romance, walk along the Seine to the Musée National Picasso for a modernist twist. Picasso’s line drawings are like spring’s subtle micro eyeliner, and his bold use of color will have you thinking of fun, colorwashed lids.

Whether you’re feeling more Renaissance or funky Cubist, these spring trends have you covered. Below, the experts break down this season’s most painterly makeup looks.

Smudged lips

Closeup of Sofía Reyes with diffused smudged lips.

Courtesy of Launchmetrics

Closeup of Kim Sunghee with diffused smudged lips on the red carpet.

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Closeup of İsmail Hacıoğlu with diffused smudged lips.

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Closeup of Carole Brana with diffused smudged lips.

Courtesy of M.A.C

Closeup of Supriya Ganesh with micro liner makeup on the red carpet.

Courtesy of Launchmetrics

Thanks to a resurgence in horny-romance media, showing up to any event like you’ve just had a hot makeout session in the back of a cab (or a hockey locker room, or a gothic Yorkshire estate…) is not only accepted, it’s encouraged. What could be a better excuse to show up late?

If you don’t get your smudgy lips the old-fashioned way, this is the kind of perfectly imperfect look that invites you to, literally, color outside the lines. “It’s matte rather than glossy, with blurred edges rather than mechanical precision,” says Sage, a New York City-based makeup artist.

You’ll need a matte lipstick or lip stain—think blushy pink for a Wuthering Heights romantic effect or deep berry for a more Twilight or Anne Rice vampiric affair. Ashley Rebecca, a New York City-based makeup artist, recommends Violette_FR Plume Lip for a diffused, whipped texture that creates a natural, kiss-worn look; and New York City-based artist Christian Briceno likes the cushiony stain of Dior Addict Lip Tint. “Place the color at the center of the lips and tap outward,” he says. “Blur the edge with a fingertip or dense brush.”

Watercolor blush

Closeup of Hailey Baldwin with watercolor blush makeup.

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Closeup of Sabrina Carpenter with watercolor blush makeup on the red carpet.

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Closeup of a model with watercolor blush makeup on the runway.

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Closeup of a model with watercolor blush makeup on the runway.

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If you were to dot just a single drop of lily pink watercolor paint onto a wet canvas, it would dance and blur and diffuse into a watery cloud of blush. It would be concentrated in the center, diluted at the edges. It would billow like the skirt of an Edwardian woman in a John Singer Sargent painting.

This dreamy effect was spotted on cheekbones on the spring runways at Ralph Lauren and Marc Jacobs. The look has also graced the red carpet, worn by stars like Sabrina Carpenter, Hailey Bieber, and Priyanka Chopra. “[It’s] great for anybody who is looking to create a fuller-looking pout,” says Alex Scoffell, a New York City-based makeup artist and brand manager at Kevin Aucoin.

Keep the watercolor medium in mind as you apply your blush. “Watercolor paint is transparent, and you can sheer the color out or add more strategically to enhance saturation,” says Rebecca. “To do this with blush, start with soft cream blushes or gels (on the apples of cheeks), then add silky powder blushes on top to create a watercolor flush.” She recommends a combo of Dear Dahlia Petal Drop Liquid Blush and Hourglass Ambient Lighting Blush. And Joseph Carrillo, a New York City-based makeup artist, likes to layer the cream and powder blush in Patrick Ta Major Headlines Double-Take Duo.

Golden Hour skin

Closeup of model with Bronzy Glowy Skin.

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Closeup of Teyana Taylor with Bronzy Glowy Skin on the red carpet.

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Closeup of Kaia Jordan Gerber with Bronzy Glowy Skin.

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Closeup of Madison Beer with Bronzy Glowy Skin.

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Closeup of Zara Larsson with Bronzy Glowy Skin.

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If Venus de Milo gathered her skirt, left the Louvre, and became a beauty influencer, this lit-from-within bronzy look would be her signature. “Positively glowing,” everyone would say. “Drop the skin-care routine, please!”

Of course, what’s meant to look natural and effortless always takes a little effort. Looking this sculpted requires some strategic bronzing. “Using a product with a tiny bit of luminosity and glow is key here,” says Drita Paljevic, director of artistry at Kevyn Aucoin, who recommends the brand’s Sensual Skin Bronzer. Armani Beauty Luminous Silk Creamy Bronzing Powder would also work well here. “Apply liberally around the outer edges of the face and on the cheeks and eyelids to create that beachy, (faux) sun-kissed look.”

For a low-effort version, Dallas-based makeup artist Sarah Walsh suggests adding a bronze illuminator like Iconic London Instant Sunshine Bronzing Drops to your moisturizer or primer. Then, if you want to amp it up later, sweep a powder bronzer like DIBS Duet Baked Bronzer “across your forehead, underneath cheekbones and jaw, the collarbone and tops of shoulders, and even across the bridge of the nose,” she says.

Micro liner

Closeup of Eihi Shiina with micro liner makeup.

Courtesy of Launchmetrics

Closeup of Rachel Zegler with micro liner makeup.

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Closeup of Mia Goth with micro liner makeup on the red carpet.

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Sometimes, art is all in the wrist. Case in point: a super subtle, painterly flick of micro liner—like Picasso’s minimalist pen-and-ink line drawings. These deserve to be in MoMA every bit as much as more elaborate works, but they are more of a modernist whisper than a shout.

Fine-line flicks also made a quiet but noticeable debut on runways for Giorgio Armani Prive, Jovana Louis, and Prabal Gurung. You might have needed a triple zoom to see the detail, but it’s still a load-bearing line—helping to give every look a little lift and wink. “It’s super precise, very close to the lashes, and almost invisible at first glance,” says Carrillo. “It defines the eye without turning into a ‘look,’ and it feels modern and wearable.”

Paljevic recommends tightlining the upper lid’s water line with a very small pencil first (the extrafine tips on Soshe Waterproof Precision Eyeliner or CoverGirl Perfect Point Eye Pencil would work well here). “Then take the pencil and make a very small wing from the outer corner of the eye,” she continues. “By applying the product only on the outer corner and leaving the inner corner mostly bare, it will create a lovely lifted fox-eye effect.

If black liner feels too predictable and you want to ring in warmer weather with color, Walsh suggests Victoria Beckham Satin Kajal Liner in Navy Noir. (You may need a thin, angled brush to get the micro look, but this liner is very forgiving.) Or take a cue from the models at Jovana Louis and go pink with NYX Epic Wear Waterproof Eyeliner Stick, which Picasso surely would have used had it been an option.

Ballet slipper lips

Closeup of Charli XCX with Ballet Slipper Lips.

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Closeup of model with Ballet Slipper Lips.

Courtesy of Pat McGrath

Closeup of Margot Robbie with Ballet Slipper Lips.

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Closeup of model with Ballet Slipper Lips.

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Closeup of model with Ballet Slipper Lips.

Courtesy of Launchmetrics

Closeup of model with Ballet Slipper Lips.

Courtesy of Launchmetrics

If you leaned forward and kissed one of Monet’s ballet-class paintings (frowned upon, believe it or not), you’d come away with this pastel ballet slipper-pink shade on your lips.

“This [color] feels romantic and effortless but still put-together,” says MarQuis Ward, a Los Angeles-based makeup artist and lead artist at LYS Beauty.

But there’s no need to risk museum jail to get the look: “I like to prep lips with lip oil, apply a pink lip color, and then blur the edges with my finger so it looks soft and lived in,” he says. The goal is satin pink pointe shoe.

Ward recommends the LYS Beauty Speak Love Glossy Lip Treatment to help moisturize and smooth your canvas (Summer Fridays Dream Lip Oil in Pink Cloud already has a soft ballerina tint if you want to keep things simple). Follow with a smudged, rosy hue like Charlotte Tilbury K.I.S.S.I.N.G. Satin Shine Lipstick in Icon Baby or MAC Lustreglass Sheer-Shine Lipstick in Syrup.

Want a one-and-done option? Try the TikTok-viral L'Oreal Paris Colour Riche Lipcolour in the aptly named shade Ballerina Shoes that kicked off this trend on the app.

Colorwashed lids

Closeup of Herieth Paul with colorwashed lids for makeup.

Courtesy of Launchmetrics

Closeup of a model with colorwashed lids for makeup.

Courtesy of Launchmetrics

Closeup of a model with colorwashed lids for makeup on the runway.

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Closeup of a model with colorwashed lids for makeup.

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Closeup of a model with colorwashed lids for makeup.

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Georgia O’Keeffe had her oil paints and Mary Cassatt had her pastels. But for those of us who are more gifted in the art of fingerpainting, a bold, allover wash of a singular color across eyelids can be just as stirring.

To keep this look wearable, Briceno recommends, keep the color somewhat transparent. “People want something lived in and expressive,” he says. “Softly blended pastels or mineral tones across the lid look almost airbrushed. The finish stays diffused and cloudlike, never opaque.”

Briceno says further, “Pick one [color] and build slowly with a fluffy brush, then diffuse edges until there’s no visible start or stop line. Keep the lower lash line clean or softly blended with the same tone.” If you’re working with a sheer cream blush, your most handy art tool (your fingers) will help you blend and diffuse the color across the lid.

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