- Hi guys, welcome back to my channel. It's your girl Jackie Aina. Right now, more than ever, I feel like everybody
is nostalgia obsessed. Nineties, Y2K, Sean
John making a come back, Ecko Unltd is making a comeback. What the hell, next you're
gon' bring back your edges? (intense music) - Oh woo. (intense music) - I just feel like we're seeing all of the regurgitated ways
that we used to vibe, dress, do makeup, being reinvented, especially on apps like Tik Tok. So today I thought, (claps) (chuckling) why not join it on the fun? But I'm actually gonna
do that with a twist. I'm gonna compare makeup from 10 years ago versus makeup to how it's done now. Basically, I'm just gonna
show a side by side comparison of how I would do my makeup now, versus how I did my makeup when
I first started my channel, based on what was popular,
and what was trending. Now I'm obviously not gonna
use the exact same products because they would be expired, and that would be really disgusting. But I am gonna basically
do the same layering, do the same style, use
the same color schemes, and so on and so forth. I'm gonna just try to go with the vibe. First of all, before we
get started by the way, if you aren't already a part
of the Jackie Aina family, you sure the hell should be. What you're not gonna
do is keep on watching, stealing my tips, and
throwing them on Tik Tok, 'cause I know y'all love doin' that, I know y'all love doin' that too though. 2009, when I started my channel 'cause you know, I love remindin' people I've been on YouTube for 11 years child. - What? That is shocking. - Was a lot of heavy
makeup, it was really matte. If you didn't work at MAC,
we couldn't be friends. It was like very that kinda vibe. Everything was pretty much
impacted by what Kim K and Mario Dedivanovic
were doing and wearing at that time on the red carpets. Makeup was really heavy versus now, it's a little bit lighter,
a little bit cleaner. We're going into more like
less is more, skincare's cool. Full glam is still very popular in a vibe, but it's done in a different way. So the first thing that I'm gonna do on the 2009 side are my brows. I was definitely a brows
before foundation kinda gal. It took me years to get
accustomed to doing a full face of makeup and then doing
my brows on top of it. It just felt weird, I didn't like it. I also used to do my
brows really really bold, and really dark, and also really lo-- It was just brow. It was like the more
noticeable my brow could be, the better. Now one thing that I definitely will say is that doing the brows on bare skin it still really is the
best, it does make points. It does make an encyclopedia
of points, I can't lie. I guess it just depends
on like what you want your makeup to look like, because I feel like once you
do it on bare skin first, it kinda gives this particular look. Also this is the phase where I did not like brow powders at all. I found them to be extremely useless. You need to ban them in 50 States. Like I just found brow powder completely just not, it was just not for me. I respected, but it wasn't me. I would just fill in my
whole brow with pencil, not knowin' what the
hell I was doin' clearly. I do love the fact, y'all see (indistinct)
in the back there though, yeah, oh my bad that's caked up. I do love the fact that
like no matter what phase I've gone through with
makeup, I always look like me. You know? Like I've always embraced what was there, and I've always just
wanted to look like me. Now, this was unfortunately
the very tragic year of the concealer brow. And I'm not judging, I'm not
judging if you still do it, I'm not judging you. This was probably one of the areas I was the least proud of back then, because it just looked so, blocky. It definitely gave the girls blockeesha. I don't like it anymore,
I don't like it no more. With every makeup trend, and
even sometimes with people, it served a purpose, and
then it came and it went. Just like college professors,
colleagues, ex friends. (slamming door) I think that we as a society
have progressed past the need for doing concealers to shape our brows. But like I said, they
served their purpose, and now we've evolved, and we've moved on, we've learned better. When I honestly learned
this trick right here I thought I was gonna be
booking Met Gala gigs. I honestly thought it was
over for the rest of y'all because I was just like oh, oh, oh, oh, I can already do
everything else, now brows? Now I'm doin' this. Who you know doin' this with they brows? I mean, everybody else was,
but that's beside the point. I didn't know that back then. I honestly really thought I was about to get the Nobel Peace Prize for learning how to do my brows like this. Now, if you really wanna be nostalgic you have to do a lighter concealer on the top and the bottom. That was really just the look back then. It looked like almost like a fresh wax, but not in a good way. This actually doesn't look bad. I'm definitely a girl that can do both. But normally I would do like
my complexion and then my brow. But like I said, for
the sake of the video, I'm gonna do the brow anyway first. And I'm using the same brow pencil, however, I'm gonna slightly
thin out the shape. You know, my brows were
just really excited about life back then. They were just really excited to be here. Fun fact, actually really sad fact. I used to tweeze my brows a
lot when I was like 10, 11. And I tweezed them all the way off, but it was because I had
really, really thick brows, like unibrow stats you know? You know, the years and
years and years and years and years and years of thinking
I knew how to groom my brows when I absolutely did not, it really did compromise
the thickness of my brows. So they obviously don't
grow in the same now, but I really had some
nice full brows back then. Say a prayer for my brows,
my 10 year old brows. And I'm gonna fill in my
brow with brow powder. I just feel like this just
gives a more believable brow. And also when you are using pencil you can't really get every single hair. So I would run into
this problem where like I'd take a picture and my
brows would be filled in but they'd still look transparent. Do you know what I'm talking about? Yeah, if you use brow powder you will not have to
worry about that at all. It literally grips and holds
onto every single hair, it's incredible. 2009, you definitely needed a concealer that was about four or five shades lighter than your natural complexion. It was really hard to
find intense pigmented really stand out eye shadows that could work on dark
complexions back then. So our little tip and hack
for getting them to show up on our skin tones was doing this. You would use a really
really light concealer, or you would use something
that was white based, like a white cream based product like the NYX Jumbo Milk Pencils. If you did not have a Jumbo Milk Pencil just deactivate your channel
and move to Canada please. - [Woman] Oh, I will do that either way. - I don't know how to say this. Literally in 2009, you just
had to throw the deepest, darkest, mattest, black eyeshadow
you can get your hands on, and give the girls red carpet smokey eye. Disregard the fact that you're
just going to Trader Joe's and it's Wednesday, that's not the point. So the easiest way to do this is to basically create like a gradient. I would start with my crease color, which is usually got something
that's like brownish in it, and cooler toned. Then I'm gonna take a dark
gray shade, but not too dark, you want it to be kind of
like mid tone, grayish. You're basically going from the lightest color to the darkest. So just below that crease color, I'm gonna start blending that in. If you pulled up to the
scene with this eye look, baby you was bagging. You was pulling weight, okay. You was packing heat. Now this is something
that would literally take probably like 45 minutes to do. I just did this in three minutes just now. The way the talent be jumpin' out though. Now I'm gonna take something creamy based. I don't have any like cream shadow sticks, I dunno what happened to 'em, I think I throw 'em all the way, oops. But I do have the
Danessa Myricks Colorfix. And I think this is a matte finish which I want it to be a
little bit more creamier, but for this tutorial it'll work. Because the eye look
ultimately will be matte. And this is in the shade blackout. Treading very lightly, I'm going to take blackout and
start blending that as close to my lash line, and then
start blending my way upwards because we wanna create
like a gradient effect. Oh, perfect, it's doin'
exactly what I need it to do. Now this was another reason why a lot of us used to do our eyes first because we explored a lot with color, we explored a lot with different textures. Back then a lot of loose pigments
were heavily on rotation. The bottom part we have to do when we finish the rest of the face, so I'm just gonna leave this alone, and get rid of the
fallout using Pats wipe, these things are so big, I'll probably only need this
wipe for the next three days. Just this one, just this
one wipe for three days. Okay, so we clean up the
fallout with like one wipe or you can use makeup remover,
micellar water, whatever. Not like you're gonna
wear this look anyway. I mean, I would hope not. (intense music) But if you do, I'm not here to judge, maybe not to your face. So anyway, on 2020 side, nowadays I truthfully tend
to be a little bit more relaxed when it comes to my eye looks. I also don't use shimmer
as much as I used to. At least not this year. I use a lot of mattes. I do a lot of multi purposing. So the same thing I'll use to bronze, I'll throw in my crease. I'll also use like my
highlighter as a center shade, and literally get out the house. Like, first of all, I
don't got time at all, all right, get me the hell out. I care less and less
about color payoff now, and more just about a really
seamless flawless look. So I'm gonna take a brown shade, a shade that kind of like
just matches my complexion, or a little bit darker. And go into my crease with that color. I'll either just use like
a matte mid-tone caramel brown color, a bronzer shade, just basically anything
dark brown at this point 'cause I don't care. Also I use tools less frequently. I had to have a crease
brush, outer corner brush, I'd have to have a lid brush, inner V brush, a bottom liner brush. And yeah, nowadays that's still true. In today's climate of today's society, I'll use like one brush
for like three things. I won't necessarily change my brush from my outer V and my crease color. Or I'll even use my outer V brush for what I apply on my lid, which is what I'm about to do right now. And all I'm gonna do is take
this beige shade right here. She's about a NC50, and I'm
gonna sweep her on my lid. As you can see, I'm not even
caring about color payoff because this has just
really become my signature. I hate to call it age appropriate makeup, because I don't necessarily believe there's restrictions
based on how old you are. That's not at all what I'm saying. I do feel like there's some truth to, I do my makeup the way that I feel inside. You know what I mean? Like I just feel at 33, I'm sophisticated, I'm cosmopolitan, I'm chic. I gots places to be. In order for me to really give you a look, I don't need my makeup to speak as loudly for me as I used
to, if that makes sense. I now can dress a certain way, I can afford better clothes
now, is that bad to say? But I really do feel like, okay, makeup can kinda like
take a back seat to this. You've paid your dues, you've
done the time to do the crime. I just don't need my makeup
to be as stand outish anymore, I'm in a different phase of my life. And that's also why a
lot of people are like, why don't you just (speaks gibberish), why don't you just do that, why don't you just be more creative. I had a whole freaking
decade of doin' that, I'm over it, you probably
just started doin' makeup two days ago and you assume that everybody else is
in the same phase as you. That's not the case, all right. Catch up mustards Okay, I don't know why I just
went so gangster just there. I'm just saying I'm in a
different place in my life where my makeup is just
making different statements. And also it's complimentary
to how I dress now, which is slightly different to the ways I used to dress at 21. Now lashes, hah. Hopefully y'all can see this but these are two very, very,
very different lash styles. It won't focus literally unless I do this. So if you've ever wondered why
the hell YouTubers do this, it's literally to get the
lens to focus on something really, really, really, really tiny. 'Cause you see my big old
head in the background? Yeah, it's like which one is it sis? So the lash that I would
wear it today, in 2020, if I'm leaving my house
with a mask of course, would be something more like this, it's a little bit wispier, it is kind of jagged at the edges. Definitely the more wearable lash. The lash of the 99 and
the two thousands, 2009, definitely way, way thicker. This is also a sort of wispy
style, but it's more dramatic. It's definitely almost
kind of like a double, you know Lilly Lashes, they're just over the top, very extra. This is SO EXTRA Mykonos. And the style that I'm
gonna wear on this side is FLUFF LASH from Whip Lashed Cosmetics, my favorite lash brand, Nigerian owned. Whoopdee, whoopdee, woo. I used to also wear a lot of flair styles. Not anymore. I like it when it's thicker in the middle. I just feel like it looks
a little bit more wearable, flared lashes at the end is definitely a little bit more glam, a little bit more, like you have less options
when you wear that lash. When you wear that lash you're
going for one particular look and only one particular look. The bedroom eye, you know the bedroom darling. Oh my fur coat, darling. I feel like the site is still asleep. Like wake up. I might need to drink some water. (drinking) Didn't help, but okay. 2009, there was rarely a scenario where you'd leave the house
without liquid black liner. Only black, only black. (tapping liner) This was all the difference
between me being on time, or me being about 20 minutes late because I could not get
this liner perfectly. And this was usually a line that was a little on the thicker side, and winged out because that
was just the style back then. And you know what? People actually still wear
that, I wish y'all would stop. No, I'm just kidding. I'm not judging, but I am secretly. This is still a style now but I feel like we see less and less of this. I feel like a lot of people
were forcing themselves to get into liquid liner just to fit in, or just to achieve a certain aesthetic that they really didn't even like, they just saw other people doing it. And I feel like makeup should
just be about what's personal and what you love, right? That's why a lot of us got into the looks. So I'm just glad to
see like the reclaiming of our natural eye shapes. Complexion was really
really complicated back, I mean, it's still complicated
now, but it was the layering, it was the highlighting,
it was the contouring, the highlighting, the
contouring, the highlighting. It was the foundation, the highlighting. A lot of color correcting. So I'm gonna take my Live Tinted Huestick in the shade Rise. I still actually use this a lot, but the color correcting phase. I'm not even gonna say this
is really a 2009 thing. I feel like this was more 2013, 2014 was when color correcting was
just out of freakin' hand, out of hand completely. I saw somebody my
complexion color correcting with a fuchsia lipstick. Now that, not sure what that is, but it's not color correcting, okay. I'll have you know. I'm also gonna hit just underneath the eye because once again, this
is just what the girls did. I find the Huesticks from
Live Tinted incredible. But I use these as like a multi stick, I actually really like these
as lipstick, and as a blush, and as an eye shadow. Today we're just using it to correct. Then I'm gonna blend this out. And I'm gonna add my foundation. Put a translucent powder on top so that it doesn't bleed
over my complexion products. And then I'm gonna add
a really full coverage, really matte foundation. This one is from Maybelline,
but the duo fiber brush though. - Oh my God what is that? - The MAC 180, instantly, I didn't even have to Google
the name of this brush and I knew what it was. (sniffing) This one that I'm using
is actually not from MAC. - It's a lie. - It's a knockoff brand but it was basically doin' the same thing. I was just layerin' back then girl. I was givin' you all the coverage. Now this foundation will definitely look a little bit warmer. That's okay, because the
products that we're gonna put in, the finished look will,
it'll look cute okay? Just trust me, thank you. Now I'm gonna conceal using
something that's full coverage. And also again really matte, obviously nobody liked being dewy in 2009. We really liked this kind
of light reflecting look, everything about the under
eye was bright and vibrant, almost kind of translucent looking. I don't know what the hell we was gon' do. It's actually crazy because
I feel like 2009, 2010 was when you started to see the merging of like what the media says is popular, and what we say is popular. Now we need contour. I vaguely remember doing cream
contour, and powder contour. Not much has changed. I still kinda do a similar technique, but I use bronzer more
than I do cream contour. And this is just what we needed to really give a strong
sculpted looking beat. Nevermind the fact that a lot of times it was not blended,
that's besides the point. As long as you look sculpted,
that's all that mattered. Did I ever tell you guys the story about the Mario Dedivanovic
workshop that I went to? I know I told Twitter. I don't think I ever told you guys this, but anyway, when Mario Dedivanovic was like at his peak sweetie, I'm not saying that he's not popular now, that's not at all what I'm saying. And I love him by the way, I think he definitely is a
pioneer in the beauty space, especially for a lot of us
that do beauty videos today. I was really curious to see how his work would look on my complexion. So I remember seeing him
announce he was going on tour, he was comin' to LA. I was like, I have to go, I don't care how I'm gonna go, I have to go. Girl, I don't know what the
heck I thought I was doin', but I went to his website
and don't quote me on this, I could be wrong. But I wanna say the class was like $500? It was either like $300, or $500. I'm just gonna assume it was $500. But anyway, I go to his website,
I see the sticker price, and I was like there's no way in Sam Hill I'm goin' to this class. But I'm gonna pretend I'm
gonna go to the class anyway, and I'm just gonna fill out
the registration information, and I'm just gonna put in
my first and last name, and reserve a seat for myself, and just act like I got the
money, you know, manifest it. That's what (indistinct) did, manifest it. I filled out all the
info and I hit submit. (relaxed music) And it went through. I was both offended, shocked, confused, but also like weirdly excited. 'Cause I was just like,
I'm goin' to his class, but like I don't got money to eat now. Whether it was $300 or $500, I don't remember the exact price, whatever the ticket cost was,
was the exact dollar amount, just less, just under what I
had in my checking account. I just knew for a fact it
was gonna get declined anyway because I didn't have that much money. I did not, literally I physically did not even have that much money in my account when I bought that ticket. It went through, I was confused. Immediately overdrafted. I just was like, you know what? This is just, I guess what risk taking is? I don't know, man, but I'm
goin' to this damn class. I went to his class and it was incredible. I learned a ton. It was the first time I
discovered Beautyblenders because he had a goodie bag. He had sponsors for his class. I just thought that
was a good life lesson, because you just sometimes, a lot of situations that I've been in, I've been forced into them. Would I have made a different decision? Sure. I'm sure we've all been there. I wouldn't have made that risk unless I was circumstantially
pushed to do it. And that was one of those
things where I just did it. And honestly, to this day
I clearly don't regret it 'cause I'm doing great now, but I dunno, I just love that story about
betting on me, betting on me. I've been betting on me
since before you knew who Jackie Aina was, okay. Now of course this could not
be a throwback, old throwback. Now this powder I discovered
a little bit after 2009, it's the Sacha Buttercup,
the Sacha Buttercup. This is a Trinidadian makeup brand. I really don't feel like I take credit for things very often. I feel like credit personally, for me, I'm at a point in my
career where it's like, I personally, I don't vibe for credit the way I used to when
I was up and coming, because I just don't need it anymore, for certain things at
this point in my career. But the one thing that
I can single handedly, confidently say is I
definitely put Sacha Buttercup on the map period. People were asking about Sacha Buttercup in countries that I never even heard of. And yes, we used to put on
this much powder back then. It was a lot, there weren't a lot of
options for my complexion. So when I saw something that wasn't white, that wasn't super, super,
super beige or light, I was just like, oh,
we gon' make this work. Highlighter's still popular nowadays, but it's just popular I
think in a different way. I think we liked the overall
skin to look sun kissed. It's like you want the high points of your skin to be highlighted, but you don't want it to look like you're wearing highlighter. Versus back then you wanted people to ask about your highlighter
from the NASA Space Center. Like that's how deep it was. These are the rare beauty
cream highlighters. (phone ringing) I'm gonna take this Liquid Luminizer in the shade Flaunt, from Rare Beauty. One of my favorite tips nowadays is highlighting under the skin. I just love. And you don't even really
need a brush for this. You can just use your fingers. It looks lived in, it
looks very effortless. Nowadays I do a lot less
piling on the foundation. I'll do the highlighting
and contouring first. This is actually technically
an off and on technique for me. I used to work for Bobbi Brown, and that is a very Bobbi Brown technique where you correct and conceal first, and then you put on your foundation. So I was doin' that for awhile. And then when I stopped
working for the brand, I just stopped. - [Nicki Minaj] Stop. - So girl, I kinda stopped
doin' that technique for awhile. And then lately I've
just been doin' it again, it's just been making points. The concealers I'm gonna use are from (indistinct) beauty,
and Pat's concealer. These are definitely a little
bit more medium in coverage. I still contour with cream, but I do it underneath foundation now, and also I do place contour
a little bit higher. I just find that it's a
little bit easier to blend doing underneath the foundation now. I have a little bit more control. I just find that nowadays less concealer just kinda does it for me. Pat's foundation, which is on
a good day, medium at best, this is the type of
foundation 10 years ago I would run away from. Okay, dewy, nope. Minimum coverage, absolutely
not, not gonna happen. Now, this is my favorite formula. One of my favorite formulas of all time. It's really sheer, very thin. It can be built up, it
can be sheered down. Not gonna make this an
ad for her foundation because you guys already
know how I feel about it. I don't really bake anymore, I feel like it kind of accentuates texture under the eyes, especially like me, I have deep set under eye. I just kinda place the powder on, and if there happens to
be a little bit of excess, I'll sweep it off later. That's as heavy as it gets for me now. Can we already see the
obvious major differences between this side and this side? Oh my God, I forgot my cream blush. Ugh. Bronzers for dark skin
didn't exist in 2009, period. I don't care what you say. If you're my complexion or darker than you already know what time it is. But nowadays we have a
plethora of bronzer options. One of them is the Dusk Face Palette, this was created by NeonMUA, collabed with Midas Cosmetics. And it actually has a
bronzer and a contour shade. So on this side, because contouring was really really popular in '09, not only am I gonna contour, but I'm even gonna use a
completely different brush, because once again we
want to sculpt this area and add shadow, and we want to chisel. This side to me is giving
me vintage Instagram vibes because this is what all of us
used to look like back then. Now back then, blush was
everything, everything. Especially a lot of colorful blushes. So I'm gonna take the one
that's in this palette. It's a bit more red. Oh yeah, this is exactly
how I would wear it too. What a gorgeous freaking color, wow. Now this would be the phase
where we dust off powder. And you still want it to
relatively look pretty light especially in the inner corner. And we also need to add nose contour. Now, I've never really been a huge fan. Actually, I don't remember. I don't remember what 2009
Jackie was doing with her nose but I know just for as
far back as I remember, I've been like sis,
don't contour your nose, don't conform to what society says, your nose is supposed to be your nose. Not everything gotta be European okay? You're beautiful. But I'm gonna do it just for the sake of that was the time period. And that's what the girls requested. Baby, this pallet has so
much range, you have no idea. I love orange blush. The more orange, the better. Even a terracotta just does it for me. The Rose Latte from Fenty really is, first of all this is the only cream blush from that collection that I like, but this is very much
so on brand for me now. I'm gonna put Rose Latte on first for a more fresher flushed blush look. And then right on top,
I'm gonna take Sweet Brown from Maréna Beauté. Now, if it is during the day, I'll probably wear something
that's shimmery too. It really just depends on the vibe. I can't pick one, don't make me. Oh, I forgot bronzer. I honestly could not
tell you the last time I actually wore contour powder,
like willingly, for fun. It's all about bronzer, it's all about warmth, all about blurred lines. Not everything gotta be
perfectly structured, and sculpted, and chiseled. I like a little bit more warmth. I almost forgot highlighter, my bad y'all. We're really gonna pack it on, and we're really gonna
build it up on this side. This is my highlight
palette from Nuban Beauty. And we just really, really went there. Just the major differences
between how matte my face is, how dark and smoky this eye is. But we'd also still wear a
ton of shimmer on the skin. Like this was just a really weird, this was a strange time period. We did love a brow bone moment, which is definitely not
my favorite look now, but girl that's just how it was back then, you just gon' have to hit that brow. You gon' have to whip that whole-- Okay, now what you gotta
do for the bottom liner is you gotta put on the black
pencil first all the way. You have the completely
closed off captivity okay. Really heavily line that water line, like your life depends on it. If you're extra talented,
you got a tight line, which means you hit that top lash. Oh my God this was always
the freaking worst. Now the way that she thought is just to blink really hard, and it kinda does the same thing. And now I'm gonna smoke
out this bottom part, 'cause the bottom lash line was-- (upbeat music) The bottom lash line
was almost as important as the top lash line. Like if this part wasn't smoked out, you did all that work for nothing. And this is also what I feel kinda makes the look more dated because why in the hell would
you want eye shadow this dark on your bottom freakin' lash line? Girl open it up, open
some windows in here, let some light in. And somebody please tell Kris
Jenner to stop doin' this. So we need now a crease color just to kinda soften this up a little bit. I know some people have their looks, but I'm so glad that this
is one of those looks that really evolved 'cause
it's definitely needed to. Finishing this off with a really subtle, really neutral gloss. I'll use like the Fenty Gloss Bomb or I'll just use like a nude. Never thought I would ever
ever, ever wear lip products again, without liner. I overlined this side just a little bit 'cause that was the thing. And this is Violet Fury
from Fenty Mattemoiselle. I saw Afrobella tweeting
about her collab with MAC, and I just felt really nostalgic
to wear a purple like this because this, I'm telling you, color was really, really,
really popular back then. Oh my God, I freaking
forgot about my staple. So if I'm going out during the day, I'll usually wear like a
beige or off-white pencil in my water line. But I don't do what I did on the side. I don't close it off all
the way to the inner corner. I just kinda apply it like on
the outer thirds of my eyes. This is like literally night and day. Wow. I literally feel the makeup on this side. This side of my face visibly looks warmer, a little bit more fresher. It's still kinda sorta matte, and it still has that powdery look. But this one is like that amped up, like this is night time. This is like daytime, but I
could also probably sneak in at the bar after I get off late from work. How did you guys enjoy this video? You guys really, really like
when I do these side by sides. And I wanna kinda like switch them up. I wanna do some more
nostalgia makeup looks. So if you wanna see more, holler
in the comments down below. If you wanna see another video like this I'm just gonna put another
one here so you can watch it. 'Cause I know you're gonna watch another video anyway right? You are, right? Okay, that's what I thought Exactly.