Makeup Touch Ups In Just 6 Simple Steps, According to Pros


So you’ve mastered your makeup routine—but the day isn’t slowing down, and neither is your schedule. Cue the art of makeup touch-ups: a few thoughtful tweaks can revive your glow, veil away midday shine, and keep your look feeling fresh from morning coffee to evening cocktails. The trick isn’t just repetition—it’s precision, choosing products that layer seamlessly over your existing base while enhancing your natural finish. Think of it as a mini reset for your complexion, a way to maintain a polished, camera-ready look no matter how long the day stretches.

Vogue’s Makeup Touch-Up Essentials

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The Luxe Blotting Paper

Chanel Papier Matifiant de Chanel blotting papers

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First things first, its best to know your skin type to plan your makeup refresh accordingly. “The best way to go about touch-ups is to learn how makeup typically performs on you throughout the day—you’ll start to notice a pattern of what things fade or start looking less fresh as time goes on,” says celebrity makeup artist Melissa Murdick, noting that if you’re out and about in the heat, you can expect your glam to have a shorter life span. So when should your glam refresh begin? Whenever your look goes from airbrushed to a little too lived in—think smudging, creasing, and product settling into fine lines. Murdick suggests taking a gander at yourself in your phone camera every so often to see how your makeup look is holding up.

But say you like a hard and fast rule—while there’s no pre-packaged makeup touch-up kit, there are some general guidelines. “Go as long as you can before reapplying, though around three hours after initial application is when touch-ups are usually needed,” says pro makeup artist Kasey Spickard. “Overall, less is always more when you’re touching up. If you overload on more makeup products, you run the risk of creating a cakey complexion.” Below, Murdick and Spickard give us step-by-step guide to quick makeup touch-ups, easy enough for beginners, with pro tips and hacks along the way.

Step One: Start with Oil Control

“When it comes to managing oily skin, you want to avoid caking your makeup at all costs,” says Murdick, who recommends always starting a touch-up routine by blotting away excess oil. “This keeps your makeup from getting heavy and patchy-looking.” She reaches for Paula’s Choice Shine Stopper Gel, gently tapping it onto oily areas for an instant matte finish.

Spickard agrees, adding that using a mattifying primer before your initial makeup application helps to “stop shine before it starts,” reducing makeup slippage throughout the day. When it comes to mid-day touch-ups, she prefers blotting papers—Chanel and Tatcha both offer luxurious options. As for the viral Revlon volcanic roller, Spickard advises a careful hand: “While it’s great on the go, too heavy a touch can cause makeup to lift.”

Chanel

Papier Matifiant de Chanel blotting papers

Tatcha

Aburatorigami Japanese blotting papers

Paula’s Choice

Shine Stopper Instant Matte Finish

Revlon Oil-Absorbing Volcanic Roller

Step Two: Spritz on a Hydrating Mist

Before moving on to color cosmetics, there’s one skin-centric step worth prioritizing: swap the setting spray touch-ups for a hydrating mist. “Refreshing your face with a hydrating mist reactivates makeup and allows for movement without patchiness—it should also revive any setting spray already applied, so less is more,” says Spickard. “After a few spritzes, I’ll take a damp Beautyblender—though any sponge will do—and buff everything out across my client’s face.” Murdick agrees, noting that setting sprays are best left for the initial application only.



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