#trans is beautiful

LIVE
To us, gender-affirming care means providing trans, non-binary and gender non-conforming people with

To us, gender-affirming care means providing trans, non-binary and gender non-conforming people with the security, warmth, and confidence necessary for all who seek medical support in their transition.

Visitgetplume.co to learn more.


Post link

Coming soon!

I have not posted an extensive tutorial or article in a long time on this blog, but there will be one soon!

What will I talk about this time? Well, I’m going back to the basics! Yup! That’s right! I will even try to do a video this time, which might be completely shitty because of the lack of decent lighting in my appartment.

Why am I going back to the things I covered already? Because I went full time. And when you go full time, not wearing makeup is something you can do, but be prepared for some strange looks. Another reason is actually hormones! HRT changes your skin a lot and your makeup routine has to adapt. Also, I have the job I have and I’m often on the road. Which means that carrying a small kit is better and carrying tools that are easy to wash as well!

Stay tuned!

Compact and pigmented

I travel a lot for a living. Sometimes I’m even on the road for weeks or months at a time, living in close quarters with other human beings. In these situations, being able to have compact luggage is important.

Last March, I realized that my home makeup bag is everything BUT compact, so I’ve been trying to assemble a compact kit.

This eyeshadow palette is one of the few NYX released in that « petite » series. It is crazy pigmented (careful with the dark shades!). The shimmery/glittery shades are gorgeous and they really apply and blend well if you spray your packing brush with a little bit of setting spray!

Available in a lot of drugstores or from their website for around 12-15$.

Surprise!

Maybe the folks at Dermablend really did lose track of my first message… maybe they just did not care… we will never know the truth.

Good thing is that finally someone took the problem into their hands and I got that message yesterday!

I will keep you posted!

The truth about Dermablend

They have those insane videos of people hiding their tattoos all over their bodies. They say their products do not transfer or rub off. It really seemed like the holy grail of concealing.

So I decided to ask them about their thoughts on beard shadow.

That was two months ago and I’m still waiting for an answer. A few days ago, I wrote them on their facebook page via messenger. For days, all I got was an automated reply telling me to visit their website. So I left a bad review on their page and left them an angry message on messenger asking if their customer service sucked for everyone or only for trans women.

That’s when I finally got an answer, asking me to give them the email address I used to contact them in the first place.

I gave it to them and said I would not spend a dime on their products.

Bare minimum!

If you go to the drugstore and wander in the cosmetics section, you can be completely overwhelmed by the quantity of products and brands you will find. If you don’t know what you are looking for, it will be even worse.

So I decided to put together a little cheat sheet of what you should have in your makeup bag to cover all your needs. Keep in mind that I’m always trying to achieve a natural look, so I really go minimal here, but it’s a good base to build upon.

Skin preparation

Before we do anything on our face, it is important we prepare it properly. Here is what you will need:

  • Facial scrub: you know these facial soaps that used to have micro-beads and that got banned almost everywhere? Well now they make mother-earth friendly products! These will clear your pores from dirt and clear your face from all the dead skin. It’s important to have a clean face or else your makeup can look cakey and won’t stick as well.
  • Day cream: a good day cream and/or serum. Nivea does some very good stuff at decent prices. Usually a little goes a long way, so even the small pots give you a good run for the money. If you shop at Costco, they have very good products for very decent prices in their home brand too. Apply after cleaning your face.
  • Makeup base/primer: some daycream can double up as makeup bases. You can also use BB cream or primer to get some light coverage or color correction before you apply your makeup. There are lots of options here and you will learn what you need over time. For example, I use a yellow base to cancel some of the redness of my skin (I have rosacea) on top of an anti-redness face cream.

You can stick to a face scrub and a day cream, but the makeup base is a good extra to help your makeup stick better. I found a few amazing products that I will list in another post.

Tools, etc.

Before applying your makeup you will need tools to apply it, etc. I will break it down into a few categories:

  • Consumables: this is the part where you will spend a few bucks every now and then. Makeup sponges (the small disposable wedges), makeup remover pads, Q-Tips, facial tissues, etc.
  • Face tools: Blender sponges (the big egg shaped sponges), face brushes, etc. The blender sponges are kind of a must have, but I don’t use them that much. A good brush set should at least include: a foundation brush, a blending brush, a concealer/contour brush and a powder brush.
  • Eyes tools: forget about all the gadgets for now! You need 3 brushes to get started with your eyes: a blending brush, a flat shadow brush and a liner brush.

If you watch videos on youtube with 20 years old girl advertising big brands and you look up the price, be ready to cry. Brushes can cost a LOT! But I managed to find a few good deals on big brands at Winners and Marshall’s and also stumbled on some surprising brands that are really affordable. One of my best find so far is ecotools. I’m not affiliated with them in any way, but I got their « Daily Defined Eye Kit » at Winners the other day and the brushes are awesome and they sell for really cheap. I haven’t tried their face brushes, but I will definitely give them a run in the future. From what I can see on their website, their « Airbrush Complexion Kit » looks really good for the price.

Eventually we will get to the eyebrows and lashes and the tools that go with them, but that is for another day. Now it’s time to grt down to business.

Makeup

Now to the good part! Let’s keep it to the minimum because you could buy things forever. If you want to look more feminine, there is only a few things you need to do to. The main one is to erase the beard shadow. The second one is to make your skin look more feminine. I know some girls are happy with just some eyeliner and lipstick, but this is not the case for me. If, like me, you have to change that face of yours to feel good in your skin, then the following is for you.

  • Beard cover: this is not an official product name, because girls do not have beard. What you will be looking for is a product that will be either pink or orange and that will stain your skin. Usually you can find those shades in the color correctors. I tried many things and for my skintone, orange is what works best. You will also have the choice between liquid or cream. My personal choice there is cream because I find it sets better on my skin, and also because I find liquid ones tend to mess my foundation color after. NYX is making excellent full coverage concealers in peach and orange. But if you are in a pickle, a cheap lipstick of the appropriate color can do as well.
  • Loose powder: pick a pot of loose powder that roughly matches your skin tone. If you have redness problems, you can also go with a yellow powder. This powder is multi-use, but the main one is to set your makeup in place and bake the areas that are the most at risk of rubbing off, etc.
  • Setting spray: it’s like glue for your makeup. Not much to add there: spray it on your face to set your makeup. Some people also use it as a skin primer. It usually works both ways.
  • Matched concealer: a concealer that matches your skin tone. I like a liquid concealer for that application. You will put that in the T zone and in the under eye area. Some people also use a concealer as an eyeshadow base, but I personally don’t like it.
  • Foundation: your color matched foundation. As I always say, better go with something that has buildable coverage as it is more versatile.
  • Eye shadow base: makeup companies now make specialized products to prime your eye lids. I prefer those a lot as they can help the colors pop and keep your eye shadow from creasing much better than any concealer would. My absolute favorite is the MAC Painterly base, but it doesnt work well with everyone. My girlfriend, for example, cannot use it because it drags the skin of her eyelids. She needs something more liquid. There are a few good liquid and cream eyeshadow bases in the drugstores. Revlon makes a decent one that really helps with creasing.
  • Eye shadow palette: if you are not certain what to pick, I suggest you go with a « quad » or something similar. Quads are those small palettes that have 4 colors that go together. They are basically a look in a box. If you are not sure which colors to pick, nude shades are pretty much universal. Otherwise, stay tuned and I’ll cover eyeshadow in another post.
  • Contour/Highlight/Blush palette: you might not find it all in one palette. I try to avoid highlighters that have too much glitter (it’s a trend to look shiny it seems) but sometimes it does look good.
  • Mascara: everybody knows what that is. Maybelline’s Great Lash has been a reference in the drugstore brands for years. Cheap and effective!
  • Eyeliner: you need two black eyeliners. A black liquid liner pen and a black kajal liner pencil. NYX make some really good liner pens and pencils. Maybelline also has amazing liquid liners and pencils. Experiment with different products because most of the fun is in the eyes!
  • Lipstick: pick your color! I really love Maybelline’s matte lip ink. It’s a liquid lipstick with a built it applicator that lets you draw on your lips with precision and that turns, once set, practically indestructible.

Conclusion

This is what I put in my makeup bag. The full makeup routine take time to do and time to master. Your first attempts will be disappointing if not frustrating. Don’t worry: it’s part of the process! Before I end that post, a quick reminder: get some makeup remover. Fractionated coconut oil also works wonders!

Basic concepts: foundation coverage and color

You might all be tempted to use full coverage products right off the bat because you think it will hide your man’s face instantly. Well, take a minute before you buy and think about your skin and your intentions.

Coverage

First you have to understand that coverage is only in terms of color! It’s not some kind of putty that will fill up holes and erase your wrinkles! It can actually do the exact opposite and make any imperfection on your skin pop out! So if you have a baby’s skin, go crazy, but if you do not, then I suggest either a light to medium coverage foundation or, even better, a buildable coverage foundation (one you can layer until you reach the desired coverage).

You can also mix some of your foundation with your day cream or serum to give it some coverage. It’s surprising how it can actually help achieve a very natural look when you don’t feel like wearing a full makeup. It evens out and brighten the skin without hiding everything and making you look plastic.

Color

Then, you need to see your skin for what it is. Nobody has a perfectly even skin color. You have blood vessels, redness, etc. You have to pick a foundation that will match your general complexion. When in store, it is a good idea to try the samplers on the back of your hand and then compare in the mirror with your face! One step further would he to actually bring a mirror and go look at yourself in the sunlight. Don’t forget to blend the product on your skin!

In this picture you can see a lot of things I mentioned earlier. First, you can see that there is a slight different of shade between a fresh drop of foundation and a blended/dried foundation.

In the top picture, you can see how the skin color is not even: i have veins that show through, the redness of the skin is not even, etc.

In the bottom picture, you see the effect of a full coverage, matte foundation. It’s the back of my hand, but you can see that the skin texture is a lot more visible than in the top picture. Also, you can see that it litterally erases all the nuances in the skin tone: no more veins, no more uneven redness… personally, I think it doesn’t look very natural in person, but it looks good in pictures.

Concealer colors

I say colors (plural) because at some point, you will probably end up needing more than one concealer. If you had to get just one, ask yourself the question: do you have beard shadow to cover? If the answer is yes, well be patient because I will be covering (hahaha!) that topic in another post. Color correction is a topic on its own!

If the beard is not an issue (yet) and you simply want the basic concealer everyone need, it’s simple enough. Pick the color that is the closest to your skin tone as well! This will be used in the undereye area and the T-Zone (which is the nose and browbone area). You will be using it for a bunch of different things. It is your secret eraser. It helps you cleanup a messy eyeshadow job, etc.

Concealers usually come in cream or in liquid form. Depending on your skin type and the use, you might prefer one over the other. I personally love liquid concealers for most of the work, but for beard coverage, I prefer cream ones. If you go liquid, pick one with a built-in applicator as I find those are less wasteful. I have a MAC concealer, amazing product, but it’s a small pump and I never use a full pump. So every time, I waste a lot of product because it’s so stiff that it’s almost impossible not to do a full pump.

If you want to do contouring with your concealer, also get one that is two shades lighter than your skin and another one that is two or three shades darker as well. We will discuss contouring eventually, but this is just a hint if you plan on going on a shopping spree soon!

Thanks for reading! I hope this is helpful to some of you! My next post will be about color correction and beard cover! Stay tuned as this is a big one!

scxrletbxtch: documentingtrash: Somebody make that two button meme it’s good society’s made it so tr

scxrletbxtch:

documentingtrash:

Somebody make that two button meme

it’s good society’s made it so trans people are more accepted, but the rise in trans men very much has to do with these teenage girls thinking being trans is the new trend. they confuse body image issues, trauma, mental illness, etc for gender dysphoria. lots of it is fetishization of trans men too, peep all those uwu soft gay boi “trans guys” popping up lately. it’s all confusion.

i’m not saying any of this from a place of hate, but rather experience. i detransitioned from being a trans man. i’m lucky my insurance blocked my access to hormones or i would’ve fucked up my life entirely. i went to gender therapy too and every time i had an ounce of doubt about my identity, she continued to push being trans onto me. this is common for most gender therapists to do. it’s repulsive.

anyways that was my quick rant. rogd is real, though i agree the studies are lacking.

this is facts. i went through a trans phase for 3 whole years of my life. i think my about page even still says he/him bc i’ve been too lazy to change it to they/them. gender therapists are so afraid of going against the public agenda and getting complaints of transphobia against them that they’re afraid to question whether someone’s “dysphoria” could actually be a case of body dysmorphia, autism, etc. and someone was like “it’s ableist to think autistic people don’t have an understanding of their own identities,” but i genuinely didn’t before i had the autism diagnosis. i chalked up my blunt way of speaking and my being “different” to others to being trans. and i came to this conclusion of being trans after spending too much time on social media and seeing the “trans is beautiful” rhetoric everywhere.

there’s a major ethical dilemma in the medical field. planned parenthood currently provides HRT to legal adults on an “informed consent” basis, even offering same-day prescriptions to those applicable. this completely bypasses the first rule of receiving HRT found in the WPATH SOC7: a well-documented and persistent case of gender dysphoria. what happened to “live as your preferred identity for at least a year?” i lived as mine for THREE before realizing i wasn’t trans. fortunately i realized this right before becoming a legal adult so i dodged a bullet of mistakenly getting HRT, but what about the people that come to this conclusion too late? that turn 18, get a referral for hormones, and only THEN realize they’re not trans? the medical field needs to stop this “affirmative action” model for their patients where they affirm their gender identity and take action with no questions asked. the prohibitive model obviously is just as bad because people don’t take too kindly to you insinuating that they’re not who they say they are. clinicians need to thoroughly evaluate their patients and try to find a root cause of gender dysphoria just in case it happens to be influenced by other aspects such as social media, body dysmorphia, autism, etc. otherwise this is downright medical malpractice. i’m not by any means suggesting that transgenderism isn’t real— there are many who feel genuine dysphoria over being born in “the wrong body” and HRT and surgery ARE the best paths for them. but now that the frequency of trans referrals has surged in recent years due to almost aggressively positive coverage on social media, we need to take extra precautions to not misdiagnose someone, as it can be catastrophic.


Post link
loading