Time to blush: Looking back on the decade’s best and most awkward makeup trends

The 2010s were known for both simple and dramatic makeup trends. Instagram/@huda
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Updated 25 December 2019
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Time to blush: Looking back on the decade’s best and most awkward makeup trends

DUBAI: The 2010s were known for both simple and dramatic makeup trends, but are they all worth carrying into the 2020s? 

Eyeliner




Instagram/@rahmanbeauty

Eyeliner was a go-to product during the 2010s — celebrities and makeup lovers covered their lids with thick streaks of eyeliner and extended it to their lash lines to define their eyes during this era. It was a marked difference from the minimalism of the previous decade.   

Eyebrows

From Instagram-perfect to bushy and thick, eyebrows have seen major changes during the 2010s with the most recent trend being microblading — a tattooing procedure that uses tiny needles to add semi-permanent pigment to the skin. 




Instagram/@themayaahmad

Contouring




Instagram/@kimkardashian

Contouring is the technique of using darker cream or powder-based products to create dimension and define the facial structure. It is a trend that kicked off during the middle of the decade.  

Baking




Instagram/@hudabeauty

No, it is not baking a cake — it is baking your makeup. Baking your makeup is the process of applying powder under your eyes for a crease-free finish. 

Lashes




Instagram/@soniaxfyza

A good lash day is a good day. The 2010s were all about bold, eye-catching lashes. Huda Kattan, founder of Huda Beauty, built an empire on the trend.  

Strobing




Instagram/@dimasheikhly

The 2010s are ending with a sparkle. Makeup addicts are all about glowing skin, which they attain using the strobing technique. Strobing is applying light, shimmery shades on the higher planes of the face. 


Mahmoud Sabbagh’s dark comedy scores new digital release deal

Updated 11 sec ago
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Mahmoud Sabbagh’s dark comedy scores new digital release deal

DUBAI: Saudi director Mahmoud Sabbagh has secured an agreement with digital film distributor and aggregator Under the Milky Way for the international digital release of his feature “Last Party in R. Desert,” according to Deadline.

The dark comedy marks the Saudi film pioneer’s third feature, following his breakthrough 2016 comedy-romance “Barakah Meets Barakah.” The film debuted on Netflix last July.

Under the new deal, “Last Party in R. Desert” will be released across multiple international territories on Apple TV, Google Play and Prime Video. The rollout will begin in the UK, Ireland and other English-speaking markets on Feb. 2, followed by a launch in the US and Canada on Feb. 3.

The film centers on Najm, a cash-driven local impresario and son of a renowned wedding singer, who is struggling to keep his music troupe afloat amid professional tensions and a shifting night scene in contemporary Saudi Arabia.

Abdullah Al-Barrak stars as Najm opposite acting and singing star Marwa Salem, who plays Cola, the troupe’s new lead female singer. The cast also includes the late actor Sami Hanafi as Silver, the professional sound engineer, and renowned local musician Radwan Jifri as oud player Tarefi.

The film is expected to expand to subscription and ad-supported platforms later this year.

Sabbagh wrote and directed the feature and serves as producer under his Jeddah-based El-Housh Productions, in co-production with Cairo- and Dubai-based boutique production company Nine Project.