With mineral makeup, your brushes make all the difference. Not the number of products, but the right brush per step determines how even, natural and long-lasting your result will be. That's why our brush collection is structured as a set 5-step routine.
Step 1 - Primer buffing
The first step is all about smoothing. A primer should be worked into the skin, not left on top of it.
Brush: Bestie - Kabuki Brush
The dense, soft bristles buff primer evenly into the skin and create a smooth base without streaks. This ensures that everything that follows blends more beautifully.
Step 2 - Place concealer precisely.
Concealer requires control. Too coarse and you move your base; too small and it takes unnecessary time.
Brush: Double Agent - Concealer & Buffing Brush.
The angled tip is perfect for under eyes and targeted areas. The rounded side blurs edges seamlessly, so concealer becomes part of your skin.
Step 3 - Build foundation evenly
With mineral foundation, buffing is essential. Layers provide coverage, not pressure.
Brush: Bestie - Kabuki Brush
This brush picks up minerals well and works them into the skin in a controlled manner. You build coverage where needed without making it look heavy.
Step 4 - Apply warmth and shape
After the base, you bring warmth back into the face. This requires a brush that follows, not draws.
Brush: Glowmate or Sculptress
Glowmate gives a soft, sunkissed finish. Sculptress combines warmth and definition thanks to its angled shape and controlled density.
Step 5 - Fixing and softening.
The final step is all about bringing together. Setting powder should fix without ruining your work.
Brush: Glowmate or Bestie
With light pressure, blend everything together and fix your look without a cakey effect.
Why this brush routine works
Each brush is designed for one main task within the routine. Shape, density and flexibility are tailored to what that step needs. As a result, you use less product, make fewer mistakes and your makeup looks calmer and more natural.
This routine shows how our brushes are meant to be: not as separate tools, but as a collaborative system.






























