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Show CARELESS '.MAKEUP RUINS BEAUTY . If your fact) happens to bo thapod lilto Betto Davit' or soma movia star's, study tha abova pictures, than avoid tha glaring makeup faults illustrated rouge placed where It distorts features, lipstick killing the mouth's allure, eyebrows framing orbs grotesquely. Suitable hair styles and cor rect makeup give the loveliness of motion picture stars free rein. . I jBy ALICIA HART . The woman who knows her type, 'exactly what the shape of her face I is and some facts about her coloring has a better chance of being able Beauty to mke the most of her features and to make less obvious the unattractive unat-tractive ones. Instead of trying to copy the hairdress and makeup technique of I her favorite motion picture actress, she picks a star whose face is shaped something like her own. whose coloring is quite similar. Then she studies the method that particular actress employs when applying ap-plying rouge, lipstick and so forth. She tries to find out what the studio makeup experts have done to make the star the glamorous creature she is. ' j Makeup ("harts Or she orders makeup charts from cosmetics manufacturers easily available, and with these in hand, i studies her own features, skin tex- ture, bone structure; the way her jhair frames her face, where color 'appears when cheeks are naturally t flushed. Then she experiments with makeup in various-shades until the desired effect is achieved. "Veritable miracles can be accomplished ac-complished with the right cosmetics, applied correctly." says Perc West-more, West-more, famous Hollywood makeup expert: "If she observes simple rules of health which make for unblemished un-blemished skin, clear eyes and a nice, figure, then learns how to dress her hair, use rouge, lipstick and powder, any woman can be not only attractive but lovely. "Likewise, bad makeup and an unsuitable coiffure can spoil even the most perfect features, ruin the effect of really beautiful hair," Mr. West more continued. Easily Ruined "Consider Bette Davis, for example. exam-ple. All that lovely girl has to do to spoil her appearance is to .pencil I exaggerated arches into her eye brows, pull her hair forward over cheeks, use too much rouge and place it In little round circles on cheekbones, then make s cupid's bow of her lips. "By the simple process of smear-, ing on too much lipstick and rouse and wielding an eyebrow pencil with an unrestrained hand, pretty 'little Janet Gaynor can change herself her-self from a dainty, little-girl type of i woman to a rather hard-looking individual. in-dividual. Pictures of Janet wearing too much makeup prove conclusively conclusive-ly how important it is to decide1 what one's type happens to be and what awful things can happen to a,; woman who never has bothered to develop makeup sense." " I Mr. Westmore went on to point! out what could happen to handsome Rita Johnson's face if she simply parted her hair one inch higher and used rouge low on her cheeks. 'The seemingly smallest details often mean the difference between real beauty and a merely so-so face," he concluded. |