Glitter, chaos and expression: How Euphoria turned makeup into a mood, not a rulebook

Sneha Kumari | Apr 16, 2026, 14:56 IST
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The rise of Euphoria-inspired makeup marks a shift from perfection to self-expression. Bold colours, glitter, and experimental looks have replaced rigid beauty rules, especially across social media.
X | @euphoriacentral | How Euphoria Turned Makeup Into a Mood<br><br>
Image credit : X | @euphoriacentral | How Euphoria Turned Makeup Into a Mood
Somewhere between a rushed mirror selfie and a late-night scroll, beauty quietly changed.

Around the same time, Euphoria lit up the screen; something clicked. It stopped being about symmetry. About blending until everything disappeared. About looking like you tried...without looking like you tried.

And then suddenly, there was glitter under the eyes. Neon liner that didn't match anything. Tiny rhinestones placed exactly where they shouldn't be.

It wasn't accidental. It was intentional chaos.

X | @PopBase | The Beauty Shift We Didn’t See Coming


When makeup becomes a mood, not a routine

For the longest time, makeup came with rules. Conceal this, highlight that, and blend until flawless. But then shows like Euphoria flipped the script.

The characters didn't wear makeup to look "better". They wrote it to feel louder. Messier, softer, angrier and braver.

Behind those looks was Doniella Davy, who treated every face like a story instead of a checklist. A tear-shaped glitter detail wasn't just pretty; it meant something. A smudged liner wasn’t a mistake; it was emotion.

And that idea stuck.

Instagram, where every look turns into a scroll-stopping piece of art

It's like whenever you open TikTok or Instagram, you will see it everywhere.

Not polished tutorials that take hours. But real, messy, playful attempts. Someone trying graphic eyeliner for the first time. Someone layering colours just because they felt like it and someone adding glitter at 2 a.m. because, why not?

There's something comforting about that. Because it tells you that you don't need to "get it right". You just need to start. A shaky line? Fine. Uneven rhinestones? Even better. Too much shimmer? There’s no such thing anymore.

X | @euphoriacentral | How Euphoria Turned Makeup Into a Mood
Image credit : X | @euphoriacentral | How Euphoria Turned Makeup Into a Mood


Winged liner vs clean girl: We have seen a generational shift

Bold, dramatic, winged eyeliner, once a signature look popularised by millennial icons like Taylor Swift and Ariana Grande, has evolved into more than just a beauty trend; it now reflects a generational identity. While that sharp, defined liner spoke to precision and polish, today’s “clean girl” aesthetic leans towards minimal makeup, dewy skin, and understated features.

This shift highlights how beauty preferences are becoming more fluid and personal, moving away from bold, structured looks to softer, more effortless expressions of self.

From fixing flaws to expressing feeling: Beauty, redefined

What makes this shift matter isn't just how it looks; it's how it feels. Makeup once used to be about fixing, covering and adjusting. Now, it's about adding, expressing and expanding.

Some days, that means a bare face and lip balm, while other days, it's electric blue liner and glitter tears. Both are valid, and both are you.

And that's the whole point. There's no single version of "put together" anymore.

X | @euphoriacentral | From Blending In to Standing Out: Beauty’s Biggest Shift Yet
Image credit : X | @euphoriacentral | From Blending In to Standing Out: Beauty’s Biggest Shift Yet


The bigger picture nobody talks about

This isn’t just a beauty trend. It’s a mindset shift.

We are living in a world where everything is hyper-visible. Photos, stories, reels, everything is documented. And for a while, that visibility came with pressure to look perfect all the time.

But this wave of expressive makeup? It pushes back.

It says you can be visible and imperfect. Creative and inconsistent. Put together an experiment.

It gives you permission to show up as a work in progress.
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