Blue eyeshadow across time: How the iconic makeup look refuses to fade
From Twiggy to Paris Hilton, this hue has proven it's got more lives than a cat with a good contour
KARACHI:
Move over, red lipstick. Step aside, winged eyeliner. There's a beauty maverick that's been serving looks since your grandmother's first dance, and it's not going anywhere.
One shade that has repeatedly batted its cerulean lashes at us, refusing to be relegated to the back of the makeup drawer. Blue eyeshadow, that audacious hue that's been both celebrated and side-eyed, has proven itself to be the chameleon of the cosmetic world. It's the colour that launched a thousand looks, from silver screen sirens to punk rock rebels, always managing to keep us on our toes – or should we say, on our lids?
Remember Isabella Rossellini in David Lynch's Blue Velvet (1986)? Of course, you do. Her lids adorned with a deep, mysterious blue that's as captivating as it is unsettling. Lynch didn't just use blue eyeshadow; he weaponised it, turning a beauty staple into a symbol of film noir's seductive danger. It was the '80s equivalent of a femme fatale's loaded gun - beautiful, deadly, and impossible to look away from.
Rewind to the '60s, and you'll find Twiggy batting those famous lashes over a wash of pastel blue. If Pfeiffer's look was a power suit, Twiggy's was a mini skirt – revolutionary, youth-driven, and impossible to ignore. Her doe-eyed gaze, amplified by that perfect baby blue, was quick to become a cultural reset button, ushering in an era where bigger was better, at least when it came to eyes. Her blue-tinged gaze became the face of a generation, proving that sometimes, a little dab of colour can go a long way in making history.
The makeup look would take a moody turn decades later — ‘90s to be specific. Vincent Gallo’s cult classic Buffalo '66 paralleled the grunge and angst of the decade by dressing blue eyeshadow in an almost melancholic persona.
Christina Ricci's character sported a shade of blue that was less "party girl" and more "girl who's contemplating the existential dread of existence... but make it fashion." This wasn't your standard smokey eye; it was a smokey eye that had been through some things, seen some stuff, and came out looking hauntingly beautiful.
But just when we thought blue eyeshadow couldn't get any bolder, the early 2000s said "Hold my shimmer." Enter Paris Hilton, the hotel heiress turned reality TV star who made frosty blue eyeshadow as essential to going out as a flip phone and low-rise jeans.
Paris's take on the trend was pure Y2K excess – think metallic, think glittery, think "Is this eyeshadow or did a Smurf explode on my face?" Possibly, no one must have screamed "That's hot" louder than Paris ever did in her era.
Let's face it: blue eyeshadow is the Madonna of the makeup world - constantly reinventing itself, refusing to fade into obscurity, and sparking controversy with every comeback. From Twiggy's mod moment to Paris Hilton's Y2K glitter explosion, this hue has proven it's got more lives than a cat with a good contour.
So next time you're feeling bold (or just nostalgic for literally any decade since the '60s), why not take blue for a spin? Whether you're channeling Rossellini’s unhinged songstress or Ricci's grunge dream, remember: in a world of neutral palettes, sometimes it pays to be the peacock. After all, nothing says "I'm not here to blend in" quite like a streak of blue across your lids.
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