A celebrity makeup artist breaks down the five-step layering system that keeps foundation, eyes, and lips intact when temperatures spike.
It is humid. It is hot. And if you have ever watched a full face of makeup dissolve somewhere between the parking lot and the front door, you already know the problem.
For a celebrity makeup artist who works high-profile events in some of the country’s most unforgiving climates, summer skin is not just a beauty inconvenience. It is a technical challenge with a specific solution. As the ESSENCE Festival of Culture draws thousands of attendees to New Orleans each year, she has refined a five-step method that keeps foundation from breaking down, mascara from migrating, and lips from fading before the first performance ends.
The approach starts with one central idea: less product holds better in heat. The skin-first trend, which prioritizes a natural, understated look over full coverage, has grown partly because lighter formulas simply survive warmer conditions longer. Clients request softer, more minimal finishes as temperatures climb, and that instinct is correct.
The five-step method, explained
Step one: prime with mattification in mind
The first line of defense is a mattifying primer applied before anything else. Options like the Danessa Myricks Yummy Skin Blurring Balm Powder are reliable because they manage natural oil production and create a surface that foundation can actually grip. Those with dry skin may lean toward a hydrating primer instead, which keeps the base from looking parched as the day wears on.
Step two: reach for a skin tint, not a foundation makeup
After priming, the goal is coverage that breathes. A lightweight skin tint layered over a creamy concealer handles most of what a full-coverage foundation would, without the weight that melts fastest in humid air. Products like the Tarte Shape Tape Full-Coverage Concealer or the NARS Radiant Creamy Concealer can spot-treat discoloration underneath, while the skin tint blends it all together naturally.
Step three: the setting powder step you cannot skip
Skipping setting powder is the single most common reason summer makeup fails. The comparison holds: it is like finishing a painting without a sealant. The Laura Mercier Translucent Setting Powder absorbs moisture and locks the base in place without adding a heavy, cakey texture. This step is what separates a face that lasts four hours from one that lasts twelve.
Step four: go waterproof on eyes and lips makeup
Eye products require a different standard in summer conditions. Waterproof liner options like the Danessa Myricks Linework Eyeliner and volume-building mascaras designed to resist humidity, such as the Too Faced Better Than Sex Volumizing Mascara, are the baseline for eyes. For lips, matte or waterproof formulas hold best. If a non-waterproof lipstick is unavoidable, pressing a light layer of powder over the upper lip creates a barrier against sweat and keeps the color from bleeding.
Step five: lock everything in with setting spray
The final step determines how well everything else holds. A setting spray acts as a flexible film over the entire face, preventing products from separating or shifting throughout the day. The MAC Prep + Prime Fix+ Setting Spray is a strong option, though the right formula depends on skin type. Oily skin benefits from a matte-finish spray, while drier skin does better with something that adds a touch of hydration back into the finish.
What makes the summer makeup system work
The logic behind all five steps follows the same principle: each layer either absorbs what the next layer produces or seals what the previous layer applied. Primer controls oil before it reaches foundation. Powder absorbs moisture before it loosens pigment. Setting spray holds everything in place once the rest is done.
This is not about spending more or using more product. It is about sequencing what you already have in a way that accounts for the actual conditions you are walking into. At a summer festival in New Orleans, those conditions are unforgiving.

