The Philadelphia Inquirer

January 3, 2002 Thursday CITY-D EDITION
A makeup book for women of Asian descent – and all othersRod Stafford Hagwood KNIGHT RIDDER NEWS SERVICE

Asian American women traditionally have had to rely on beauty guides that
enhance the features of white women.

Yet makeup artist Margaret Kimura says all women can learn some valuable
lessons from women of Asian descent.

“I didn’t have any role models from a visual standpoint, other than my
mother or my older sister,” Kimura says. “So to me, role models were more about
character. Audrey Hepburn has always been a role model. So has Oprah
Winfrey.

“To me, it was about who really shows a great deal of character and inner
beauty. That makes them exude outer beauty.”

So while her book, Asian Beauty (HarperResource), written with Marianne
Dougherty, gives tips and advice that enhance the beauty of Asian women,
Kimura is adamant that the book works for all women.

“We Asians have a lot of yellow in our skin,” says Kimura, who has worked
with diverse clients such as Winona Ryder, Ray Charles and Arnold
Schwarz-enegger. “That is the main connection between all Asians. But I
have found that a Caucasian woman living in a Japanese village and eating the
Japanese diet is going to have the same problems as a Japanese woman. And
the same is true with an Asian woman living here, and eating McDonald’s, and
living this life.

“Our needs are based on diet, climate, and things like stress levels.
It’s all relative, really. I just want to break the stereotype that all Asian
women look like Suzie Wong. I wrote this book from a consumer standpoint because
of the fact that there was not one place where I could buy everything or have
one person help me.”

Kimura proposes a “shadows and light” technique to use colors for
dramatic effects that will also translate from office to evening for women of every
hue.

She also encourages Asian women to not be shy with color because their
skin tones can pull it off better than most other women can.

Kimura includes a useful breakdown of the uses of various brushes and
tools.

Here are a few tips that address common Asian features:

Lips Asian women have full, balanced lips, so enhance them with color.

Eyes. Use a tapered contour crease brush for shadow that will help create
depth and size.

Lashes. Asian women usually have stubborn, straight lashes, so use a blow
dryer to heat the lash curler before trying to shape them.

Cheekbones. Create definition in a rounder face by applying highlight to
the “apple” portion of the cheek and shadow below it.