You already know that your eye shape is totally different from your best friend's, so why wear your liner the same way? The truth is, sure, you can both rock a cat-eye, but you might need to tweak the flick a little at the end to emphasize *your* unique set of baby blues. Lucky for you, makeup artist Jaleesa Jaikaran knows exactly which style of liner accentuates what you've got going on, so keep scrolling (or click your shape below) for your exact how-to.
Jump to your eye shape: Almond, Downturned, Wide-set, Asymmetrical, Round, Big, Small, Monolids, Hooded, Close-set, and Deep-set.
If you look in the mirror and the top and bottom of your irises are covered by your upper and lower lids (along with the traits mentioned in the graphic), you have almond eyes.
MAKE UP FOR EVER Artist Color Pencil: Eye, Lip & Brow Pencil
Opt for an eyeliner with a creamier consistency and trace your lash line before slightly smudging it with a out for a soft, dreamy finish. Since this eye shape tends to be most symmetrical, it can handle any liner look, but the easiest technique is to follow the natural shape of the eye, while building thickness towards the outer third half, Jaikaran explains.
Not sure if your eyes are downturned? Imagine an invisible horizontal line going through the center of them. If the outer corner drops lower than the "line," you have this shape.
Urban Decay Cosmetics 24/7 Glide-On Eye Pencil
Using a bright pencil liner, draw on a very thin cat-eye, flicking the end up toward your temples to create a little lift at the outer corners of your eyes. Keeping the tail short also helps the look remain visible when you smile. Oh, and leave your lower lash line bare, so it doesn't compete with the liner on top.
If the space between the inner corners is larger than the width of one of your eyes, you have wide-set eyes.
Keep the color concentrated at the inner corners on your top and bottom lash lines, minimizing any product applied at the outer corners to help create more balance and draw the focus inward.
Asymmetrical eyes can often be slightly different in shape, as in one might be larger than the other—a common trait, since everyone's face is asymmetrical to some degree.
Jane Iredale Eye Pencil
Using a lighter-colored eyeliner pencil (Jaikaran used a taupe shade here), trace along your lash line from your inner to outer corner. Then, if (and only if!) you want to create more balance between your eyes, on the eye is smaller, apply a thicker amount of that same liner to the outer corner to make it appear wider.
With round eyes, look to see if the whites of your eyes along the bottom of your irises are visible when you're looking straight ahead. Another indicator is that you'll definitely be able to see your crease clearly when your eyes are open.
Opt for an elongated look (to keep your shape from looking too circular), which you can achieve with extended wing liner. Be sure to keep the line thinner at the inner corners and thicker at the outer corners.
Big eyes are typically larger in proportion to the other features on your face, like your nose and mouth.
Since big eyes can pull off a lot of different liner looks because of their size and shape, you can experiment with more unconventional looks, like this double-winged eye. To recreate it, make one flick that extends out from your upper lash line, and then draw a second tail from the corner of your lower lash line. (Just opt for liners with depth, versus super light shades, to keep from altering your shape, making it appear even larger.)
Small eyes, you guessed it, will appear smaller in comparison to the rest of the features on your face. You may also notice a short amount of space between the tips of your lashes and your brow bone.
With small eyes, opt for a lighter color or even a metallic hue, like gold, which reflects light and makes your eyes look brighter. And skip liner on the lower lash line, which can shrink your eye shape.
With monolids, you'll typically have no discernible crease and also notice that your eyelid is on the flatter side, Jaikaran explains. Your brow bone will typically look less prominent as well.
When lining your top lash line, start off with a thin line, using a liquid liner at the inner corner, making it significantly thicker as you extend past your outer corner. That way the look remains fully visible when you open your eyes.
Hooded eyes tend to have less eyelid space, but you also might notice that your upper eyelid covers your crease when your eyes are open, too.
Go for a thicker liner toward the outer corners, making sure the liner is as close to your lashes as possible—thin, simple lines can get easily lost when your eye is open (due to less eyelid space) and any liner that's too heavy may make the eye look small. If you're creating a cat-eye, like Jaikaran did here, it's important to make the wing look thicker at the outer corner before filling it in, so it keeps its flick shape your eyes are open.
If the space between the inner corners is less than the width of one of your eyes, close-set is your shape.
The secret for close-set eyes is to start your eyeliner at the middle of the lid and extend it out further than your eye in a straight line, which you can do on both the top and bottom lash lines. Then, use a bit of shimmer in the inner corner and on your brow bone to brighten them.
It's less about shape with deep-set eyes and more about their positioning, which happens to be set further back in your socket. Because of this, your brow bone can often appear stronger and overshadow your eyes, hiding your lids.
Trace a thin line as close to your lashes as possible, keeping any of the liner's thickness toward the outer half of the eye. Then, create another thin line along your bottom lash line—again, thickening the liner slightly toward the outer half, since applying liner in a thick manner at the inner corners can create the illusion that your eyes are even deeper set.
MAKE UP FOR EVER Artist Color Pencil For Almond Eyes
Urban Decay Cosmetics 24/7 Glide-On Eye Pencil For Downturned Eyes
Makeup: Jaleesa Jaikaran; Assts: Shaleira Smith and Lakeisha Dale; Nails: Kayo Higuchi, Asst: Marie Barokas; Hair: Jerrod Roberts; Photographer: Ruben Chamorro; Fashion Stylist: Kathy Lee; Beauty Director: Carly Cardellino; Creative Director: Abby Silverman; Senior Visuals Editor: Raydene Salinas Hansen; Designer: Katie Buckleitner; Videographer: Robert Mroczko; Camera: Rob Mroczko; Editors: Emily Wilson and Olivia Akien; Production Assistant: Scott Kidwell
Small-eyes look: coat by Zara; earrings by Maria Tash; nose ring and cartilage earrings are model’s own. Hooded look: bodysuit by Only Hearts; rings by Tom Wood and Ginette NY. Downturned look: top by Sandro; earrings by Tuza. Big look: top by House of CB; earrings by Alighieri, MM Druck, Maria Tash and Loren Stewart. Asymmetrical look: top by Tanya Taylor; ring by Tom Wood; earrings by Lady Grey and Five and Two. Monolid look: jacket by Land of Distraction; earrings by Shashi, Charlotte Chesnais, Jennifer Fisher and Maria Tash; nose ring and cartilage earrings are model’s own. Close-set look: top by Cynthia Rowley; earrings by Annika Inez. Deep-set look: top by Caroline Constas; earrings by Adornmonde. Wide-set look: top by Lucy Paris; earrings by Sachin & Babi. Round look: jumpsuit by Dondup; earrings by Sophie Monet; ring is model’s own. Hooded look: top by Simone Aviv; earrings (pink) by Shashi; all other earrings are model’s own.
Carly Cardellino
Carly Cardellino was the beauty director at Cosmopolitan. If you follow her Instagram, then you know she'll try just about any beauty trend or treatment once (the pics of her purple hair are on IG to prove it). But her favorite part about being in beauty is finding the most effective products, and then sharing that intel with others—because who wants to spend money on stuff that doesn't work? No one, that's who. Her most recent discovery: De La Cruz Sulfur Ointment, which will change your blemish-clearing game! Hopefully through the beauty stories she writes—and the experiences she shares—you can see exactly why she's in this business.