Category: YOGA

  • Amazon Has Amazing Beauty Deals Right Now

    Amazon Has Amazing Beauty Deals Right Now

    Image may contain Bottle Shaker and ShampooCollage: Jemeria Davison; Source images: Courtesy of brandsSave StorySave this storySave StorySave this story

    One of our favorite beauty destinations is doing what it does best: a mega savings event (and no, it’s not another Prime Day). Amazon’s Big Spring Sale is in full swing from March 25 through March 31, offering up to 40% off across the site—but, naturally, we’re most excited about the beauty steals. From editor-favorite cleansing oils to time-saving multi-stylers, tons of 2025 Allure Best of Beauty-winning products are marked down, making it the perfect time to stock up on your go-tos or try something new. (Hey, Anua, Briogeo, Medicube, and R+Co!)

    While the deals are open to all shoppers, Amazon Prime members snag free two-day shipping and access to even more exclusive savings. So, what are you waiting for? Curl up on the couch, dive into the sale, and fill your virtual cart with fresh spring beauty essentials before they’re gone. Your vanity (and your self-care routine) will thank you.

    Our Top Picks

    ma:nyo Pure Cleansing Oil orange bottle of facial cleansing oil with white pump on light gray background with red Allure Best of Beauty seal in the top right cornerOil OutMa:nyo Pure Cleansing OilJUMP TO PRODUCT$23 $18 (22% off)

    Amazon

    Topicals Slick Salve Mint Glossy Lip Balm in branded tube component on a light gray backgroundMint ConditionTopicals Slick Salve Mint Glossy Lip BalmJUMP TO PRODUCT$16

    Amazon

    Haruharu Wonder Black Rice Probiotics Barrier Essence in branded component on a light gray backgroundEssence-ially PerfectHaruharu Wonder Black Rice Probiotics Barrier EssenceJUMP TO PRODUCT$22 $20 (9% off)

    Amazon

    Kitsch Microfiber Hair Towel in branded component on a light gray backgroundFrizz FighterKitsch Microfiber Hair TowelJUMP TO PRODUCT$23

    Amazon

    Anua PDRN Hyaluronic Acid 100 Moisturizing Cream in branded tube component on a light gray backgroundSuper SootherAnua PDRN Hyaluronic Acid 100 Moisturizing CreamJUMP TO PRODUCT$24

    Amazon

    Frequently Asked QuestionsAccordionItemContainerButtonLargeChevron

    • Meet the experts
    • How we test and review products
    • Our staff and testers

    Ma:nyo Pure Cleansing Oil

    ma:nyo Pure Cleansing Oil orange bottle of facial cleansing oil with white pump on light gray background with red Allure Best of Beauty seal in the top right cornerSave to wishlistSave to wishlist

    Ma:nyo

    Pure Cleansing Oil

    $23 $18 (22% off)

    Amazon

    Allure commerce writer Lily Wohlner applying the Ma:nyo Pure Cleansing Oil

    Lily Wohlner

    A 2025 Best of Beauty Award winner, Ma:nyo’s Pure Cleansing Oil features 14 plant oils that transform into a luxurious milk with water to deeply cleanse, regulate sebum production, and leave skin looking plump and refreshed.

    Wohlner before applying the Manyo Pure Cleansing Oil

    Wohlner before applying the Ma:nyo Pure Cleansing Oil

    Lily WohlnerWohlner after applying the Manyo Pure Cleansing Oil

    Wohlner after applying the Ma:nyo Pure Cleansing Oil

    Lily Wohlner

    Alastin Skincare Transform Body Treatment

    Alastin Skincare TransFORM Body Treatment Skin Firming Lotion in branded bottle component on a light gray backgroundSave to wishlistSave to wishlist

    Alastin Skincare

    Transform Body Treatment

    $220

    Amazon

    Alastin’s Transform Body Treatment encourages collagen production to “help enhance skin firmness, especially in areas prone to laxity like the arms, thighs, or abdomen with continued use," Rachel Westbay, MD, a board-certified dermatologist in New York City, told Allure.

    Round Lab Birch Juice Moisturizing UVLock SPF 45

    Round Lab Birch Juice Moisturizing UVLock Spectrum 45 Sunscreen in branded tube component on a light gray backgroundSave to wishlistSave to wishlist

    Round Lab

    Birch Juice Moisturizing UVLock SPF 45

    $22

    Amazon

    Allure contributing commerce writer Christa Joanna Lee applying the Round Lab Birch Juice Moisturizing UVLock

    Christa Joanna Lee

    Round Lab’s Birch Juice Moisturizing UV Lock is a non-greasy, super lightweight chemical sunscreen that won’t clog pores or cause breakouts. Plus, its skin-smoothing finish makes for great prep underneath your foundation.

    T3 SinglePass Curling Iron

    T3 SinglePass Curling Iron in branded component on a light gray backgroundSave to wishlistSave to wishlist

    T3

    SinglePass Curling Iron

    $160

    Amazon

    T3’s SinglePass Curling Iron features an extra-long ceramic barrel that can cover your whole head in just a few minutes, giving tresses a shiny, professional-looking finish.

    First Aid Beauty KP Bump Eraser Body Scrub

    First Aid Beauty KP Bump Eraser Body Scrub in branded component on a light gray background with best of beauty seal in the top right cornerSave to wishlistSave to wishlist

    First Aid Beauty

    KP Bump Eraser Body Scrub

    $28

    Amazon

    Allure former content director Kara McGrath using First Aid Beauty’s KP Smoothing Body Lotion

    Kara McGrath

    Lactic acid is the star ingredient in First Aid Beauty's Best of Beauty-winning KP Smoothing Body Lotion, which sloughs away dead skin cells and smoothes texture without irritating sensitive skin.

    Topicals Slick Salve Mint Glossy Lip Balm

    Topicals Slick Salve Mint Glossy Lip Balm in branded tube component on a light gray backgroundSave to wishlistSave to wishlist

    Topicals

    Slick Salve Mint Glossy Lip Balm

    $16

    Amazon

    Topicals’ Slick Salve delivers a refresh with every swipe—an instant pick-me-up for dry lips. Beyond the cooling sensation, shea butter and coconut oil soothe skin, leaving lips soft and glossy.

    Haruharu Wonder Black Rice Probiotics Barrier Essence

    Haruharu Wonder Black Rice Probiotics Barrier Essence in branded component on a light gray backgroundSave to wishlistSave to wishlist

    Haruharu Wonder

    Black Rice Probiotics Barrier Essence

    $22 $20 (9% off)

    Amazon

    Allure commerce editor Sarah Han applying the Haruharu Wonder Black Rice Probiotics Barrier Essence

    Sarah Han

    Loaded with black rice probiotics and barrier-loving ceramides and lipids, this milky serum brings stressed skin back from the brink—turning red, dry patches into a thing of the past.

    Avène Cicalfate+ Restorative Protective Cream

    Avène Cicalfate+ Restorative Protective Cream in branded tube component on a light gray backgroundSave to wishlistSave to wishlist

    Avène

    Cicalfate+ Restorative Protective Cream

    $26

    Amazon

    Dry patches? Chapped lips? Rough elbows? Avène’s Cicalfate+ Restorative Protective Cream smooths it all, thanks to soothing thermal spring water that helps skin bounce back from stress.

    Medicube Facial Cleanser Zero Pore Capsule Cleansing Foam

    Medicube Zero Pore SA Clear Capsule Facial Deep Cleanser in branded component on a light gray backgroundSave to wishlistSave to wishlist

    Medicube

    Facial Cleanser Zero Pore Capsule Cleansing Foam

    $20 $15 (25% off)

    Amazon

    A thick, creamy formula that suds up into a velvety foam, this Korean cleanser combines micro blue exosome capsules for gentle exfoliation, with mandelic and salicylic acids to maintain clear pores. Meanwhile, cica and green tea calm irritation and deliver antioxidant protection.

    Lee applying the Zero Pore Capsule Cleansing Foam

    Christa Joanna LeeLee after applying the Zero Pore Capsule Cleansing Foam

    Lee after applying the Zero Pore Capsule Cleansing Foam

    Christa Joanna Lee

    R+Co Dallas Thickening Shampoo

    R+Co Dallas Biotin Thickening Shampoo in branded component on a light gray backgroundSave to wishlistSave to wishlist

    R+Co

    Dallas Thickening Shampoo

    $38 $35 (8% off)

    Amazon

    Limp hair? Get outta town and head all the way to Dallas…that is, R+Co’s Dallas Thickening Shampoo. It’s infused with shine-enhancing vitamin B5 and strengthening biotin and coconut oil, for beautiful bounce that mimics a salon blowout.

    Missha M Perfect Cover BB Cream

    Missha M Perfect Cover BB Cream in branded tube component on a light gray backgroundSave to wishlistSave to wishlist

    Missha

    M Perfect Cover BB Cream

    $19 $15 (21% off)

    Amazon

    Formulated with moisture-locking hyaluronic acid and ceramides alongside soothing rosemary leaf and chamomile extracts, Missha M’s Perfect Cover BB Cream delivers SPF 42 protection and buildable medium coverage that helps cancel out discoloration.

    Anua PDRN Hyaluronic Acid 100 Moisturizing Cream

    Anua PDRN Hyaluronic Acid 100 Moisturizing Cream in branded tube component on a light gray backgroundSave to wishlistSave to wishlist

    Anua

    PDRN Hyaluronic Acid 100 Moisturizing Cream

    $24

    Amazon

    Allure senior commerce editor Sarah Felbin applying the Anua PDRN Hyaluronic Acid 100 Moisturizing Cream

    Sarah Felbin

    This Anua PDRN Hyaluronic Acid 100 Moisturizing Cream stars the salmon DNA-derived, K-beauty superstar ingredient that signals to your skin to repair and strengthen. Hyaluronic acid, squalane, and niacinamide step in to further hydrate and calm.

    Felbin before applying the Anua PDRN Hyaluronic Acid 100 Moisturizing Cream

    Felbin before applying the Anua PDRN Hyaluronic Acid 100 Moisturizing Cream

    Sarah FelbinFelbin after applying the Anua PDRN Hyaluronic Acid 100 Moisturizing Cream

    Felbin after applying the Anua PDRN Hyaluronic Acid 100 Moisturizing Cream

    Sarah Felbin

    Anua Heartleaf 77 Soothing Toner

    Anua Heartleaf 77 Soothing Toner in branded component on a light gray backgroundSave to wishlistSave to wishlist

    Anua

    Heartleaf 77 Soothing Toner

    $23 $20 (13% off)

    Amazon

    If calm, balanced, radiant skin is your goal, Anua’s Heartleaf 77 Soothing Toner delivers. Powered by heartleaf—an herb known for its calming properties—it helps ease dryness-induced irritation, while hyaluronic acid boosts moisture levels for a dewy, glass-skin glow.

    Briogeo Style + Treat Yuzu + Plum Oil Sleek Stick

    Briogeo Style + Treat Yuzu + Plum Oil Sleek Stick in branded hot pink component on light gray backgroundSave to wishlistSave to wishlist

    Briogeo

    Style + Treat Yuzu + Plum Oil Sleek Stick

    $23

    Amazon

    Put flyaways back in their place with Biogeo’s Sleek Stick. Yuzu extract, plum oil, and B vitamins lock in moisture and nutrients, leaving hair glossy and sleek without that heavy, oily finish.

    Laura Geller Sculpt-n-Stay Waterproof Brow Pencil

    Laura Geller Sculpt-n-Stay Waterproof Brow Pencil in branded component on a light gray backgroundSave to wishlistSave to wishlist

    Laura Geller

    Sculpt-n-Stay Waterproof Brow Pencil

    $22 $20 (9% off)

    Amazon

    Laura Geller’s Sculpt-n-Stay Pencil glides on easily, fills in sparse areas, and keeps brows perfectly shaped and in place all day.

    AquaBliss High Output Revitalizing Shower Filter

    AquaBliss High Output Revitalizing Shower Filter in branded component on a light gray backgroundSave to wishlistSave to wishlist

    AquaBliss

    High Output Revitalizing Shower Filter

    $37 $33 (11% off)

    Amazon

    Designed with a blend of advanced filters, including stainless steel mesh and activated carbon, Aquabliss’ Shower Filter purifies your water and enriches it with vitamin C and tourmaline, revealing softer skin and glossier strands.

    Kitsch Microfiber Hair Towel

    Kitsch Microfiber Hair Towel in branded component on a light gray backgroundSave to wishlistSave to wishlist

    Kitsch

    Microfiber Hair Towel

    $23

    Amazon

    Kitsch’s Microfiber Hair Towel gently wicks away excess moisture without stripping hair of its natural oils, so strands dry quickly and frizz-free.

    Biodance Collagen Gel Toner Pads

    A jar of Biodance Collagen Gel Toner Pads on a light gray backgroundSave to wishlistSave to wishlist

    Biodance

    Collagen Gel Toner Pads

    $26 $22 (15% off)

    Amazon

    Han applying the Biodance Cera-nol Gel Toner Pads

    Sarah Han

    “These are so, so, so, so soothing—some of the most cooling, most drenched toner pads I've ever put on my face,” Han says of Biodance’s Collagen Gel Toner Pads. “One casual swipe of this makes my skin look 10 times dewier, not even joking.”

    Dyson Airwrap i.d. Multi-Styler

    Dyson Airwrap i.d. Multi-Styler in multiple branded components on a light gray backgroundSave to wishlistSave to wishlist

    Dyson

    Airwrap i.d. Multi-Styler

    $650 $542 (17% off)

    Amazon

    Allure senior art director Ingrid Fowler using the Dyson Airwrap i.d. Multi-Styler and Dryer

    Ingrid Fowler

    The Dyson Airwrap i.d. is available in two versions, each with six attachments: The Straight/Wavy includes a thicker curling barrel and a flyaway smoother, while the Curly/Coily comes with a diffuser and a wide-tooth comb. Its smart design and impressively short drying time earned it an Allure Best of Beauty Award in 2025.

    La Roche-Posay Hyalu B5 Suractivated Anti-Aging Face & Neck Cream

    La Roche-Posay Hyalu B5 Suractivated Cream blue jar with white lid on light gray backgroundSave to wishlistSave to wishlist

    La Roche-Posay

    Hyalu B5 Suractivated Anti-Aging Face & Neck Cream

    $40

    Amazon

    Allure social media director Kassidy Silva applying the La Roche-Posay Hyalu B5 Suractivated Cream

    Kassidy Silva

    Formulated with mature skin in mind, La Roche-Posay’s Hyalu B5 Suractivated Face & Neck Cream houses three different sizes of hyaluronic acid molecules to plump and smooth the look of fine lines and wrinkles.

    Beauty of Joseon Ginseng Essence Water

    Beauty of Joseon Ginseng Essence Water Hydrating Face Toner in branded component on a light gray backgroundSave to wishlistSave to wishlist

    Beauty of Joseon

    Ginseng Essence Water

    $18

    Amazon

    Antioxidant-rich ginseng root water is the base of this Beauty of Joseon essence—it helps regulate sebum and visibly refine pores over time for an ultra-smooth base.

    Clinique Almost Lipstick Tinted Lip Balm in Pink Honey

    Clinique Almost Lipstick Tinted Lip Balm in Pink Honey in branded component on a light gray backgroundSave to wishlistSave to wishlist

    Clinique

    Almost Lipstick Tinted Lip Balm in Pink Honey

    $25 $19 (24% off)

    Amazon

    Felbin applying the Clinique Almost Lipstick in Pink Honey

    Sarah Felbin

    Clinique’s Almost Lipstick is back in the spotlight thanks to TikTok's love for Black Honey, a 2023 Best of Beauty winner. New shades like Nude Honey and this one, Pink Honey, have also joined the lineup, but the formula has stayed just how we like it—sheer, lightweight, and enriched with castor seed oil, candelilla wax, and vitamin E for comfortable wear.

    Felbin before applying the Clinique Almost Lipstick in Pink Honey

    Felbin before applying the Clinique Almost Lipstick in Pink Honey

    Sarah FelbinFelbin after applying the Clinique Almost Lipstick in Pink Honey

    Felbin after applying the Clinique Almost Lipstick in Pink Honey

    Sarah Felbin

    Estée Lauder Double Wear 24-Hour Maximum Cover Camouflage Foundation for Face and Body SPF 15

    Estée Lauder Double Wear 24-Hour Maximum Cover Camouflage Foundation for Face and Body SPF 15 in branded tube component on a light gray backgroundSave to wishlistSave to wishlist

    Estée Lauder

    Double Wear 24-Hour Maximum Cover Camouflage Foundation for Face and Body SPF 15

    $55

    Amazon

    In 13 creamy shades, Estée Lauder Double Wear 24-Hour Maximum Cover Camouflage Foundation has a skin-like finish that makes discoloration and redness disappear before your eyes—and the all-day staying power doesn't hurt, either.

    Olaplex No. 4D Clean Weightless Volume Dry Shampoo

    Olaplex No.4D Clean Volume Detox Dry Shampoo in branded component on a light gray backgroundSave to wishlistSave to wishlist

    Olaplex

    No. 4D Clean Weightless Volume Dry Shampoo

    $30

    Amazon

    Powered by oil-absorbing micro-fine starch and shine-boosting rambutan seed extract, Olaplex’s Best of Beauty-winning No. 4D Dry Shampoo delivers on both sides of the spectrum—lifting away grease while leaving hair super-silky.

    Smashbox Always Sharp Longwear Kohl Eyeliner Pencil

    Smashbox Always Sharp Longwear Kohl Eyeliner Pencil in branded component on a light gray backgroundSave to wishlistSave to wishlist

    Smashbox

    Always Sharp Longwear Kohl Eyeliner Pencil

    $27

    Amazon

    Felbin applying the Smashbox Always Sharp Longwear Waterproof Kohl Eyeliner Pencil

    Sarah Felbin

    Smashbox’s Always Sharp Kohl Eyeliner is creamy enough to smoke out, with a tip that never goes blunt. The genius? It self-sharpens every time you twist the cap.

    Felbin before applying the Smashbox Always Sharp Longwear Waterproof Kohl Eyeliner Pencil

    Felbin before applying the Smashbox Always Sharp Longwear Waterproof Kohl Eyeliner Pencil

    Sarah FelbinFelbin after applying the Smashbox Always Sharp Longwear Waterproof Kohl Eyeliner Pencil

    Felbin after applying the Smashbox Always Sharp Longwear Waterproof Kohl Eyeliner Pencil

    Sarah Felbin

    Fwee Blurry Pudding Pot

    Fwee Lip&Cheek Blurry Pudding Pot in rose gold branded component on a light gray backgroundSave to wishlistSave to wishlist

    Fwee

    Blurry Pudding Pot

    $20 $16 (20% off)

    Amazon

    Don’t be fooled by how bold it looks in the pot: Fwee’s Blurry Pudding Pot blends out into a soft, sheer tint that gives lips and cheeks a fresh, lit-from-within glow (like you just caught a little sun).

    Bumble and Bumble Curl Defining Styling Cream

    Bumble and Bumble Curl Defining Styling Cream in branded component on a light gray backgroundSave to wishlistSave to wishlist

    Bumble and Bumble

    Curl Defining Styling Cream

    $37

    Amazon

    Reduce frizz, add shine, and offer your curls a soft, flexible hold with Bumble and Bumble's Curl Defining Styling Cream, which should be scrunched into wet hair from mid-shaft to ends before air drying or diffusing.

    Cyklar Sensorial Body Wash

    Cyklar Sensorial Body Wash in branded component on a light gray backgroundSave to wishlistSave to wishlist

    Cyklar

    Sensorial Body Wash

    $35

    Amazon

    Foamy, silky, and never stripping, Cyklar’s editor-loved Body Wash cleanses deeply, while a blend of argan, jojoba, and avocado oils (plus glycerin) keeps skin smooth and hydrated.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    How We Find the Best Amazon Big Spring Sale Beauty Deals

    Our shopping team searches daily for the best beauty products in the industry. We enlist the help of multiple editors, writers, contributors, and experts to determine which products are really worth your penny. Our Amazon Big Spring Sale 2026 beauty sales are no different: We base our discounted selections on products with at least 4.0-star average ratings, past Allure Best of Beauty award winners, and those that our editors and experts have tried and given a stamp of approval.

    Why Trust Allure for the Best Amazon Big Spring Sale Deals?

    No matter what you seek or your individual needs and concerns when you’re shopping for the best Amazon Big Spring Sale 2026 beauty deals, we want to ensure that you love anything we recommend in our stories. We believe that having a diverse team of writers and editors—in addition to the wide range of outside testers and industry experts we regularly call upon—is essential to reaching that goal.

  • Zendaya Has Me Seriously Considering Red Eyeliner — See Photos

    Zendaya Has Me Seriously Considering Red Eyeliner — See Photos

    Zendaya posing in a white dress and diamond necklacesPhoto: Getty ImagesSave StorySave this storySave StorySave this story

    I think most makeup wearers can relate when I say my default eyeliner shade is always some take on black or brown. Maybe I'll do charcoal on a really wild day. I even have a couple of shades of blue and purple waiting in the wings in case I want to create colorful… well… wings. But red? I'm reluctant to put it lightly. Or at least I was until I saw Zendaya making it look like a new neutral.

    Zendaya has been unsurprisingly killing it with the beauty and fashion moments as she promotes her new movie, The Drama. And while she's been looking like a one-woman bridal fashion show for many of the appearances, she took a glamour-goth turn for the Rome premiere, wearing a black Giorgio Armani Privé gown previously worn by Cate Blanchett. (Something borrowed. Get it? Because the movie is about a wedding?)

    Zendaya posing in a black low cut dressPhoto: Getty Images

    The dress definitely called for some badass makeup, but instead of the bold, black liner you might expect, makeup artist Nikki Wolff went with red tones that really vibed with the burgundy backdrop at the event. Once you get past her bangs, very much intentionally styled by Ursula Stephen to fall in front of her eyes, Zendaya's lids are covered in a smoky wash of fiery color with a seamless, shimmery blend.

    Zendaya smiling with her hair in her eyesPhoto: Getty Images

    Even her lower waterline is given a bold stroke of red—a look I'm quite sure would make me appear to have not slept for days. But it works so well on Zendaya because a) she's Zendaya and b) it's not a true red. The coppery hue comes through as red in contrast with her eye color and glossy lips, outlined in a tan pencil.

    Zendaya smiling with her hair in her eyesPhoto: Getty Images

    While this may not be an everyday look for most of us (Zendaya included), it absolutely proves there's plenty of room to explore unexpected eyeliner colors—even the ones we previously assumed wouldn't be flattering.

  • The Best Korean Skin Care for Mature Skin, From Serums to Masks

    The Best Korean Skin Care for Mature Skin, From Serums to Masks

    Image contains a collage of Korean skin care for mature skinCollage: Jemeria Davidson; Source images: Courtesy of brandsSave StorySave this storySave StorySave this story

    The best Korean skin care for mature skin focuses on the exact things aging skin starts to lose—hydration, barrier strength, and overall balance. As skin gets thinner, drier, and more reactive over time, a gentler approach becomes less of a preference and more of a necessity. “Mature skin needs TLC,” says Jane Yoo, MD, a dual board-certified dermatologist based in New York City. She points to K-beauty’s emphasis on barrier support and sustained hydration as key advantages.

    A big part of K-beauty’s effectiveness comes down to its ingredients—something you see in classics like “ginseng that provides powerful antioxidant support” against environmental stressors and snail mucin, which “improves hydration” and helps offset dryness from stronger actives, says Dr. Yoo. She also recommends ferments like galactomyces and bifida to help “support the skin barrier” and improve how products layer, and Centella asiatica (a.k.a. cica) that acts as an “anti-inflammatory and calming agent” for skin that’s become more reactive. Even rice extracts contribute, delivering soothing hydration with a subtle brightening effect. Ahead, find these ingredients in formulas that prove glass skin isn’t age-bound.

    Our Top Korean Skin Care for Mature Skin

    • Best Cleanser: Hanyul Artemisia Soothing Cleansing Oil, $28
    • Best Toner for Uneven Texture: Skin1004 Madagascar Centella Poremizing Clear Toner, $17
    • Best Serum for Dark Spots: Innisfree Green Tea Enzyme Vitamin C Brightening Serum, $32
    • Best Eye Serum: Beauty of Joseon Revive Eye Serum Ginseng + Retinal, $17

    Frequently Asked QuestionsAccordionItemContainerButtonLargeChevron

    • Which ingredients should I look for in Korean skin care for aging skin?
    • Does mature skin need a full 10-step K-beauty routine?
    • Are Korean beauty products too gentle to actually make a difference for mature skin?
    • Meet the experts
    • How we test and review products
    • Our staff and testers

    Best Cleanser: Hanyul Artemisia Soothing Cleansing Oil

    Hanyul Artemisia Soothing Cleansing Oil in branded component on a light gray backgroundSave to wishlistSave to wishlist

    Hanyul

    Artemisia Soothing Cleansing Oil

    $28

    Sephora

    $33

    Olive Young

    Why it's worth it: You can trace each Hanyul formula back to a key ingredient and where it’s grown—like yuja (Korean yuzu) from Goheung or red rice from Yeoju—so everything feels rooted in a specific place. And that matters, especially for mature skin: Regional conditions can influence how potent or soothing an ingredient is, which becomes more important as skin gets drier, thinner, and more reactive with age. Take artemisia—a broader plant family that includes mugwort, the specific variety used in their Artemisia Soothing Cleansing Oil. Here, it’s sourced from Ganghwa—an island known for its mineral-rich soil and coastal climate—paired with Centella asiatica, a go-to in Korean skin care for calming irritation and supporting a stressed-out barrier.

    The lightweight triglyceride oil base melts through makeup and sunscreen without stripping, while glycerin and Lactobacillus ferment help maintain moisture. It’s so thorough yet nourishing, your second cleanse won’t have to do much heavy lifting.

    Tester feedback from contributing commerce writer Christa Joanna Lee

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    “I can already tell I’ll be using Hanyul’s Artemisia Soothing Cleansing Oil down to the very last drop. It melts away waterproof eye makeup with barely any rubbing, and leaves my skin feeling clean, calm, and comfortable. There’s nothing worse than that squeaky, over-stripped feeling after cleansing, and thankfully, this formula steers clear of that entirely.” —Christa Joanna Lee, contributing commerce writer

    More to know

    AccordionItemContainerButtonLargeChevron

    • Key ingredients: mugwort, Centella asiatica, glycerin, Lactobacillus ferment
    • Fragrance-free: no

    Best Toner for Redness: Aestura A-Cica365 Cooling Relief Toner Pads pH4.5

    Aestura A-Cica365 Cooling Relief Toner Pads pH4.5 in branded tub component on a light gray backgroundSave to wishlistSave to wishlist

    Aestura

    A-Cica365 Cooling Relief Toner Pads pH4.5

    $28

    Sephora

    $37

    Olive Young

    Why it's worth it: Do you know your skin’s pH? It plays a big role in how your skin behaves. Healthy skin sits slightly acidic (around 4.5–5.5), which helps keep the barrier strong and irritation in check, but as skin matures, that balance can drift a little higher, making it easier for dryness and sensitivity to creep in. These toner pads keep mature skin feeling balanced, with a pH of 4.5 and Aestura’s proprietary pH4.5 Cica complex (Centella asiatica, zinc, and PHA) to calm and gently resurface without overdoing it. Hyaluronic acid pulls in hydration, while niacinamide helps even tone over time. People with mature skin will also appreciate the subtle, cooling finish that instantly refreshes your complexion.

    Tester feedback from features director Dianna Singh

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    “My super-fair skin has always leaned a little bit pink, but lately, I've been dealing with genuine redness. (I blame pregnancy, cold temperatures, and Best of Beauty testing.) These toning pads have an instant soothing effect and help reduce some of the rosiness on my cheeks in just about 10 minutes of wear.” —Dianna Singh, features director

    More to know

    AccordionItemContainerButtonLargeChevron

    • Key ingredients: pH4.5 Cica complex (Centella asiatica, zinc, PHA), hyaluronic acid, niacinamide
    • Fragrance-free: yes

    Best Toner for Uneven Texture: Skin1004 Madagascar Centella Poremizing Clear Toner

    Skin1004 Madagascar Centella Poremizing Clear Toner in branded component on a light gray backgroundSave to wishlistSave to wishlist

    Skin1004

    Madagascar Centella Poremizing Clear Toner

    $17 $15 (12% off)

    Amazon

    $19

    Nordstrom

    $25

    Ulta Beauty

    Why it's worth it: You might associate pore issues with oily or acne-prone skin types, but as skin matures, collagen and elasticity dip, which can leave pores looking more noticeable—especially around the nose and cheeks. Skin1004’s Madagascar Centella Poremizing Clear Toner has a gentle, texture-refining approach. This refreshing exfoliating toner clears out buildup that can exaggerate uneven texture, thanks to a 4-HA complex (AHA, BHA, PHA, LHA) that sweeps away dead skin cells without tipping into irritation.

    Himalayan pink salt, rich in 80 minerals, works to draw out impurities, while Centella asiatica helps keep everything calm and soothed. Multiple forms of hyaluronic acid layer in hydration, so your skin stays comfortable. And yes—we see you, chic packaging.

    Tester feedback from commerce editor Sarah Han

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    “Pores are the bane of my existence and, until I consistently set aside time every week to do a deep pore-cleansing mask and can afford monthly facials for regular extractions, I’ll stick with daily-use toners like this Skin1004 gem. I’ve never had a reaction to Skin1004 products, which isn’t surprising given the star ingredient is cica, but I wasn’t totally sure about that going into this toner. After all, four types of acids can be a lot! But leave it to Skin1004 to make it feel as gentle as any hydrating toner. It also helps that the AHA/BHA/PHA/LHA are at the bottom of the ingredient list, so I have no qualms using this on a daily basis. Since I’m a regular retinol user, I’ve incorporated the Poremizing Clear Toner into my a.m. routine (after rinsing my face with water) so my skin is decongested and ready for the rest of my skin care (and sometimes makeup).” —Sarah Han, commerce editor

    More to know

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    • Key ingredients: glycolic, salicylic, gluconolactone, and capryloyl salicylic acid, Himalayan pink salt, Centella asiatica, hyaluronic acid
    • Fragrance-free: yes

    Best Serum for Deep Wrinkles: O Hui Reverse Activator Retinol Wrinkle Serum

    O Hui Reverse Activator Retinol Wrinkle Serum in branded component on a light gray backgroundSave to wishlistSave to wishlist

    O Hui

    Reverse Activator Retinol Wrinkle Serum

    $95

    Revolve

    Why it's worth it: If your goal is to go beyond fine lines and soften the look of deeper wrinkles, O Hui—part of LG Beauty—doesn’t tiptoe around it. The formula centers on the brand’s 7.2% TruReverse Retinol+ Complex, “which includes stabilized 0.3% pure retinol to reduce fine lines, wrinkles, and improve firmness in a gentle manner,” says Dr. Yoo. The 200-nanometer capsules (for context, that’s roughly 500 times smaller than the width of a human hair) are designed to “easily penetrate the skin to activate their wrinkle-reducing benefits,” she says. Peptides step in to support collagen, and soybean oil helps “hydrate, soothe, and decrease any redness that may come from the retinoid,” she adds.

    More to know

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    • Key ingredients: 0.3% pure retinol, soybean oil, peptides
    • Fragrance-free: yes

    Best Serum for Puffiness: IOPE Expert PDRN Caffeine Shot Serum

    IOPE Expert PDRN Caffeine Shot Serum in branded dropper component on a light gray backgroundSave to wishlistSave to wishlist

    Iope

    Expert PDRN Caffeine Shot Serum

    $43

    Amazon

    $43

    Sephora

    $43

    Soko Glam

    Why it's worth it: You might associate mature skin with being thinner, drier, and less firm—but as circulation slows and lymphatic drainage becomes less efficient, puffiness can also start to sneak in (and stick around a little longer than it used to). IOPE’s PDRN Caffeine Shot takes cues from the PDRN injectables popular in Korean clinics—just translated into a topical formula that delivers similar nourishing benefits (without the needles). It contains plant-derived PDRN to support skin repair, boost hydration, and help improve overall bounce. Paired with a high dose of caffeine, it ​​visibly depuffs and re-energizes tired skin, while niacinamide, beta-glucan, and probiotics further strengthen the barrier and smooth tone.

    As Hee Jin Kim, MD, a board-certified medical doctor based in Fort Lee, New Jersey, puts it, it’s a go-to for “skin repair and puffiness,” especially post-treatment or when skin feels depleted. The lightweight texture absorbs quickly with a refreshing feel, leaving skin looking a little more lifted and a little less puffy—like you’ve been gua sha-ing all day.

    More to know

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    • Key ingredients: plant-derived PDRN, caffeine, niacinamide, beta-glucan, probiotics, Lactobacillus ferment
    • Fragrance-free: yes

    Best Serum for Dark Spots: Innisfree Green Tea Enzyme Vitamin C Brightening Serum

    Innisfree Green Tea Enzyme Vitamin C Brightening Serum in branded component on a light gray ackgroundSave to wishlistSave to wishlist

    Innisfree

    Green Tea Enzyme Vitamin C Brightening Serum

    $32

    Amazon

    $32

    Sephora

    Why it's worth it: Years of sun exposure, slower cell turnover, and a little extra inflammation all start to add up, so mature skin doesn’t recover from discoloration and dullness quite as easily. Innisfree’s Green Tea Enzyme Vitamin C Brightening Serum “combines green tea enzymes with vitamin C and vitamin E for a powerful antioxidant, skin-soothing, and skin-brightening combination,” helping address uneven tone and early pigmentation, says Y. Claire Chang, MD, a board-certified dermatologist based in New York City. Ferulic acid boosts that brightening trio, while niacinamide and tangerine peel extract help even things out over time.

    The gentle enzyme exfoliation smooths texture without overdoing it, and hydrating ingredients like squalane, panthenol, and hyaluronic acid keep skin comfortable, so you’re brightening, not suffocating your skin. That bright, citrusy tint comes from a blend of vitamin C derivatives, carrot root extract, and beta-carotene—more of a little visual reminder of all the antioxidant goodness packed inside.

    More to know

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    • Key ingredients: vitamin C, green tea enzymes, vitamin E, squalane, panthenol, hyaluronic acid, carrot root extract, beta-carotene
    • Fragrance-free: yes

    Best Mask for Dry Skin: Dr. Althea Aqua Blue Hydration Mask

    Dr. Althea Aqua Blue Hydration Mask in branded component on a light gray backgroundSave to wishlistSave to wishlist

    Dr. Althea

    Aqua Blue Hydration Mask

    $12

    Amazon

    $13

    Ulta Beauty

    Why it's worth it: Mature skin has a way of always feeling a little thirsty thanks to declining oil production and a weaker barrier that lets moisture escape more easily over time. Dr. Althea’s Aqua Blue Hydration Mask “is a simple mask that does exactly what it says it does—deliver hydration,” but with a few thoughtful extras, says David Kim, MD, a board-certified dermatologist based in New York City. Azulene (which also gives it its soft blue hue) calms and soothes, while a blend of humectants, like glycerin, pulls water into the skin.

    What makes this sheet mask feel distinctly K-beauty, though, is the mix of bamboo water, algae extracts, and fermented ingredients, which support the barrier while keeping things lightweight.

    Tester feedback from Han

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    “I adore how drenched Dr. Althea masks are, and I say this because it seems like a straightforward thing to say about sheet masks but these are literally dripping and noticeably more potent. I mean, who doesn’t want as much serum as possible to absorb into their skin? After 20 minutes (the brand says 10 to 15, but I always go a little over), my complexion looked glowy and hydrated as expected—it is very cooling, though I don’t know how helpful it is with puffiness. But what was most impressive was that I had a few big dry patches along the outer rims of my face after a laser treatment and this mask totally calmed them down.” —Sarah Han, commerce editor

    More to know

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    • Key ingredients: azulene, glycerin, bamboo water, algae extracts, jojoba oil, Candida Bombicola ferment
    • Fragrance-free: yes

    Best Mask for Elasticity: Dr. Jart+ Hydro Firming Mask

    Dr. Jart+ Hydro Firming Mask in branded component on a light gray backgroundSave to wishlistSave to wishlist

    Dr. Jart+

    Hydro Firming Mask

    $10

    Amazon

    $10

    Sephora

    Why it's worth it: If sheet masks have always felt like a nice-to-have and not a must-have, this one makes a convincing case. Dr. Jart+’s Hydro Firming Mask starts opaque, then gradually turns clear as your skin absorbs what it needs. It uses low-molecular-weight hydrolyzed collagen—basically a more absorbable form that can reach all the layers of your skin and improve the appearance of firmness and fine lines—paired with hyaluronic acid and shea butter to pull in water and seal it in. That combination leaves skin plump and bouncy by the time you peel it off.

    For mature skin, where elasticity naturally dips, it’s less about that quick, surface-level glow and more about deeper, lasting hydration that makes skin feel really nourished.

    Tester feedback from Lee

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    “This winter has been relentless on my skin, so I couldn’t wait to slap on Dr. Jart+’s Hydro Firming Mask. The fit is spot-on, so it actually stays put. After peeling it off, my dry, sensitive skin skin looked noticeably plumper, smoother, and way more hydrated.” —Christa Joanna Lee, contributing commerce writer

    Tester feedback from senior commerce editor Sarah Felbin

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    “My combination skin calls for a face mask that's soothing on dry patches, but won't clog pores in my T-zone, and Dr. Jart totally delivers. I like that this mask turns clear in one hour (vs. three hours for other, similar masks), so I can wear it while watching an episode of my favorite reality show (Housewives, anyone?). The mask itself is thin and comfortable to wear, doesn't dry out as it sits, and leaves my face feeling soft, smooth, and super-hydrated after. I'll be wearing this one on repeat whenever my skin needs a reset.” —Sarah Felbin, senior commerce editor

    More to know

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    • Key ingredients: hydrolyzed collagen, hyaluronic acid, shea butter
    • Fragrance-free: no

    Best Eye Serum: Beauty of Joseon Revive Eye Serum Ginseng + Retinal

    Beauty of Joseon Revive Eye Serum: Ginseng + Retinal in branded tube component on a light gray backgroundSave to wishlistSave to wishlist

    Beauty of Joseon

    Revive Eye Serum Ginseng + Retinal

    $17

    Amazon

    $17

    Sephora

    $17

    Olive Young

    Why it's worth it: K-beauty has a way of making retinoids feel a little less intimidating, especially when it comes to the delicate eye area. It’s all about gentle delivery systems and plenty of barrier support so you get the benefits without the usual downsides. Beauty of Joseon’s Revive Eye Cream Ginseng + Retinal probably needs no introduction, but just in case, the serum pairs anti-inflammatory ginseng, which helps minimize the look of puffiness, with liposome-encapsulated retinal that’s stabilized to brighten and smooth the delicate eye area.

    Why is retinal such a buzzy ingredient? It "only requires a one-step conversion to the active form of retinoic acid, unlike retinol, which requires a two-step conversion,” says Hee Jin Koh, MD, a board-certified dermatologist based in Clifton, New Jersey. This type of retinoid is not only more efficient but also tends to be much easier for sensitive skin to tolerate.

    Tester feedback from Han

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    "To use eye cream or not? Overall, I think eye creams are a ‘nice-to-have’ skin-care step—and if I reach for an eye cream at all, it'll be a retinol to reap those fine-line-minimizing and tightening benefits. Again, I'm 32 and haven't experienced fine lines around the eyes or generally sagging undereyes, but skin care is, with a lot of emphasis, all about consistent use and prevention. Beauty of Joseon's Revive Eye Serum: Ginseng + Retinal has a lightweight, custardy-gel texture that absorbs almost immediately, making my undereyes look a tad brighter and less puffy the next morning. Formula-wise, stabilized retinal is super gentle and minimizes irritation, while ginseng brightens and boosts circulation, and glycerin supports the skin barrier." —Sarah Han, commerce editor

    More to know

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    • Key ingredients: ginseng, retinal, niacinamide
    • Fragrance-free: yes

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Which ingredients should I look for in Korean skin care for aging skin?

    When it comes to Korean skin-care products for aging skin, sometimes it’s about finding the right hero ingredient—but more often, it’s about how a few key ones work together. Classic K-beauty ingredients like ginseng “provide powerful antioxidant support and are helpful against environmental stressors,” while snail mucin “improves hydration and can be useful when combined with strong actives to counter any dryness or irritation,” says Dr. Yoo.

    Ferments like galactomyces and bifida help “support the skin barrier” and can improve how products layer. For skin that’s become more reactive, Centella asiatica acts as an “anti-inflammatory and calming agent,” and rice extracts offer soothing hydration with a subtle brightening effect, she says.

    Does mature skin need a full 10-step K-beauty routine?

    Not necessarily. “What mature skin actually benefits from is a targeted, consistent routine,” rather than piling on steps for the sake of it, says Dr. Yoo. The focus should be on a few well-chosen products that support hydration, barrier function, and any specific signs of aging you’re noticing. “You can add any extra steps if they are solving a problem such as hyperpigmentation or redness,” but otherwise, more isn’t always better, she says.

    Are Korean beauty products too gentle to actually make a difference for mature skin?

    “No, Korean beauty is not too gentle to make a difference for a mature skin-care routine,” says Dr. Yoo. In fact, that gentler approach is kind of the point. Mature skin needs extra care, she explains, and Korean skin care delivers that by focusing on supporting the skin barrier and improving hydration—both of which become more important as skin naturally gets thinner over time. It’s less about pushing skin to its limits and more about keeping it comfortable, balanced, and functioning at its best.

    Meet the experts

    • Y. Claire Chang, MD, a board-certified dermatologist at UnionDerm based in New York City
    • David Kim, MD, is a board-certified dermatologist at SOHO Derm and founder of Lightsaver based in New York City
    • Hee Jin Kim, MD, a board-certified medical doctor and Medical Director of PureenMD based in Fort Lee, New Jersey
    • Hee Jin Koh, MD, a board-certified dermatologist based in Clifton, New Jersey
    • Jane Yoo, MD, a dual board-certified dermatologist and Mohs surgeon based in New York City

    How we test and review products

    Before reviewing any makeup, we ask questions about a number of factors: What ingredients are in it? Does the brand offer a wide shade range inclusive of consumers with all skin tones and undertones? Is it safe for readers who have sensitive skin or wear contact lenses? Is it on the affordable side or more of a splurge? Is its packaging consciously designed or needlessly wasteful?

    For our review of the best Korean skin care for mature skin, we enlisted the help of multiple editors, writers, contributors, dermatologists, and makeup artists to review the products. This ensures our testing base spans different skin tones, genders, and dermatological conditions. We considered each product's performance across four primary categories: ingredients, wear and longevity, packaging, and inclusivity. For more on what's involved in our reporting, check out our complete reviews process and methodology page.

    Our staff and testers

    A beauty product is a personal purchase. You might be searching for a face cream to address persistent dryness or a new nail product to add to your Sunday self-care routine; you may simply be browsing around for the latest launches to hit the hair market. No matter what you seek or your individual needs and concerns, Allure wants to ensure that you love anything we recommend in our stories. We believe that having a diverse team of writers and editors—in addition to the wide range of outside testers and industry experts we regularly call upon—is essential to reaching that goal.

    After all, can we really say a skin-care product is the "best" for people over 50 if the only testers we've solicited opinions from folks who have yet to hit 30? Can we honestly deem a high-end diffuser worthy of your hard-earned cash if it's never been tested on curls? We're proud that our staff spans a wide range of ages, skin tones, hair textures, genders, and backgrounds, which means that we are able to fairly assess any beauty product that comes into the beauty closet.

  • These Makeup Brush Sets Make Getting Ready So Much Easier

    These Makeup Brush Sets Make Getting Ready So Much Easier

    Image contains Allure editors with their favorite makeup brush sets surrounded by a collage of makeup brushesCollage: Jemeria Davison; Source images: Courtesy of Allure editors and brandsSave StorySave this storySave StorySave this story

    The best makeup brush sets can make getting ready a lot easier. Instead of guessing which brushes you actually need—or ending up with five different fluffy ones that all do the same thing—a well-curated set gives you the essentials in one go. “I love recommending sets because they remove decision fatigue when someone is building their brush collection,” says Thynna Wagenblast, a makeup artist based in New York City and Los Angeles.

    There’s also the practicality factor: Buying a set is usually more cost-effective than picking up each brush individually, and the tools are designed to work together for everything from buffing foundation to blending eye shadow. For beginners, that means less trial and error; for seasoned makeup lovers, it’s an easy way to refresh multiple tools at once. Many sets also come with a brush roll or travel case, which keeps everything organized and protects the bristles when you’re on the go.

    Our Top Makeup Brush Sets

    • Best for Travel: Sigma Beauty Essential Travel Brush Set, $135
    • Best Face Brushes: Morphe Buttery Blends, $28
    • Best Drugstore: Real Techniques Everyday Essentials Makeup Brush & Sponge Set, $19
    • Best for Beginners: Laura Geller 5-Piece Full Face Brush Set, $49

    Frequently Asked QuestionsAccordionItemContainerButtonLargeChevron

    • What’s the difference between synthetic and natural-hair brushes?
    • Can drugstore makeup brushes work as well as expensive ones?
    • How do you clean makeup brushes?
    • Meet the experts
    • How we test and review products
    • Our staff and testers

    When the brushes are thoughtfully designed—think soft, dense fibers and sturdy handles—blending tends to be easier, and your makeup looks that much more polished. Ahead, the sets we reach for most.

    Best for Travel: Sigma Beauty Essential Travel Brush Set

    Sigma Beauty Essential Travel Brush Set in branded components on a light gray backgroundSave to wishlistSave to wishlist

    Sigma Beauty

    Essential Travel Brush Set

    $135

    Ulta Beauty

    Allure beauty closet associate Edward Horgan using the Sigma Beauty Essential Travel Brush Set

    Edward Horgan

    Why it's worth it: Packing makeup for a trip always sounds simple until you're staring at your vanity, wondering which brushes make the cut. Sigma’s Essential Travel Brush Set streamlines things with “a well-edited, versatile set of everything you need for your entire face,” says Nick Barose, a makeup artist based in New York City. The kit includes seven multitasking eye and face brushes that can handle just about anything in your routine, from buffing in foundation to blending shadow or setting concealer.

    Since most of us aren’t exactly washing our makeup brushes mid-trip, it's helpful that these are made with synthetic antimicrobial fibers to resist bacterial buildup. They’re also built for life on the go: The metal sleeves that secure the bristles are made with the brand’s corrosion-resistant SigmaAlloy, helping prevent wobbling or loosening—even after getting jostled around in a suitcase or carry-on. And when you’re done getting ready, everything tucks neatly into a slim carrying case that keeps the brushes protected en route.

    Allure beauty closet associate Edward Horgan before using the Sigma Beauty Essential Travel Brush Set

    Horgan before using the Sigma Beauty Essential Travel Brush Set

    Edward HorganAllure beauty closet associate Edward Horgan after using the Sigma Beauty Essential Travel Brush Set

    Horgan after using the Sigma Beauty Essential Travel Brush Set

    Edward Horgan

    Tester feedback from beauty closet associate Edward Horgan

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    “These brushes have great handles and a nice soft feel on the face! They’re a great size for traveling and I love the fact that they come with a tube case so you can keep them all in one place on a desk or countertop. It’s hard to find quality high performance brushes in a travel size so an essential kit like this is super convenient. Although the brushes are nice, I would’ve preferred one more condensed face brush compared to the angled eye brush it came with. I had to use another brush at my desk for my creams because the face brushes it came with were for liquid and powder specifically.” —Edward Horgan, beauty closet associate

    More to know

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    • Bristle material: synthetic
    • What’s included: 7 brushes and a travel case
    • E30 Pencil Brush (eyeliner brush)
    • E40 Tapered Blending Brush (eye shadow brush)
    • E55 Eye Shading Brush (eye shadow brush)
    • E65 Small Angle Brush (brow/eyeliner brush)
    • F30 Large Powder Brush (powder brush)
    • F40 Large Angled Contour Brush (blush/bronzer brush)
    • F60 Foundation Brush (cream/liquid foundation brush)

    Best Eye Brushes: EcoTools Sea Gems Eye Makeup Brush Set

    EcoTools Sea Gems Eye Makeup Brush Set in branded components on a light gray backgroundSave to wishlistSave to wishlist

    EcoTools

    Sea Gems Eye Makeup Brush Set

    $16

    Ulta Beauty

    Allure senior commerce editor Sarah Felbin using the EcoTools Sea Gems Eye Makeup Brush Set

    Sarah Felbin

    Why it's worth it: If you’ve ever tried doing a full eye look with just one brush, you know it’s a bit like cooking dinner with only a spoon—it technically works, but it’s not exactly ideal. EcoTools’ Sea Gems Eye Makeup Brush Set gives you five multitasking tools so each step of your eye makeup performs the way it’s supposed to. One brush provides an even wash of color, another blends out the crease, a smaller smudge brush softens liner along the lash line, and an angled brush helps place pigment right where you want it. The brushes work with liquid, cream, powder, or stick shadows, so you’re covered no matter your formula of choice.

    Even better: The handles are made with ocean-bound recycled plastic, part of EcoTools’ mission to make beauty tools a little more planet-friendly—and the dreamy, sea-inspired colors give the brushes a subtle beachy vibe that looks pretty cute sitting on your vanity, too.

    Tester feedback from senior commerce editor Sarah Felbin

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    “This brush set actually makes eye shadow feel foolproof. My most used is the All-Over Eye Brush—the larger size and rounded shape are perfect for applying a smooth, seamless wash of color in seconds. I'm also a big fan of the teeny tiny Smudge Brush for sweeping color along my lower lash line or smoking out my eyeliner. The entire set is easy to use, easy to clean, and well-made (no shedding bristles here). Plus, each brush is labeled on the handle, which comes in handy on days when I'm speeding through my makeup routine.” —Sarah Felbin, senior commerce editor

    More to know

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    • Bristle material: synthetic
    • What’s included: 5 cream/powder/liquid eye brushes:
    • All-Over Eye Brush
    • Tapered Eye Brush
    • Blending Eye Brush
    • Smudge Brush
    • Angled Shadow Brush

    Best Face Brushes: Morphe Buttery Blends 4-Piece Face Brush Set

    Morphe Buttery Blends 4-Piece Face Brush Set in branded components on a light gray backgroundSave to wishlistSave to wishlist

    Morphe

    Buttery Blends 4-Piece Face Brush Set

    $28

    Ulta Beauty

    Allure senior editor Jesa Marie Calaor using the Morphe Buttery Blends 4-Piece Face Brush Set

    Jesa Marie Calaor

    Why it's worth it: True to the name, the plush “buttery” bristles in Morphe’s Buttery Blends 4-Piece Face Brush Set make blending feel almost effortless. The set includes four face brushes designed to cover the key steps of your base routine, from buffing out concealer to blending blush and sculpting bronzer. The standout is the medium-angled powder bronzer brush—exclusive to this set—which hugs the natural curves of your cheekbones to softly diffuse color.

    Another perk: The bristles are infused with silver ions, which help inhibit the growth of odor-causing bacteria on the fibers, which is always a nice bonus since you likely use complexion brushes more than the others in your kit. No matter if you’re using creams, liquids, or powders, the plush, soft bristles ensure a flawless blend every time.

    Calaor before using the Morphe Buttery Blends 4Piece Face Brush Set

    Calaor before using the Morphe Buttery Blends 4-Piece Face Brush Set

    Jesa Marie CalaorCalaor after using the Morphe Buttery Blends 4Piece Face Brush Set

    Calaor after using the Morphe Buttery Blends 4-Piece Face Brush Set

    Jesa Marie Calaor

    Tester feedback from senior editor Jesa Marie Calaor

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    “I use this product every day. I don't always use each brush for its intended purposes: For example, I sometimes use the Slanted Blush Brush for bronzer, the Domed Concealer Brush for sculpting my nose, and the Slanted Cream & Liquid Bronzer Brush for my CC cream. But that's the beauty of this set—four brushes can be used for so many different types of product. That's major, especially with how often I travel—I never feel like I left a tool that I need at home. The bristles are so soft and the pouch it comes in is so convenient.” —Jesa Marie Calaor, senior editor

    More to know

    AccordionItemContainerButtonLargeChevron

    • Bristle material: synthetic
    • What’s included: 4 complexion brushes:
    • M133 Domed Concealer Brush (cream/liquid concealer brush)
    • M202 Slanted Blush Brush (cream/liquid/powder blush brush)
    • M242 Slanted Cream & Liquid Bronzer Brush (cream/liquid bronzer brush)
    • M244 Medium Angled Powder Bronzer Brush (powder bronzer brush)

    Best Drugstore: Real Techniques Everyday Essentials Makeup Brush & Sponge Set

    Real Techniques Everyday Essentials Makeup Brush & Sponge Set in branded components on a light gray backgroundSave to wishlistSave to wishlist

    Real Techniques

    Everyday Essentials Makeup Brush & Sponge Set

    $19

    Amazon

    $20

    Ulta Beauty

    Why it's worth it: If your makeup routine is more about the basics than full glam—or you need a downsized kit to toss in your carry-on—Real Techniques’ Everyday Essentials Makeup Brush Set is a great place to start. The kit includes four versatile brushes—three for the complexion and one for the eyes—plus the brand’s Miracle Complexion Sponge (a 2025 Best of Beauty winner!), with a unique three-sided design that helps you tap, blend, and buff complexion products with ease.

    “If you’re a newbie or minimalist when it comes to makeup, this set is affordable and versatile,” says Kierra Lanice Wray, a makeup artist based in Lansing, Michigan. “If you don’t have a blush handy but you have bronzer, it’s okay to use the 400 Blush Brush for bronzer,” she says. And the 300 Deluxe Crease Brush isn’t just for shadow: “It also diffuses concealer beautifully.” In other words, you’re covered for face, cheeks, and eyes with just one set.

    Felbin using the Real Techniques Everyday Essentials Makeup Brushes from Felbin

    Sarah FelbinFelbin after using the Real Techniques Everyday Essentials Makeup Brushes from Felbin

    Felbin after using the Real Techniques Everyday Essentials Makeup Brushes from Felbin

    Sarah Felbin

    Tester feedback of the Real Techniques Everyday Essentials Makeup Brushes from Felbin

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    “When I first checked the price on this set, I was shocked—for less than $4 per tool, they perform beautifully and feel much more expensive than they are! The sleek, brushed metal handles have a nice weight to them, and the bristles feel super-soft (plus, they don't fall out as I'm using the brushes). Each brush applies powders and creams flawlessly, making all of my products very easy to blend without disturbing the layers underneath." —Sarah Felbin, senior commerce editor

    Tester feedback of the Real Techniques Miracle Complexion Sponge from senior director of commerce audience & analytics Lexi Herrick

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    “This complexion sponge is really high-quality and effective. I find that it blends well without absorbing too much product, and has a gentle texture that never irritates or rubs too harshly on my skin. It also cleans well and can be used for much longer than many of the makeup sponges I’ve tried.” —Lexi Herrick, senior director of commerce audience & analytics

    More to know

    AccordionItemContainerButtonLargeChevron

    • Bristle material: synthetic
    • What’s included: 3 complexion brushes, 1 eye shadow brush, 1 sponge
    • 400 Blush Brush (powder blush brush)
    • 300 Deluxe Crease Brush (eye shadow brush)
    • 402 Setting Brush (powder blush/highlighter brush)
    • 200 Expert Face Brush (cream/liquid foundation)
    • Sponge

    Best for Advanced Users: Sephora Collection 8-Piece Pro Face and Eye Brush Set

    Sephora Collection 8-Piece Pro Face and Eye Brush Set in branded components on a light gray backgroundSave to wishlistSave to wishlist

    Sephora Collection

    8-Piece Pro Face and Eye Brush Set

    $99

    Sephora

    Why it's worth it: Before you assume an eight-piece brush set is only for makeup artists—or, ahem, beauty editors with overflowing kits—hear us out: Sephora Collection’s 8-Piece Pro Face and Eye Brush Set actually makes your routine easier, not more complicated. The lineup includes eight face and eye brushes that cover the essentials (foundation, powder, blush, highlight, concealer, and eye makeup), so you don’t have to keep improvising with whatever brush is closest.

    Inspired by Sephora’s Pro brush line, each one features ultra-soft vegan fibers that pick up and blend product effortlessly, whether you’re working with powders, creams, or liquids. What’s more, everything comes packed in a sleek case that protects the brushes while you travel and doubles as a handy holder on your vanity—keeping them neatly in place instead of rolling everywhere.

    Allure commerce editor Sarah Han using the Sephora 8-Piece Pro Face and Eye Brush Set

    Sarah HanA selfie of Allure commerce editor Sarah Han holding a black leather container of the Sephora 8Piece Pro Face and Eye...

    Han after using the Sephora 8-Piece Pro Face and Eye Brush Set

    Sarah Han

    Tester feedback from commerce editor Sarah Han

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    “Ever since I picked up the Sephora Pro Bronzer Brush #88 (a Best of Beauty winner!), it’s become my ride-or-die blush brush. It’s perfectly dense—not too much, not too little—key for someone who loves to pack on blush. Yes, I know it’s technically meant for bronzer, but that’s the beauty of this set—you can use whatever feels most comfortable/right for any step. (Likewise, I use the angled Pro Blush Brush for my contour.) While I only started with those two brushes, it made complete sense for me to pick up the entire set. The bristles across the board are so freakin’ soft and pick up pigment beautifully. I like how chic the all-black handles (and silver Sephora logo) look individually and all together, and the chic leather organizer is perfect for longer trips, when I have the suitcase space to plop it into.” —Sarah Han, commerce editor

    More to know

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    • Brush material: synthetic
    • What’s included: 5 complexion brushes, 2 eye shadow brushes, 1 brow brush, and a case
    • #56 Pro Foundation Brush
    • #57 Pro Concealer Brush
    • #59 Pro Powder Brush
    • #93 Pro Blush Brush
    • #98 Pro Highlighter Brush
    • #15 Pro Eyeshadow Brush
    • #27 Pro Crease Brush
    • #20 Pro Brow Brush

    Best for Beginners: Laura Geller 5-Pc Full Face Brush Set

    Laura Geller 5-Pc Full Face Brush Set in branded components on a light gray backgroundSave to wishlistSave to wishlist

    Laura Geller

    5-Pc Full Face Brush Set

    $49

    Amazon

    Why it's worth it: If you’re a newbie, you might be convinced that applying makeup with your fingers works just fine, but the right brushes can make everything look smoother, more blended, and a lot easier. Laura Geller’s 5-Piece Full Face Brush Set is “especially great for beginners because it keeps things simple,” with three face brushes and two eye brushes that cover the essentials without overwhelming you, says Barose.

    The lineup also works particularly well with Laura Geller’s signature baked powders, which are meant to be lightly swirled and buffed into skin. Use the angled brush to sweep on blush or bronzer, the classic bronzer brush to add warmth along the high points of your face, and the retractable airbrush kabuki—a dense, rounded brush with tightly packed bristles that buffs powder or foundation into skin for that smooth, diffused finish. Two eye shadow brushes round out the set for quick washes of color or softly blended smoky looks. They also come with super soft vegan bristles that won’t shed and will keep their shape over time.

    More to know

    AccordionItemContainerButtonLargeChevron

    • Brush material: synthetic
    • What’s included: 3 complexion brushes, 2 eye shadow brushes
    • Angled Blush Brush
    • Bronzer Brush
    • Airbrush Kabuki Brush
    • 2 Eyeshadow Brushes

    Best for Sensitive Skin: Hourglass Vegan Brush Travel Set

    Hourglass Vegan Brush Travel Set in branded components on a light gray backgroundSave to wishlistSave to wishlist

    Hourglass

    Vegan Brush Travel Set

    $340

    Nordstrom

    $340

    Sephora

    Why it's worth it: If your skin gets irritated at the mere thought of scratchy makeup brushes, the Hourglass Vegan Travel Brush Set is an investment that makes sense. Each brush is made with ultra-soft, PETA-approved Taklon bristles—a synthetic fiber designed to mimic the feel of natural hair without the proteins that can sometimes trigger irritation. “These high-quality vegan brushes help apply makeup beautifully without the risk of allergic reactions to the bristles,” says Barose. The silky fibers glide over skin, blend seamlessly, and are easy to keep clean. The seven-piece lineup covers all the bases. It includes the dual-ended Ambient Lighting Edit brush for powders, bronzer, blush, and highlighter, along with precision eye brushes. You’ll also find the brand’s Vanish foundation (a 2024 Best of Beauty winner) and concealer brushes, which hug the contours of the face for seamless coverage.

    A few thoughtful details make the set feel especially worth the splurge: Weighted metal handles offer better control while blending, and the sleek bronze case with a vegan leather roll keeps everything protected in transit. With a little care—regular gentle washing and letting them dry flat—they’ll stay soft, clean, and ready to blend for years.

    More to know

    AccordionItemContainerButtonLargeChevron

    • Brush material: synthetic
    • What’s included: 5 complexion brushes, 2 eye shadow brushes
    • Ambient Lighting Edit Brush (powder, blush, bronzer brush)
    • Veil Single Powder brush (setting powder brush)
    • No 14 Detail Setting Brush (powder brush)
    • No 6 Tapered Blender Brush (eye shadow brush)
    • No 12 Beveled Shadow Brush (eye shadow brush)
    • Vanish Seamless Finish Concealer Brush (concealer brush)
    • Vanish Seamless Finish Foundation brush (foundation brush)

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What’s the difference between synthetic and natural-hair brushes?

    The biggest difference between synthetic and natural-hair brushes comes down to the bristles themselves. Natural brushes are typically made from animal hair and can be great for picking up powders, but they may feel rougher on sensitive skin. Synthetic options are made from engineered fibers like Taklon. “Synthetic fibers tend to be gentler and more hygienic than natural hair brushes,” says Wagenblast. “Synthetic bristles are nonporous, so they’re less likely to trap bacteria, oils, or dead skin cells that can cause irritation.” Because of that smooth surface, they’re also easier to clean and tend to work well with a wide range of formulas—from liquids and creams to powders.

    Can drugstore makeup brushes work as well as expensive ones?

    Some of the best brushes don’t come with a luxury price tag. Sets like the Real Techniques’ Everyday Essentials in our roundup above prove you don’t need to spend a fortune for great performance. “It’s one of the besdrugstore brush kitst drugstore brush kits because it delivers professional performance at a very accessible price,” says Wagenblast. The brushes are “incredibly soft but still dense enough to pick up and distribute product evenly,” making them effective with both creams and powders. Wagenblast also notes that durability matters: These brushes “hold their shape and softness even after frequent washing,” which isn’t always the case with cheaper tools.

    How do you clean makeup brushes?

    Cleaning your makeup brushes regularly helps prevent product buildup, bacteria, and skin irritation. “I always recommend washing brushes at least once a week with a gentle cleanser like baby shampoo to keep them clean and maintain that softness,” says Wagenblast. To do it properly, swirl the brush bristles in lukewarm water with cleanser, gently massage out makeup residue, then rinse thoroughly. Once you’re done, just reshape the bristles and lay the brushes flat on a towel to dry. This way, you’ll avoid water messing with the glue inside the handle and keep the brush heads in good shape.

    Meet the experts

    • Nick Barose, a makeup artist based in New York City
    • Thynna Wagenblast, a makeup artist based in New York City and Los Angeles
    • Kierra Lanice Wray, a makeup artist based in Lansing, Michigan

    How we test and review products

    When Allure tests a product, our editors look at it from every angle in an effort to best serve you. We review ingredients, scrutinize brand claims, and, when necessary, examine peer-reviewed scientific and medical studies. In addition to testing each and every product that’s included in each and every review, we rely on experts who shape their fields, including dermatology, cosmetic chemistry, and medicine, to help us vet the ingredients and formulas.

    For our list of the best makeup brush sets, we considered each product’s performance across five primary categories: product ingredients and efficacy, packaging, fragrance, texture, and product wear. Every product was determined to have excelled in each category by our editorial team, which is composed of in-house writers and editors as well as contributors—along with special consideration from dermatologists. To learn more information on our reporting and testing processes, read our complete reviews process and methodology page.

    Our staff and testers

    A beauty product is a personal purchase. You might be searching for a face cream to address persistent dryness or a new nail product to add to your Sunday self-care routine; you may simply be browsing around for the latest launches to hit the hair market. No matter what you seek or your individual needs and concerns, Allure wants to ensure that you love anything we recommend in our stories. We believe that having a diverse team of writers and editors—in addition to the wide range of outside testers and industry experts we regularly call upon—is essential to reaching that goal.

    After all, can we really say a skin-care product is the “best” for people over 50 if the only testers we’ve solicited opinions from folks who have yet to hit 30? Can we honestly deem a high-end diffuser worthy of your hard-earned cash if it’s never been tested on curls? We’re proud that our staff spans a wide range of ages, skin tones, hair textures, genders, and backgrounds, which means that we are able to fairly assess any beauty product that comes into the beauty closet.

  • What’s a ‘Mormon Wife’ Supposed to Look Like in 2026? | The Secret Lives of Mormon Wives Cast Interview

    What’s a ‘Mormon Wife’ Supposed to Look Like in 2026? | The Secret Lives of Mormon Wives Cast Interview

    The Secret Lives of Mormon Wives costars Jen Affleck Mayci Neeley Layla Taylor Miranda Hope Jessi Draper and Mikayla...Save StorySave this storySave StorySave this story

    March 2026 was poised to be perhaps the pinnacle of Utah Mormon cultural influence. The fourth season of the Hulu sensation The Secret Lives of Mormon Wives was dropping 10 new episodes of soft waves, plump lips, and perky breasts. And just 10 days later, the latest season of The Bachelorette would premiere on ABC with a Mormon woman—Taylor Frankie Paul, a cast member of SLOMW—at its center for the first time. But last week, what may have been cracks in the picture-perfect presentation of this demographic of Utah women became a major fissure when a 2023 video of Paul throwing metal barstools at her ex-partner, Dakota Mortenson, while her child is in the room surfaced online. Just three days before it was set to premiere, The Bachelorette—at a likely cost of tens of millions of dollars—was entirely cancelled. There are reports from cast members that the filming of season five of SLOMW has been paused. (As of press time, Hulu had not replied to a request for comment.)

    Over the last decade, the cultural currency of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS) has risen sharply in the United States, as the Mormon lifestyle bloggers of the 2010s laid the groundwork for the reality show influencers of today. Those young content creators—with their long, shiny hair, mostly modest attire, affiliate links, and several children under five—walked so Paul and her #MomTok compatriots could run (perhaps a little too far). Is this month’s turmoil an indication that the Mormon commerce machine may come to its inevitable end? Or will it now morph once again?

    A few weeks ago, I flew to Salt Lake City to report on the powerful 2.0 wave of Utahn beauty influence—timed perfectly to this Big Month for Mormons. I sat down with the cast of SLOMW (minus Paul, who pulled out the day before, and Whitney Leavitt, who is currently performing on Broadway as Roxie Hart in Chicago), visited the med spa of The Real Housewives of Salt Lake City’s Heather Gay, got Utah Curls, and slurped on a “dirty soda.” This is what I found along Interstate 15—and where I think this aesthetic subculture-turned-juggernaut is headed next.

    I've only been in Jessi Draper’s chair for four minutes when she starts telling me about her labiaplasty. “After having a baby, I was like, it's not the same down there. It was hard to wear yoga pants. It was just distracting,” the 33-year-old hairstylist says while twirling a lock of my hair into her signature—and, since 2024, trademarked—“Utah Curls” style. The inner (or, in this case, outer) workings of their genitals may be TMI for the average chat with your hairstylist, but for Draper, this is small talk. In fact, she’s told this story before, on the first season of Hulu’s megahit reality show The Secret Lives of Mormon Wives. (Hulu doesn’t release its numbers, but there are rumors that ratings have topped that of The Kardashians.) Getting a labiaplasty—or breast implants, Botox injections, spray tans, or lash extensions—is par for the course in Utah Mormon beauty culture.

    We’re in JZ Styles, a 15,000-square-foot beauty behemoth that Draper founded in 2016 alongside her father. The salon is nestled in the Pleasant Grove suburb of Salt Lake City, just down the road from one of the town’s Swig locations, the “dirty soda” shop that skyrocketed to nationwide fame after the show’s premiere. (Mormon doctrine forbids alcohol consumption; it takes no issue, however, with drinking a blend of Diet Coke, flavored syrup, and half-and-half.) This area, which is home to utopian-sounding towns like Thanksgiving Point and American Fork, has more plastic surgeons per capita than Los Angeles, according to a 2017 report published by the Utah Women & Leadership Project. Utah also has more members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS) than, well, anywhere else in the United States; approximately 42% of the state’s population identifies as Mormon.

    Along with the salon, the building is home to a warehouse—where the SLOMW production company rents out space to shoot the cast’s confessionals—and a store that sells walls of hair extensions, styling products, accessories, and merch, including sweatshirts with words like SAINT, SINNER, and FAME WHORE emblazoned on them. There’s also a crewneck that says BAD AT HAIR, a reference to drama Draper had with costars Taylor Frankie Paul, 31, and Demi Engemenn, 31, during season two of the show, when Engemenn allegedly advised Paul to stop seeing Draper for her extensions because she was "bad at hair." Utah Curls is printed on the packaging for Draper’s beige and pink curling irons, which come in three sizes. (She tells me they sold out in less than 24 hours following season one’s premiere.) In the same space is a hair school called JZ Academy. Draper currently has around 50 employees who help her run the place (including her sisters, who serve as the heads of operations, and her mom, who is also a hairstylist, as lead educator). And even though I’m there at 12 p.m., on a random Tuesday in March, six of the salon’s other chairs are filled by young women. All of them are getting blonde highlights.

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    Even if you haven’t seen The Secret Lives of Mormon Wives, you probably know a “Mormon wife” when you see one. If the original, modern LDS stereotype was conservative young men in white shirts and black ties (if you’re not one of the millions who saw The Book of Mormon, you know the image), today’s aesthetic vision of Mormonism is quite the opposite. “You can tell when a girl's from Utah,” Draper tells me. There’s “a lot of blonde bitches here,” her costar Mikayla Matthews, 25, says later, as we sit in the back office of JZ Styles with Draper and costar Mayci Neeley, 31. LDS members pioneered the settlement of this state, and Utahns, whether they’re Mormon or not, are heavily influenced by the religion’s culture; the restaurant inside my hotel in downtown Salt Lake City was not serving alcohol, for example. The show’s cast of women, who at some point have all been members of the church, are mostly white with long hair, microbladed eyebrows, Juvéderm-filled lips, and, quite often, pregnant bodies—there are, at the time of publication, 23 children between the seven cast members (we’re not counting Engemenn, who is no longer filming the show).

    Over the sounds of a few high-powered hair dryers, six of the show’s current cast members tell me that the area’s obsession with aesthetics isn’t just an overblown media headline. I believe them since I’ve now seen the infamous aesthetics-focused billboards that line Interstate 15, the major highway that cuts through Utah County, with my own two eyes—they advertise for plastic surgeons, med spas, teeth whitening services, hair extensions, and even Draper’s salon. “I think that if people assume that this is a vain state, they would be correct,” says costar Layla Taylor, 25.

    Each of the SLOMW cast members has spoken openly about their aesthetic work, ranging from neuromodulators to breast implants to the aforementioned labiaplasty. After filming season one, Taylor gifted herself a breast augmentation, rhinoplasty, a tummy tuck, Botox, and filler in her lips, chin, and jaw. “I had kids young, and I love my babies to death, but they screwed up my body, and I wanted to feel hot again,” she said on Page Six’s Virtual Reali-Tea podcast at the time. “I’m single. I want a new husband one day, so I had to revamp!”

    Some of them have documented their experiences on camera—both for the show and for their personal social media. In 2022, Taylor Frankie Paul, the fallen Bachelorette, made the women’s “MomTok” group famous for outing her swinging scandal. In season four, which premiered earlier this month, she gets a breast augmentation. It’s her second in less than four years. I was scheduled to interview Paul at JZ Styles, but the day before I arrived, I was told she would no longer be there. We didn’t get a chance to discuss her revision—or anything else. During a confessional interview, she said she wanted to get a “touch-up” after having another child and also for her upcoming appearance as the lead on The Bachelorette. “I think I’m about to be in a lot of dresses,” she says. “If you know me, I’m not normally in dresses, so I just kind of want to feel good in them.”

    For the stars of SLOMW, telling the world about where and what on their bodies they’ve had poked and prodded feels natural. Like their moral obligation, even. “We're not pushing for people to get plastic surgery,” Matthews says. “It's just like, ‘Hey, if this is something you want to do, there's no shame, there's no judgment. This is my experience for your information, for your knowledge.’”

    “That's how it should be,” adds Neeley. “You see certain celebrities and [they say], ‘I've never done anything.’ I think that's why we like to be open about it too, because I'm like, it's so weird to act like you are perfect. We know we're not.”

    The Secret Lives of Mormon Wives costars Mayci Neeley Jen Affleck and Mikayla Matthews

    Neeley, Affleck, and Matthews at JZ Styles, the birthplace of Utah Curls.

    When Allure traveled to Utah in 2017 to investigate that earlier phenomenon of LDS influence, we learned that while there’s no Mormon doctrine that outright says, “thou shalt be hot,” there are messages regarding a woman’s appearance that filter through the church. The LDS website even has a section on “Dress and Appearance” for its young missionaries. “From a young age, we’re taught that our bodies are sacred temples where we make covenants with God. It’s about self-confidence from the inside out. Inner beauty is really important, too,” Dancing with the Stars cast member (and erstwhile blogger) Witney Carson told writer Alice Gregory at the time.

    “It's said that the harder you work as a missionary, the hotter your wife."

    Some are a bit less eloquent than Carson in addressing the value that the religion can put on appearance, particularly that of a woman: “It's said that the harder you work as a missionary, the hotter your wife,” says Julie de Azevedo, PhD, a Salt Lake City–based psychotherapist specializing in Mormon women’s emotional health and relationships. “They joke about it, but I think there's truth in jest.” The misogyny isn’t exactly whispered among Mormon men. It’s often said out loud. And recorded. And published on the internet. In 2015, Elder M. Russell Ballard, a prominent member of the LDS faith, who served as president of the Quorum of the Twelve Apostles from 2018 until his death in 2023, gave a devotional where he suggested to women that they "don't wander around looking like men. Put on a little lipstick now and then and look a little charming. It's that simple.” There are plenty of other sexist incidents and similar messages that’ve been repeated throughout the church’s recorded history, including a 1994 sermon by former church president David O. McKay in which he encouraged women to wear makeup, declaring “even a barn looks better when it's painted.” It’s not hard to imagine what’s said behind closed doors.

    You don’t need to be exceptionally pious to be affected by the Mormon way of life. In fact, the cast says the church’s influence is very much embedded in their psyches, even though not all of the Wives are devout followers of the religion. It makes sense, since being part of the LDS faith affects every aspect of a churchgoer’s life: what they wear, what they drink, whom they marry, and how they spend their time. Many have vocally left the church, including Taylor, Matthews, Draper, and their costar Miranda Hope, 27. Jen Affleck, 26, tells me she’s currently going through a “faith crisis” and is unsure of where she stands, although a few days after our chat, she vlogged herself attending church. Neeley tells me she’s still very much a practicing Mormon. Paul and costar Whitney Leavitt, 32, still attend church. “If you've ever deconstructed a high-demand religion, it is so much more than just going through the faith crisis alone and coming out on the other side,” Hope says. “There are so many things I'm so grateful for that the church taught me and that I still practice today, but at the same time, there are still things that I find I [need to] work through.”

    The Secret Lives of Mormon Wives costars Layla Taylor Jen Affleck and Miranda Hope discuss Mormon beauty standards and...

    From left: Taylor, Affleck, and Hope were quick to admit that the aesthetic stereotypes of Utahns are exactly what the billboards lining Interstate 15 would lead one to believe.

    Even if they’re not the devout Mormons who wear sacred garments and stay virgins until marriage, to outsiders the cast has become unofficial spokeswomen for the faith, or at least the culture. This is, in part, by design: Dr. de Azevedo says there’s a saying that “every member [is] a missionary," which is the idea that “you shine your light and other people will want to be Mormons.”

    Katie Ludlow Rich, a scholar specializing in Mormon women’s history, tells me that post-World War II, there was a movement within the church to assimilate into the broader American culture. “In the bigger push toward missionary work, there seems to be a stronger emphasis placed on appearance, not only those spiritual imperatives of attracting a mate,” she says. “You are a missionary. Everywhere you go, you represent the church, and so you have to look a particular way in order to represent the church well.” Because who wouldn’t want to join a religion seemingly spitting out beautiful women?

    A recent survey published by two researchers at Brigham Young University (LDS’s higher-education center, and where many young Mormons meet their future mate) found that 14% of the 1,333 Latter-day Saints surveyed (82% of whom were women) have had major cosmetic surgery and 20% had undergone cosmetic enhancements, which, beyond Botox, include treatments such as laser hair removal, chemical peels, and dermabrasion. These numbers, the researchers say, are significantly higher than the national average (according to Pew Research Center, only 4% of Americans report having had cosmetic surgery). Still, 10 years ago, plastic surgery was far more secretive even among members of the LDS community. “Now it's like, I want everyone to know that I am invested in self-care, that I can afford it, that I am going to the coolest place in town, and that I own what I want and I get it,” says Heather Gay, owner of Beauty Lab + Laser, a med spa based in the Utah capital. (She, too, has purchased billboards on Interstate 15, including one two years ago that encouraged passersby to “Love thy selfie.”)

    Gay is also a cast member of The Real Housewives of Salt Lake City, another successful reality show franchise that lifts the curtain on Utahn Mormon culture (three cast members are ex-Mormons, while one is still practicing). She left the church nine years ago, in her early 40s, and has since publicly distanced herself from the faith. Her book, Bad Mormon, and the Peacock limited series, Surviving Mormonism with Heather Gay, both explore the psychological impact of LDS culture.

    Heather Gay part of the cast of The Real Housewives of Salt Lake City has a unique window into the Mormon wife aesthetic...

    RHOSLC star Heather Gay now runs two Beauty Lab + Laser locations in the Salt Lake City area.

    The constant nipping and tucking might seem at odds with a religion that preaches modesty and a sacred text that advises parishioners to abstain from consuming alcohol, tobacco, drugs, and caffeine, and declares that tattoos and piercings don’t show “respect toward our earthly bodies.” But Mormonism is a high-demand, patriarchal religion, and the church’s obsession with godly worthiness has only made the fixation on beauty flourish. “There's a scripture that says, ‘Be therefore perfect,’ and I think that's misinterpreted as, ‘be externally flawless,’” says Dr. de Azevedo. “There's kind of this cultural belief in Utah that if you look perfect—if your kids look perfect, if your house is perfect—then somehow it's tied to your righteousness.” As Brigham Young, the second president of the LDS church, told the early Utah settlers in the mid-1800s: “Beautify your gardens, your houses, your farms; beautify the city. This will make us happy and produce plenty.” In other words: Appearance matters.

    “There's a scripture that says, ‘Be therefore perfect,’ and I think that's misinterpreted as, ‘be externally flawless.'"

    It makes sense, then, why these women put so much time and effort into their outward presentation. “Women are encouraged to be stay-at-home moms, so if you don't have other ways to find satisfaction and value, you might focus more on appearance as something you can control or something that you can make you feel good about yourself, because you're not achieving outside of the home as much,” Dr. de Azevedo says.

    “There are these spiritual imperatives that are placed on [Mormon women] to look a particular way in order to attract a husband,” Rich says. Marriage is not a choice. Here, it’s necessary for salvation. “You can't be with your family for eternity in LDS theology unless you are married and sealed for time and eternity in the eldest temple,” says Rich. “To return to heaven or to have an eternal family, that requires marriage.”

    But there are twice as many single women as there are men in the LDS faith, making finding a suitable husband to marry and have babies with yet another competition. And most Mormons don’t risk waiting: The average age of marriage is 28.5 for men and 26.8 for women, according to a 2023 devotional given by the church’s current president, Dallin H. Oaks. The SLOMW cast members were all married for the first time between the ages of 17 and 23. “There is pressure to get married, and when you're finding your significant other, you obviously want to attract the right person,” Affleck tells me. “So what do you do? You do all the right things.”

    The one-upmanship continues even beyond marriage. Rich tells me that she knows of an 88-year-old lifelong Mormon woman living in Boston who goes to weekly lash appointments. “She lives in an upper-middle-class neighborhood in Boston where there are lots of professional women, and she said, ‘None of them go get their eyelashes done. But when I go to church, most women have their eyelashes done,’” Rich says. “And that's a woman in her 80s, feeling this pressure.”

    “It's a performative faith,” says Gay. "You're Mormon as much by the things you believe as by the things you do and don't do. It's like, ‘Oh, are you getting your lips done? I'm getting my lips done. Are you getting Botox? I'm getting Botox.’ You are constantly checking yourself against your neighbor.” Hope, who left the church following her own faith crisis around the time season one began filming, agrees: “I think we've all heard the term ‘keeping up with the Joneses,’ and I think that's very prevalent in Utah,” she says.

    Researchers have found that this kind of environment can create something known as a "contagion effect,” in which attitudes or behaviors can spread throughout a specific population. This phenomenon has also been reported in places like South Korea and in Orthodox Jewish communities, where there is ethnic homogeneity—and an outsized number of plastic surgery patients. The pursuit of perfection, in this case, is also tied to proximity to whiteness. “Everyone's blonde and blue-eyed here,” Affleck, whose mother is Ecuadorian, says. “Being different, we just stand out, and that can cause a lot of insecurities. I mean, I've been guilty of dyeing my hair blonde for that exact reason.” Utah County is 89.2% white, and the LDS faith globally is 72% white.

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    Taylor says that being the only Black cast member on SLOMW is still an everyday struggle. “For a long time, I thought the perception of beauty was long, straight hair, light-colored eyes, skin that wasn't dark like mine,” she tells me. “I tried to bleach my skin one time, and I straightened my hair my whole entire life and have done things that were very toxic because I thought that that's what beauty was because it's all I saw growing up.” While this is in part because of the homogeneity of the region, racism is also embedded into the very fabric of the religion: Earlier versions of the Book of Mormon contained a passage that described dark skin as a curse from God (it’s since been revised to contain less harsh language, says Rich), and until 1978, the LDS faith did not allow Black men to become priests. Today, the church has a statement on its website saying it “condemns racial and cultural prejudice in any form.”

    While she says she’s filtered herself in past seasons, Taylor has since learned to show up as her authentic self. Part of that transformation was inspired by finding a Black hairstylist who understands how to work with her hair texture. “I've had braids now. I've worn wigs now, and it's been so cool to fully embrace that side of myself,” Taylor says. “For a long time, I felt like I wasn't safe to do so.” She had been getting her hair done at JZ Styles, including extensions, but stopped in season three due to the damage caused by the employees’ lack of experience working on Black women’s hair. Now, Draper says she’s working with Taylor’s stylist on a curriculum for JZ Academy. “I just think it's important to kind of expand what you know,” she tells me while I’m in her chair. “Even though Utah's predominantly white, it's good to know everything. I never want to be in that situation again.”

    The night before I was set to interview the SLOMW cast, I strolled through downtown Salt Lake City in the rain looking for a spot to get a manicure. I didn’t have any trouble finding a suitable place steps away from Temple Square—the area known as the historical and spiritual center of the LDS church. Three young women had also braved the downpour to get pedicures, and they sat side-by-side in their Utah best: matching sweatsuits and highlighted beachy waves. Each of them opted for the same pinky-nude polish on their toes. The topic of discussion was fake tanning, and they were listing the pros and cons of their two favorite brands: Glowing Tan and St. Tropez. Two of them were wearing engagement rings. They appeared to be college-age.

    My fellow nail salon-goers were the portrait of the SLOMW season one version of Mormon beauty, but I’d argue the cast today represents Mormon beauty 2.0. So, what’s the 2026 version of a Utah Curl? “It’s all about the blowout,” Affleck says, her dark hair blown out smooth and sleek with soft flips that emphasized her layers. Draper adds that her clients are ditching the stereotypical “long, long, long hair” and requesting shorter, more natural hairstyles and colors. Only two of the eight wives this season are blonde, a stark difference from season one, wherein all but one had highlights, lightened hair, or full-on bleach jobs. Taylor says she hasn’t had lash extensions in years. Matthews took out her breast implants in 2024, although it was more because she believed they contributed to her chronic eczema flare-ups than for aesthetic reasons. Gay also sees the aesthetic goals of her Beauty Lab + Laser clients evolving: Instead of puffing up their faces with filler, they’ve become more interested in microneedling and lasers, which Draper and Hope also say are now part of their beauty routines. “Everyone wants really glowy, really tight, glazed donut skin,” Gay says. (Allure has previously reported on the safety concerns regarding med spas, so please proceed with caution.)

    The new definition of Mormon perfection looks different now, but that’s not to say the pursuit of looking naturally beautiful is easier than looking artificially enhanced. After Draper releases one final Utah Curl into my hair (I now match the six other clients in the salon), she tells me she regrets her most recent cosmetic surgeries, which included an upper and lower blepharoplasty, a procedure that involves removing excess skin around the eyes, along with fat grafting in her face. She says she got caught up in “it,” and I assume she means the quest for flawlessness. “I went in for one thing, and I was talked into doing other things,” she explains. “It can be really easy to get talked into things because we're, again, in Utah Mormon culture, and the standard of beauty is so high, and we're also on TV.”

    Hairstylist and The Secret Lives of Mormon Wives costar Jessi Draper demonstrates Utah Curls which have come to define...

    Draper uses a curling iron from her own line to create her trademark—literally—style of ringlets, called Utah Curls.

    A few days after our chat, Draper shared a video to her 1.6 million Instagram followers, addressing the negative comments from strangers about her appearance. She revealed that she got Kybella injections in hopes of reversing the effects of the fat grafting in her face. “I have such self-confidence issues, and looking back, I can totally see how I was blinded by those,” she says. “I was beautiful, and I wasn’t able to say that a few months ago, and I can say that now.”

    “Appearance is everything here,” Taylor reiterates. She’s been open about her ongoing eating disorder throughout the show, and during the final episode of season four, she tells Hope and Draper that she’s been abusing Tirzepatide, a GLP-1. “I got it from a plastic surgeon here in Utah in the fall of last year,” she tells me. “They just handed it to me without ever having an appointment with me. They got me a prescription, and it was at my house the next day.” She stopped using it a couple of months ago. “I'm very happy that I shared that with the world because there are so many people that abuse this drug and it's so easily accessible now,” she says.

    “I have no interest in changing myself… I mean, I have a boob job, I get Botox."

    Two years ago, Hope seriously considered getting her ears pinned back. “They stick out more than I would like,” she admitted, although she says it never really bothered her until she received comments about it online. She’s since changed her mind. “I remember looking back at baby pictures of my son and even now, he has my ears exactly, and I was like, ‘I'm not doing that anymore," she says. “I have no interest in changing myself… I mean, I have a boob job, I get Botox. I'm still open to doing that stuff. However, I think being very intentional with it is important.”

    With a 40-ounce #MomTok-branded Hydrojug weighing my bag down, I left JZ Styles to tag along with Hope for a visit to Rise Rejuvenation, a med spa just 20 minutes north that’s frequented by the cast. (The American Med Spa Association estimates that there are 225 med spas in Salt Lake City and another 125 in Utah County, where Rise is located.) Season one’s most memorable scene includes Neeley, Leavitt, and Matthews at the practice, inhaling laughing gas in what they describe as a Mormon loophole to get “high” without drugs. When I ask Hope if she ingests the stuff every time she visits the med spa, she laughs and says only sometimes: “I will just for kicks and gigs, but normally I don't do it when I get my Botox done.” Besides getting neuromodulators in her forehead, eleven lines, and lips, Hope often gets HydraFacials at Rise and is interested in getting a Moxi treatment, a non-ablative resurfacing laser. She says she’ll just have to wait until there’s enough downtime between filming to fully recover.

    Miranda Hope The Secret Lives of Mormon Wives costar gets Botox injections every few months

    Hope gets Botox in her forehead, eleven lines, and lips.

    The Secret Lives of Mormon Wives costar Miranda Hope gets Botox injections which she says are a regular occurrence in...

    After Hope’s appointment, I head back to downtown Salt Lake City with my head of Utah Curls to walk around the 10-acre campus that’s home to the Salt Lake Temple (a modest footprint, really, when you consider that the church is the nation's fifth-largest private landowner and owns 1.7 million acres across America). The area is eerily quiet at 5:30 p.m. A few women pushing strollers walk past me with similar-looking ringlets in their hair, although their eyes look far more tired than mine. I approach the 222-foot-tall temple looming in the center of the campus, but I can’t get too close: It’s currently undergoing an aesthetic upgrade of its own, set to be completed late this year.

    “Hello!” I hear from behind me. I turn to see two modestly dressed, blue-eyed young missionaries approaching me—a blonde sporting a messy low bun and a brunette with undone waves. There isn’t a hair or lash extension in sight. “I love your hair,” the blonde tells me, gesturing to my curls. “Do you want to learn about what goes on in the Temple?”

  • Fantasy Lip Art Ideas for 2026: The Most Creative Lip Looks Right Now—With Photos

    Fantasy Lip Art Ideas for 2026: The Most Creative Lip Looks Right Now—With Photos

    A collage of colorful fantasy lip makeup designs.Courtesy of @juliaedwardsmakeup / @themirrorbeauty / @sophiasinot / @deemakeupartSave StorySave this storySave StorySave this story

    Fantasy-lip art is taking over. No, you’re not imagining it. Yes, we know it’s 2026 and that clean-girl beauty and ballet buns have long been dominating feeds. But bolder lip art—featuring high-contrasting colors, metallic (and often iridescent) finishes, and whimsical details—have been showing up on feeds, runways, and in the concert performances of your favorite pop stars. (We’re looking at you, Zara Larsson.)

    We predicted a colorful shift in makeup trends for 2026, and we’re thrilled to see that forecast come to life, not only because we were—ahem—right, but because the results have been nothing short of inspiring. Ahead we explore today’s fascination with fantasy-lip art.

    In this storyAccordionItemContainerButtonLargeChevron

    • Why are fantasy-lip looks popping up in 2026?
    • Fantasy-lip inspiration
    • Tips for creating fantasy-lip looks in 2026

    Why is fantasy-lip art popping up in 2026?

    It’s easy to overlook vivid makeup looks when our algorithms have been pushing us toward more pared-back aesthetics over the last year. But we want to be very clear: Makeup maximalism never truly went away. Every decade has had its more imaginative beauty moments: There were the bursts of blush of the ’80s; the allover body shimmer of the ’90s; the chrome finishes of the early aughts; and the late 2010s brought us rainbow-shadow looks (à la Coachella) and face gems (thanks to HBO’s Euphoria). We’re betting that one of this year’s hallmarks will be fantasy lips.

    Considering the current social, political, and economic climate, it makes perfect sense that this use of punchy, contrasting colors harkens back to previous decades. The beauty trends of 2026 have been all about seeking comfort and familiarity, and loud lip looks give us that. Julia Edwards, a London-based makeup artist, says it best: “This trend is rooted in girlhood nostalgia, play, and prioritizing self-expression.”

    Donni Davy, lead makeup artist on Euphoria and the cofounder of Half Magic, echoes this, highlighting the parallels between the current fascination with maximalist lips and the Y2K and ’90s club-kid eras. Elements of these aesthetics are “coming in hot for 2026, adding dimension to otherwise simple lip looks,” she says, noting that we’ll see this reflected in Euphoria’s upcoming season.

    The fantasy-lip trend can also be interpreted as a reaction to more subdued looks. “I think we are seeing the pendulum swing in the opposite direction from the clean-girl [aesthetic],” Alexandra French, an Emmy Award-winning makeup artist in Los Angeles, previously told Allure.

    Edwards takes this idea further. “To me, the clean-girl trend was most suited to the male gaze—focusing on creating a ‘natural but better’ appearance and uplifting subtle enhancements that emphasize symmetry,” she explains. Edwards goes on to say that she recognizes that there’s a time and place for stripped-back beauty, “but as discussions around women’s rights and identity continue to evolve, beauty becomes another space for agency and self-definition.”

    Davy’s thoughts about clean-girl beauty? It isn’t even on her radar right now.

    Visions of escapism and bolder expression have also shown up on recent runways. At Prabal Gurung’s fall-winter 2026 show, artists painted models’ lips a fiery red before dousing them in chunky glitter. At Roksanda, you couldn’t miss the severe combo of cherry lipstick and black lip liner for spring-summer 2026. And Dior ambassador Willow Smith walked down the brand’s runway for spring-summer 2026-2027 wearing metallic lips lined with dark greige liner.

    Willow Smith wears braids and a lined frosted lip at a Dior fashion show.Getty Images

    It’s worth noting that to some, including the pros we spoke to for this story, fantasy lips aren’t just a fleeting trend; dramatic looks are part of their artistic DNA. Rowi Singh, a Sydney-based makeup artist and content creator, says that her imaginative approach to makeup is deeply rooted in her culture. “Punjabi women drew me to maximalism,” she says, “over-accessorizing, and plunging into the deep end with bold colors.”

    As for why more people are jumping on the bandwagon now, Singh gets it, reiterating a desire for change. “We’re in a time when people are emboldened to take more makeup risks,” she says. And those risks are paying off.

    Fantasy-lip art inspiration

    Ombré fantasy-lip artClose up of an orangetinted glossy fantasy lip combo.Courtesy of @juliaedwardsmakeupCloseup of a bright pink redlined fantasy lip combo.Courtesy of @themirrorbeautyCloseup of a colorful fantasy lip combo.Courtesy of @deemakeupartGraphic fantasy-lip artCloseup of Doja Cat with a black and nudetinted glossy fantasy lip combo.Courtesy of @sophiasinotCloseup of Lori Harvey with a lined glossy fantasy lip combo.Close-up of Lori Harvey with a lined, glossy fantasy lip combo.Courtesy of @sophiasinotFantasy-lip art with shimmerCloseup of a sparkly pink glossy fantasy lip combo.Courtesy of @juliaedwardsmakeupCloseup of JT with a black and nudetinted glossy fantasy lip combo.Courtesy of @sophiasinot

    How to Create Fantasy-Lip Art

    There are so many iterations of this trend, but no matter which approach you take, you’ll need some confidence—and these tips—to pull them off.

    1. Explore unconventional color combinations. Edwards suggests combining blue and pink, gray and green, and lilac and orange. Try the Made By Mitchell Colour Case Cosmetic Paint Palette, which contains an array of creamy brights and pastels. If you’re not ready to commit to a full palette, pick out two punchy shades from the NYX Professional Makeup Shine Loud High Shine Long-Lasting Liquid Lipstick collection.

    2. Have powder formulas on hand. Dee, a Los Angeles-based makeup artist, says that blush and eye shadow palettes are great tools for creating colorful ombré lips. She suggests reaching for Made By Mitchell’s Curve Case Press'd Powder Blush & Bronzer Palette, featuring eight pans of easily blended powder. We like the Pat McGrath Labs Mothership X Eyeshadow Palette: Moonlit Seduction, which includes high-impact mattes and a celestial reddish brown and blue duo-chrome.

    3. Have fun with sparkle. Does your ombre lip need a little more magic? Tap on some sparkle: About Face Cherry Pick Shimmer in Supernova is a balm swirled with finely milled flecks of silver glitter. The Half Magic Glitter Gloss in Virtual BFF has an otherworldly shift.

    4. Use a high-shine gloss. “Glosses carefully layered over iridescent pigments or glitter can be used to create an impactful three-dimensional look,” says Edwards. We love MAC Lip Glass, which coats lips with mirror-like shine without disrupting the makeup beneath it.

  • Megan Thee Stallion Looks Like a ’90s Prom Queen in Her Big, Blonde Updo — See Photos

    Megan Thee Stallion Looks Like a ’90s Prom Queen in Her Big, Blonde Updo — See Photos

    Megan Thee Stallion smilingPhoto: Getty ImagesSave StorySave this storySave StorySave this story

    Ah, prom season. I admit, I'm not really on top of how the teens are styling their hair for the big dance these days, but I have crystal-clear memories of how we used to do it in the 1990s. If you didn't pile curls into a tendril-spilling tower atop your head, did you even read the special prom issue of YM? Well, it seems Megan Thee Stallion definitely did, and it apparently inspired her Broadway debut after-show glam.

    Meg gave her first highly anticipated performance in Moulin Rouge!, in which she'll be playing the role of Zidler in the musical through mid-May. I would be remiss to not shout out her amazing hairstyle in the show—a glossy, Veronica Lake-esque look that's bedazzled along its waves—but it's her celebratory stage door style that's really sending me back.

    Megan Thee Stallion dressed as the character Zidler in Moulin RougePhoto: Getty Images

    Everything about Megan's look as she emerged from the Al Hirschfeld Theatre on March 24 screamed prom queen: the long, sequinned dress, the strappy, metallic shoes, the matching red mani-pedi, the gold Alexis Bittar jewelry (those bangles are so epic), the bold lips and shimmering eyes, because why take off your stage makeup if you're going out after? She's even carrying bouquets of flowers as if her name was just announced as the winner.

    Megan Thee Stallion carrying bouquets of flowers in a sequin dressPhoto: Getty Images

    But it's that big, blonde updo that really seals the deal. A mix of sandy and bronde tones, her hair has been swept up into a heap of loose curls. And a ‘90s prom updo wouldn’t be complete without tendrils, which Megan has in spades, both framing her face and trailing in back.

    Megan Thee Stallion smiling in a blonde updoPhoto: Getty Images

    The only thing she's missing is a crown—which would weigh down her style anyway, so it's probably for the best.

  • Cécred Review: We Tried Beyoncé’s Hair-Care Line on 6 Curl Patterns—With Photos

    Cécred Review: We Tried Beyoncé’s Hair-Care Line on 6 Curl Patterns—With Photos

    Ccred Styling Collection ReviewCourtesy of subjects and brandSave StorySave this storySave StorySave this story

    At long last, Cécred has launched styling products. Take a moment to celebrate—we certainly did. If you’ve ever seen Beyoncé perform, you know her hairstyles can withstand strong winds, proximity to flames, and high humidity. Now, with this seven-piece collection, the singer has finally revealed how she keeps her hair in place.

    For those of you who are new to Cécred, here’s a refresher: When Beyoncé announced the launch of her hair-care brand in 2024, fans saw it as their best shot at achieving lustrous, voluminous, “Bey-level” curls. The first products included washday essentials formulated to help nourish your hair and scalp. The singer’s mom and former hairdresser, Tina Knowles, helped develop them, bringing her in-salon experience and expertise to the brand. Fans were right to be hyped about the collection. The Allure editors who tested it immediately incorporated some of its products into their hair-care routines. The team was especially impressed with the Cécred Restoring Hair and Edge Drops, so much so that it earned a 2025 Best of Beauty Award.

    The addition of styling products to the Cécred lineup makes perfect sense for the brand’s next move. After all, fans have been pining for them: “Please let it be for styling, I beg,” wrote one Instagram user in the comments of a teaser post for the launch. “Please be a heat protector, I’ve been wanting this,” added another.

    The collection includes a heat-protectant mist, styling glaze, volumizing mousse, hairspray, wrapping foam, strong-hold gel, and an edge brush. And because Bey is looking out for the curls we worked so hard to coddle, each styler is equipped with heat protection. Cécred calls it the “StemShield Complex,” and while the exact formulation remains under wraps, there are some clues on the product labels.

    Laura Lam-Phaure, a Los Angeles-based cosmetic chemist, points to a blend of recurring ingredients across the formulas as being responsible for shielding your hair from temperatures up to 450 degrees: watermelon seed oil, schinziophyton rautanenii [mongongo] kernel oil, ximenia americana [sour plum] seed oil, zymomonas [fermenting agent] extract, and honey extract. It's worth noting, Lam-Phaure adds, that Cécred leans on plant-based heat protectants rather than traditional silicone-heavy formulations.

    As for what the styling collection smells like, it shares the same musky floral scent as the brand’s previous lineups—blending notes of sandalwood, Haitian vetiver, oud, jasmine, and musk. To some it smells earthy, while others find it herbaceous. The consensus, though, is that it smells so good.

    To see how the brand’s latest launch performs on different hair types, we tested the styling products on wavy, curly, and coily textures. Ahead, read our full thoughts on the collection.

    In this storyAccordionItemContainerButtonLargeChevron

    • Cécred Thermal Shield Mist
    • Cécred Heat Activated Silk Glaze
    • Cécred Volumizing Mousse
    • Cécred Flexible Hold Hairspray
    • Cécred Wrap & Set Foam
    • Cécred Strong Hold Gel

    The Collection: Product Breakdown

    Cécred Thermal Shield Mist, $30

    What it is: The Knowles clearly know how non-negotiable heat-protection is. To drive the point home, they gave us a product that is designed to help avoid singeing our hair with hot tools (up to 450 degrees). “It’s jam-packed with active ingredients,” says Lam-Phaure, adding that she doesn’t see a lot of “fluff” additives. Aside from the brand’s StemShield Complex, the formula contains hydrating ingredients (like panthenol and glycerin), fragrance, and stabilizing preservatives.

    Cécred Thermal Shield Mist greige bottle on light gray backgroundSave to wishlistSave to wishlist

    Cécred

    Thermal Shield Mist

    $30

    Ulta Beauty

    $30

    Cécred

    Jennet Jusu, editorial assistant: I’m very particular about my protective styles and the routine that comes with them. I have thick, coarse 4B to 4C hair, so the products I use can make or break the final result of my style and the manageability of my hair. When I refresh a braid-out, I typically use a thermal round brush to stretch my hair, straightening each section from root to tip before braiding. For this routine, Cécred’s Thermal Shield Mist fits right in.

    After combing out my three-day-old, crinkled hair, I sprayed my hair from root to tip in sections. I immediately noticed, and loved, the lightweight fragrance (it smells expensive). I also found that my strands didn’t make that alarming hissing sound when I went in with the Hey Mane It’s Giving Body Medium Hot Round Brush.

    My hair is not easy to comb through, so being able to slide a heated brush through it and braid my entire head in about 25 minutes felt like a win. The mist softened my coils just enough to make the heat pass-through smoother and more effective.

    Ccred Thermal Shield Mist Review

    Jusu’s hair before styling.

    Courtesy of Jennet JusuCcred Thermal Shield Mist Review

    Jusu holding a styled section of hair after using the Cécred Thermal Shield Mist.

    Courtesy of Jennet JusuCécred Heat Activated Silk Glaze, $34

    What it is: Reach for this serum-like glazing fluid before getting a silk press. As the name suggests, it acts as both a heat protectant and a frizz fighter, allowing for a more seamless press-and-curl experience. Its use of denatured alcohol is noteworthy, says Lam-Phaure, as it helps evenly distribute oils and emollients for a smoother, glossier finish. The alcohol quickly flashes off, leaving only the beneficial ingredients—like smoothing hydrolyzed silk—behind. That quick-drying effect also helps prevent over-application, which water-heavy formulas can encourage when results don’t appear right away.

    Cécred Heat Activated Silk Glaze greige bottle with stacked half spheres cap on light gray backgroundSave to wishlistSave to wishlist

    Cécred

    Heat Activated Silk Glaze

    $34

    Ulta Beauty

    $34

    Cécred

    Melenie McGregor, creative producer: The Heat Activated Silk Glaze made my hair feel, well, silky. To test it, I divided my freshly cleansed, detangled, and damp hair into eight sections, massaging two pumps of the slippery fluid into them. I used the FHI Heat Unbrush to evenly distribute the Cécred product throughout my hair for maximum heat protection before blow-drying and flatironing my hair. As I styled my curls, I noticed that I needed fewer passes with my blow-dryer than I normally would, and appreciated how it protected my strands from heat.

    The bottle design is playful without impacting its function. That said, at $34, I do wish it came in a larger size than 5 oz. [Editors’ note: Heat protectant serums and lotions range from $8 to $130, so this one lands in the middle.]

    Ccred Heat Activated Silk Glaze Review

    McGregor before using the Heat Activated Silk Glaze and blow-drying her hair.

    Courtesy of Melenie McGregorCcred Heat Activated Silk Glaze Review

    McGregor after blow-drying and flatironing her hair.

    Courtesy of Melenie McGregorCécred Volumizing Mousse, $32

    What it is: This one's for anyone chasing a blowout that has some va-va-voom. The airy foam was formulated for you to use before drying your hair to create long-lasting bounce and body. Lam-Phaure says that the volumizing magic is in its many film-forming agents: VP/VA copolymer "helps give your hair structure and a slight lift," she explains, while the ingredients that start with "polyquaternium" help "lift the root without a crunchy finish."

    Cécred Volumizing Mousse greige canister of mousse on light gray backgroundSave to wishlistSave to wishlist

    Cécred

    Volumizing Mousse

    $32

    Ulta Beauty

    $32

    Cécred

    Sarah Hoffmann, commerce producer: My curl pattern is on the looser side, so I like a mousse for the added volume and definition. Cécred's new formula plays really nicely with my shaggy cut. I applied it to damp hair, using my fingers to evenly rake it through, before scrunching my hair into my palms to define my curls.

    The mousse gave my hair a light lift in the shorter layers and helped define and shape the longer pieces at the bottom, where my curls are naturally a little tighter. It’s also not crunchy at all. You could use different amounts of product to accommodate your hair's porosity and density. My strands are deceptively fine but fluffy, so a small amount did the trick. I flatironed my bangs and allowed the rest of my hair to air-dry (which took about two hours). Overall, I love how this mousse lightly defined my curls while giving me soft, touchable volume.

    Ccred  Volumizing Mousse Review

    Hoffmann with freshly washed hair.

    Courtesy of Sarah HoffmannCcred Volumizing Mousse Review

    Hoffmann after using the Volumizing Mousse and air-drying her hair.

    Courtesy of Sarah HoffmannCécred Flexible Hold Hairspray, $38

    What it is: Anyone who heat-styles regularly knows the value of a good hairspray—one that locks in your look without leaving hair stiff or coated in a sticky film. The Cécred Flexible Hold Hairspray does all of the above and more.

    Lam-Phaure says the formula is unconventional, behaving more like a lightweight smoothing cream than a traditional spray. In addition to a film-former that helps maintain your style, it contains glycerin (which, Lam-Phaure notes, has a thick texture that helps defrizz hair and provide flexible hold) and light emulsifiers commonly found in conditioning products.

    Cécred Flexible Hold Hairspray griege bottle of hairspray on light gray backgroundSave to wishlistSave to wishlist

    Cécred

    Flexible Hold Hairspray

    $38

    Ulta Beauty

    $38

    Cécred

    Jesa Marie Calaor, senior beauty editor: Cécred has been a regular part of my hair-care routine not only because it makes my poofy natural waves look shiny and healthy, but also because of how it smells so effing good. (Seriously, I was letting my hair down from a tight ponytail at an event, and someone pointed out how amazing it smelled.) Now the brand has taken over my styling routine too.

    Before hitting my strands with a thermal round brush (specifically, the Hey Mane It's Giving Body Medium Hot Thermal Round Brush), I spritz on the Thermal Shield Mist. I apply it all over my hair, spraying a bit more onto my ends to keep them from getting crispy. Then I get to curling. As I release each newly styled section, I spray the Flexible Hold Hairspray in small bursts across it, before holding the curl in my hands for a few seconds to let it set. The nozzle dispenses the finest mist, ensuring even coverage. My style holds all day (sometimes into the next day if I sleep face down on the crook of my arm) and the brand’s signature scent wafts behind me.

    Ccred Flexible Hold Hairspray Review

    Calaor before styling her hair.

    Courtesy of Jesa Marie CalaorCcred Flexible Hold Hairspray Review

    Calaor after using the Thermal Shield Mist, styling with a thermal brush, and finishing her style with the Flexible Hold Hairspray.

    Courtesy of Jesa Marie CalaorCécred Wrap & Set Foam, $28

    What it is: A styling collection wouldn’t be complete without a product for those who like to wear their hair curly. The Wrap and Set Foam promises to define natural styles and keep curls frizz-free while protecting strands from humidity and heat. (The latter is crucial for those who like to stretch their hair with a blow-dryer before styling.)

    Glycerin and jojoba oil work together in this formula to hydrate and moisturize the hair. So, while your style will be set in place, your hair will still feel soft to the touch.

    Cécred Wrap & Set Foam greige bottle of setting foam on light gray backgroundSave to wishlistSave to wishlist

    Cécred

    Wrap & Set Foam

    $28

    Ulta Beauty

    $28

    Cécred

    Jessica Cruel, editor in chief: Typically, I use a gel-cream to set my twist out after blow-drying my hair straight. When I met the Cécred team to get dialed in on the new styling launch, I wondered, Where is the twisting cream? They assured me that the Wrap + Set foam would get the job done.

    I was skeptical because I've tried that method before with other foams, and the definition and hold never match up. This one does! I was able to get the same definition that I'm used to. The twists were a bit crunchier than I like, but I was able to break that cast by coating my fingers in oil during the takedown.

    There is more shrinkage than when using my typical cream (foam has a lot more liquid, so that makes sense). Overall, this twist-out passed the test. Next time, I'll give my hair another blast of heat after twisting to stretch and get more length. Fortunately, this formula has a heat-protectant built in, which is a plus.

    Ccred Wrap  Set Foam Review

    Cruel before styling her hair.

    Courtesy of Jessica CruelCcred Wrap  Set Foam Review

    Cruel after using the Wrap & Set Foam to twist her hair.

    Courtesy of Jessica Cruel

    Jusu: The texture of this foam was sticky in my hands when I first rubbed it in, but I was happy to find that it wasn’t as sticky when it dried in my hair. It made my hair look shiny, and felt moisturized almost instantly. I applied the foam in sections before braiding my hair, and in the morning, my hair felt silky and smooth. It’s safe to say this was very effective for my braid-out routine.

    Ccred Wrap  Set Foam Review

    Jusu braiding her blow-dried hair.

    Courtesy of Jennet JusuCcred Wrap  Set Foam Review

    Jusu after using Wrap & Set Foam to do a braid-out.

    Courtesy of Jennet JusuCécred Strong Hold Gel, $32

    What it is: Designed with natural hairstyles in mind, this durable gel is said to smooth curls and coils into place without drying out the hair or leaving a stiff, cement-like cast. Lam-Phaure explains how the formula achieves this: A light, flexible film locks your style in place, polyquaternium-69 (a polymer) tames flyaways, and denatured alcohol helps it set quickly. The result? A strong, long-lasting hold that doesn’t move as you go about your day.

    Cécred Strong Hold Gel greige tube on light gray backgroundSave to wishlistSave to wishlist

    Cécred

    Strong Hold Gel

    $32

    Ulta Beauty

    $32

    Cécred

    Annie Blay-Tettey, associate beauty editor: Normally, I’d use a strong-hold gel in a twist-out or to slick back the base of a high puff, but with freshly braided cornrows in, I had to pivot to using this gel to lay my edges. The styling collection does include an edge brush, but since I hadn’t gotten my hands on it yet, I reached for my go-to: the BabyTress Edge Brush.

    I usually lay my edges with a thicker pomade-like edge control, so the liquid consistency of this gel threw me off at first. But as I smoothed my wispy baby hairs down, I found the gel had a good grip to it. I had to apply a bit more product than I would with a thicker edge control, but the lightweight texture of the gel worked easily with the brush to slick my hair down with just a few swoops. And unlike a traditional edge control, my hair didn’t feel stiff.

    I applied the Strong Hold Gel at 10 a.m., and by 4:30 p.m. my edges were still laid and intact—a little fuzzier than they were in the morning, but the design I’d swooped on was still going strong.

    Ccred Strong Hold Gel Review

    Blay-Tettey with no product on her baby hairs.

    Courtesy of Annie Blay-TetteyCcred Strong Hold Gel Review

    Blay-Tettey after using the Strong Hold Gel to lay her baby hairs.

    Courtesy of Annie Blay-Tettey

    Cruel: I packed this gel—and only this gel—as edge control on a recent work trip, putting my trust in the Knowles before a panel appearance. When I first started to apply, I worried the formula was too watery to give me the slick that I like. The consistency feels more like a styling gel you would use for ponytails than a thick edge control gel. I put my scarf on and prayed. When it was time for the big reveal, I was shocked by the results. Edges? Laid. Baby hairs? Slicked.

    Ccred Strong Hold Gel Review

    Cruel after using the Strong Hold Gel on her edges.

    Courtsey of Jessica Cruel