The End of an Era: So Long, Instagram Face
Remember the mid-2010s? It was the golden age of the YouTube beauty guru and the 'Instagram Face.' Red carpet makeup was an architectural feat defined by its opacity. It involved thick, matte foundations that promised zero imperfections, concealer applied in heavy triangles and 'baked' with powder, and contour sharp enough to cut glass. Brows were perfectly sculpted, pomade-filled arches, and lips were almost exclusively matte, dried down from a liquid tube. It was a bold, transformative look that was undeniably powerful. This was glam at its most structured, designed to look flawless under harsh lights and through a phone screen. But like all dominant trends, its reign was destined to end, not with a bang, but with a soft, diffused whisper.
Meet 'Cloud Skin': The New Red Carpet Standard
Enter the new reigning champion: a look best described as 'cloud skin.' This isn’t the ultra-dewy, bordering-on-wet 'glass skin' trend of years past, nor is it the stark matte of the full-coverage era. Cloud skin occupies a dreamy middle ground. The finish is luminous but soft-focus, like sunlight diffusing through a cloud. It’s about creating a velvet-matte texture that still allows the skin’s natural dimension to shine through. Think less about masking and more about enhancing. Makeup artists achieve this by meticulously prepping the skin with hydrating serums and moisturizers, using lightweight foundations and concealers only where needed, and swapping harsh powder for finely milled setting sprays and blurring powders. The result is a complexion that looks perfected yet impossibly real, radiant without being greasy, and soft without being flat.
The Trend on Display at the AMAs
The American Music Awards red carpet served as the perfect runway for this aesthetic shift. Take Dove Cameron, whose makeup was a masterclass in the cloud skin trend. Her complexion was ethereal and glowing, with a soft-focus finish that looked airbrushed but still retained the texture of real skin. There was no harsh contour in sight; instead, a gentle flush of blush melted seamlessly into her base. Similarly, artists like Anitta and Sabrina Carpenter showcased looks that prioritized radiance over coverage. Their skin looked healthy, hydrated, and lit-from-within. Even artists known for more dramatic looks, like Pink, opted for a base that was luminous and fresh, allowing her features to be the star rather than the makeup itself. The common thread was a rejection of heavy layers in favor of a breathable, believable glow that felt both modern and timeless.
Why We're Craving Softer Glam
This move toward softer beauty isn’t happening in a vacuum. It’s a direct reflection of a broader cultural shift. After years of lockdowns where many of us ditched makeup entirely, there's a collective fatigue with high-maintenance routines. We’ve grown accustomed to seeing our own faces, imperfections and all. This has fueled the 'skinimalism' movement, which prioritizes skincare over makeup and celebrates a less-is-more approach. Furthermore, the hyper-filtered, digitally altered 'Instagram Face' has started to feel dated and inauthentic. TikTok, with its emphasis on unfiltered personalities and quick, achievable trends, has championed a more relaxed and realistic vision of beauty. Cloud skin is the perfect red carpet translation of this new mood: it’s still polished and glamorous, but it’s a glam that celebrates, rather than conceals, the person wearing it.















