Eva’s “Invisible” Trick: Hiding Smile Lines by Using Less Product
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Eva felt confident leaving her house. She had spent 20 minutes perfecting her base, covering every imperfection. But when she flipped down the car visor mirror in natural sunlight, her heart sank.
The makeup hadn’t hidden her smile lines (nasolabial folds). Instead, it had settled into them, creating two deep, cracked crevices that looked like dried plaster. She looked five years older than she did without makeup.
This frustrating experience in the car mirror is a classic sign of “cakey” makeup, where product settles into texture instead of smoothing over it. While Eva’s trick solves the smile line, this problem can happen all over the face. We cover the complete strategy in our guide on how to stop makeup from looking cakey & patchy.
Like many women over 35, Eva thought the solution to deep lines was more coverage. She was wrong.
The “Heavy Cover” Mistake
The area around your mouth is the most dynamic part of your face. You talk, eat, and smile. When you pile thick concealer directly into that fold, the constant movement causes the makeup to break and separate.
It acts like grout between tiles—highlighting the very line you are trying to hide.
The Shift: Optical Illusion vs. Coverage
Eva learned a technique from a pro makeup artist that changed everything. The goal isn’t to “fill” the crack, but to brighten the shadow around it to create an optical illusion of smoothness.
Here is how Eva’s old routine compares to her new, game-changing technique:
| Feature | The “Old” Habit (What Eva Did) | Eva’s New Technique |
| Placement | Painting concealer directly inside the deep line. | Applying product above and below the line, leaving the crease bare. |
| Texture | Thick, matte concealer for “maximum coverage.” | Lightweight, light-reflecting formula. |
| The Result | Makeup cracks and settles within 1 hour. | The product moves with the skin; no cracking. |
| Visual Effect | The line looks deeper and “cakey.” | The shadow is lifted, making the line disappear visually. |
The “Gap” Technique: How to Apply It
To replicate Eva’s results, follow this specific order. It feels counter-intuitive to leave the line bare, but trust the process.

1. Intense Localized Prep
Before any pigment touches your face, apply a tiny amount of squalane oil or a hydrating primer specifically to the smile lines. Dry skin creates cracks. You need this area to be slippery and hydrated.
Eva’s first step highlights that proper hydration is non-negotiable for flexible makeup. Many modern products are designed to create a hydrated, tacky base for makeup to hold onto. We explored whether these new-generation formulas really work in our review: Are gripping primers like Milk Makeup’s Hydro Grip actually effective?
2. The “Bracket” Placement
Take a shade slightly lighter than your skin tone. Do not draw on the line.
Instead, draw a small whisker of concealer just above the shadow (near the nostril) and a small whisker just below the shadow (near the lip). You are essentially “bracketing” the wrinkle.

3. The Feather Blend
Using a damp Makeup Sponge or a fluffy brush, gently tap the product toward the line. You want the edges of the concealer to fade into the fold, providing a sheer veil of light rather than a thick layer of pigment.
4. Skip the Powder (Mostly)
Eva used to “bake” this area with heavy powder, which instantly aged her. Now, she either skips powder entirely in this zone or uses a microscopic amount of translucent powder on a small brush, pressing it in only once.
The Result
Eva can now smile, laugh, and talk without worrying about her makeup cracking. By using less product strategically, she erased the shadow without suffocating her skin.
Have you checked your smile lines in the car mirror lately?
Try the “Bracket” technique tomorrow morning and see the difference. Share your results or ask questions in the comments below!






