! REPORT
The Sunday Edit
3D Render by Digital Drapery CoCarolyn wasn't getting ready for anything.
No dinner.
No photos.
No audience.
Just a quiet Sunday afternoon and a few minutes to herself.
The makeup came together slowly.
Taupe eyeshadow blended gently into the crease.
A soft nude lipstick that barely changed the natural tone of her lips.
A thin, careful line of eyeliner drawn without hurry.
Nothing dramatic.
Nothing meant to impress.
And somehow that was exactly what made the moment feel perfect.
This portrait explores subtle emotional storytelling using "Daz Studio Genesis 8 Female", focusing on photorealistic skin shading and delicate Iray Uber Skin makeup layering with the "DD Makeup Editor".
Because sometimes makeup isn't about transformation.
Sometimes it's simply about "taking a quiet moment for yourself".
No dinner.
No photos.
No audience.
Just a quiet Sunday afternoon and a few minutes to herself.
The makeup came together slowly.
Taupe eyeshadow blended gently into the crease.
A soft nude lipstick that barely changed the natural tone of her lips.
A thin, careful line of eyeliner drawn without hurry.
Nothing dramatic.
Nothing meant to impress.
And somehow that was exactly what made the moment feel perfect.
This portrait explores subtle emotional storytelling using "Daz Studio Genesis 8 Female", focusing on photorealistic skin shading and delicate Iray Uber Skin makeup layering with the "DD Makeup Editor".
Because sometimes makeup isn't about transformation.
Sometimes it's simply about "taking a quiet moment for yourself".
A force of natural beauty, a warm light breeze, sunset over the fields. Thanks for sharing.
REPLY
! REPORT
Digital Drapery Co
Karma: 18,572
Sun, Apr 05Thank you, Robert - that’s beautifully put. I love that “warm breeze at sunsetfeeling you picked up, that’s exactly the quiet mood I was chasing.
Sometimes the softest moments carry the most presence, no need to overstate anything.
Do you find yourself drawn more to these calm, natural scenes, or do you enjoy mixing in more dramatic work too?
Sometimes the softest moments carry the most presence, no need to overstate anything.
Do you find yourself drawn more to these calm, natural scenes, or do you enjoy mixing in more dramatic work too?





















































