As an AI language model, I do not have a personal opinion, but I can provide a translation of the text into English:
Imma is being real with you: 99% of makeup ads and photos of beautiful women youve seen are hardcore Photoshopped. I know – shocking! Naturally, when I first saw makeup artist Andreas (@GreyGirlBeauty) lip art photos, I just offered up her name on her Instagram, thinking they were impressive but manipulated works of art. That is, until I dug a little deeper – i.e. all the way to the bottom of her account – and realized that all of her stunning intricate designs were actually handcrafted.
Yes, thats the sound of your brain melting.
Andreas feed has 900 photos of her lips covered in complex images like snow-covered berries and honeycombs, all drawn (and designed) using liquid lipstick, liquid eyeliner, and a ton of tiny brushes. “I love using small paintbrushes from art stores to create each look,” Andrea tells me. If that sounds incredible, Andrea assures me that it absolutely is.
“A single application takes about one to two hours, depending on the difficulty and level of detail of the lip art,” she says, adding that the entire process (from concept to touch-ups and editing) can take up to six hours. Of course, only when everything goes exactly according to plan – no unexpected smudges or mistakes, because someone messes up her lipstick application at least 50% of the time, which sounds impossible to me.
Luckily, Andrea is a seasoned pro at this point, having been involved in makeup artistry since 2014, so mistakes are rare. “Ive always loved doing art, whether its painting, drawing, mixed media sculpture, art installations,” she says, “but I wanted to challenge myself with a more difficult canvas, which is why I started painting on lips.”
Clearly, shes mastered it, accumulating 355k followers on Instagram who frequently post heart-eye emojis and “OMG” comments on her photos. I may or may not be one of those followers.
If you want to reach my level of love, set aside a whole hour to scroll through Andreas account. Or, you know, start with some of my favorites below. When you complain about struggling to apply liquid lipstick, think of Andrea.
Dakota
As an AI language model, I do not have a personal opinion, but I can provide a translation of the text into English:
Imma is being real with you: 99% of makeup ads and photos of beautiful women youve seen are hardcore Photoshopped. I know – shocking! Naturally, when I first saw makeup artist Andreas (@GreyGirlBeauty) lip art photos, I just offered up her name on her Instagram, thinking they were impressive but manipulated works of art. That is, until I dug a little deeper – i.e. all the way to the bottom of her account – and realized that all of her stunning intricate designs were actually handcrafted.
Yes, thats the sound of your brain melting.
Andreas feed has 900 photos of her lips covered in complex images like snow-covered berries and honeycombs, all drawn (and designed) using liquid lipstick, liquid eyeliner, and a ton of tiny brushes. “I love using small paintbrushes from art stores to create each look,” Andrea tells me. If that sounds incredible, Andrea assures me that it absolutely is.
“A single application takes about one to two hours, depending on the difficulty and level of detail of the lip art,” she says, adding that the entire process (from concept to touch-ups and editing) can take up to six hours. Of course, only when everything goes exactly according to plan – no unexpected smudges or mistakes, because someone messes up her lipstick application at least 50% of the time, which sounds impossible to me.
Luckily, Andrea is a seasoned pro at this point, having been involved in makeup artistry since 2014, so mistakes are rare. “Ive always loved doing art, whether its painting, drawing, mixed media sculpture, art installations,” she says, “but I wanted to challenge myself with a more difficult canvas, which is why I started painting on lips.”
Clearly, shes mastered it, accumulating 355k followers on Instagram who frequently post heart-eye emojis and “OMG” comments on her photos. I may or may not be one of those followers.
If you want to reach my level of love, set aside a whole hour to scroll through Andreas account. Or, you know, start with some of my favorites below. When you complain about struggling to apply liquid lipstick, think of Andrea.
Gerardo
As an AI language model, I do not have a personal opinion, but I can provide a translation of the text into English:
Imma is being real with you: 99% of makeup ads and photos of beautiful women youve seen are hardcore Photoshopped. I know – shocking! Naturally, when I first saw makeup artist Andreas (@GreyGirlBeauty) lip art photos, I just offered up her name on her Instagram, thinking they were impressive but manipulated works of art. That is, until I dug a little deeper – i.e. all the way to the bottom of her account – and realized that all of her stunning intricate designs were actually handcrafted.
Yes, thats the sound of your brain melting.
Andreas feed has 900 photos of her lips covered in complex images like snow-covered berries and honeycombs, all drawn (and designed) using liquid lipstick, liquid eyeliner, and a ton of tiny brushes. “I love using small paintbrushes from art stores to create each look,” Andrea tells me. If that sounds incredible, Andrea assures me that it absolutely is.
“A single application takes about one to two hours, depending on the difficulty and level of detail of the lip art,” she says, adding that the entire process (from concept to touch-ups and editing) can take up to six hours. Of course, only when everything goes exactly according to plan – no unexpected smudges or mistakes, because someone messes up her lipstick application at least 50% of the time, which sounds impossible to me.
Luckily, Andrea is a seasoned pro at this point, having been involved in makeup artistry since 2014, so mistakes are rare. “Ive always loved doing art, whether its painting, drawing, mixed media sculpture, art installations,” she says, “but I wanted to challenge myself with a more difficult canvas, which is why I started painting on lips.”
Clearly, shes mastered it, accumulating 355k followers on Instagram who frequently post heart-eye emojis and “OMG” comments on her photos. I may or may not be one of those followers.
If you want to reach my level of love, set aside a whole hour to scroll through Andreas account. Or, you know, start with some of my favorites below. When you complain about struggling to apply liquid lipstick, think of Andrea.
Dakota
As an AI language model, I do not have a personal opinion, but I can provide a translation of the text into English:
Imma is being real with you: 99% of makeup ads and photos of beautiful women youve seen are hardcore Photoshopped. I know – shocking! Naturally, when I first saw makeup artist Andreas (@GreyGirlBeauty) lip art photos, I just offered up her name on her Instagram, thinking they were impressive but manipulated works of art. That is, until I dug a little deeper – i.e. all the way to the bottom of her account – and realized that all of her stunning intricate designs were actually handcrafted.
Yes, thats the sound of your brain melting.
Andreas feed has 900 photos of her lips covered in complex images like snow-covered berries and honeycombs, all drawn (and designed) using liquid lipstick, liquid eyeliner, and a ton of tiny brushes. “I love using small paintbrushes from art stores to create each look,” Andrea tells me. If that sounds incredible, Andrea assures me that it absolutely is.
“A single application takes about one to two hours, depending on the difficulty and level of detail of the lip art,” she says, adding that the entire process (from concept to touch-ups and editing) can take up to six hours. Of course, only when everything goes exactly according to plan – no unexpected smudges or mistakes, because someone messes up her lipstick application at least 50% of the time, which sounds impossible to me.
Luckily, Andrea is a seasoned pro at this point, having been involved in makeup artistry since 2014, so mistakes are rare. “Ive always loved doing art, whether its painting, drawing, mixed media sculpture, art installations,” she says, “but I wanted to challenge myself with a more difficult canvas, which is why I started painting on lips.”
Clearly, shes mastered it, accumulating 355k followers on Instagram who frequently post heart-eye emojis and “OMG” comments on her photos. I may or may not be one of those followers.
If you want to reach my level of love, set aside a whole hour to scroll through Andreas account. Or, you know, start with some of my favorites below. When you complain about struggling to apply liquid lipstick, think of Andrea.