Selena Gomez talks about acne, intellectual fitness and her makeup day and night

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By Lauren Valenti

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Beauty, in all its nuances, has been part of the world of Selena Gomez.

“Being in other aspects of the industry, it’s been fun to play with [beauty] because it creates a character when you’re on set, it creates something magical,” says the triple-risk artist and intellectual fitness advocate who today launches Rare Beauty, his long-awaited new makeup line. “I’ve been very concerned about the total procedure because I also care a lot about intellectual fitness and I think it’s a component of your self-esteem, it’s a component of the way you look at yourself,” Gomez says of the crystallization of self-love and self-esteem. Expressions as logo codes.

One last summer day at her Los Angeles home, Gomez takes Vogue to her good-looking regimen day and night, from her cat’s eye style to the deep fuchsia lip recreation she wore in her “Ice Cream” with the K pop supergroup Blackpink.

As Gomez sees it, there are no sharp corners: an illuminated glow from the inside begins with a compromised skincare routine. “When you take care of your skin, you take care of your body, your brain and your soul, I think everything is connected,” Gomez says. And as a user dealing with acne, she sees a direct correlation between tension and rashes. “I don’t check anything, nothing complicated!” he admits. After wiping his face, Gomez massages the skin moisturizer Dewy, Tatcha’s cult favorite (“It’s so thick and delicious you don’t want to wear so much!”, he says), then apply a Drunk Elephant sunscreen veil. “I like to wear sunscreen, not only because it’s vital to keep my skin fresh, but I have lupus, so being in the sun is a little tricky for me,” says Gomez, who is still frank about the reality of living with an autoimmune disease. Disease.

The preparation of his complexor is complete, Gomez then applies and mixes with his lightweight Base Rare Beauty Touch, adding a lightening layer of concealer under the eyes in two other shades. Then, taking a page from his makeup artist Hung Vanngo’s book, Gomez touches and mixes his bright, soft liquid blush on the most sensitive of his cheeks. “It lifts his cheekbones a little bit,” he says of the strategic location, which “doesn’t make you see everything red and sunburnt. “Adding one more definition with Benefit’s Hoola Matte Bronzer, slide the number 3 earthy pigment along the face, sculpting the siens, cheekbones and jaw at once.

Gomez turns his attention to the eye and pulls out the Marc Jacobs Beauty Eye-Conic multi-finished eye shadow palette in Scandalust, washes his eyelids in a nude, before adding a bright rose to the middle and smoking it. Then it prepares for the cat’s eye is sensitive to perfection. Armed with her “favorite, favorite” Perfect Strokes matte liquid eyeliner, she shows her favorite eyeliner: look directly in the mirror, hold the tip of the pen over the student on the most sensitive lash line and draw outwards, tracing where the wing will be before filling it. After rotating the illuminator in the most sensitive areas of your face, as well as along the collarbones, use your Blot retouching kit.

“I think makeup is [an accessory] to complement what’s lovely about you,” says Gomez, who hopes her new beauty line will allow her enthusiasts to embrace her individuality. “I just think you’re special, you’re meant to be who you are,” he adds. I’ve met thousands of people in my life and I wish they saw what I see. “

Director: Anna Page Nadin

Producer: Gabrielle Reich

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