Blush Placement is a placement technique, not a product — the same shades applied in different zones produce completely different results depending on face shape. On a inverted triangle face, an inverted triangle face carries the most width at the forehead and temples, narrowing sharply through the cheekbones to a fine, sometimes delicate jaw and chin. it differs from a heart shape in that the taper is generally more linear and the chin is less sharply pointed.
Technique
Technique: Color applied to the apples of the cheeks and blended toward a specific point (temple, ear, or cheekbone) depending on whether the goal is lifting, widening, or lengthening the face.
The Goal on This Shape
The goal on this shape: Direct the eye along a specific line to counteract the face's natural proportions For a inverted triangle face specifically, that means working with the fact that broad, the clear widest point of the face at the top and notably narrow, often the face's most delicate feature at the bottom — blush placement is one of the few tools that can adjust that relationship without any permanent change.
Where to Apply It
Where to apply it: Minimize width at the forehead and temples while building width or structure at the jaw, using volume, texture, or facial hair to bring the lower face into closer proportion with the upper face. Concentrate the technique on whichever measurement is currently working against that goal, and use a light hand — placement makes the difference here, not product quantity.