In this segment, we're going to begin burns. The most common burn is a sunburn. I'm going to start with a brush and give it a general read name to the face, there is that will be most affected or your forehead. Because the sun comes at a 45 degree angle, and the skin is so thin, that's why it burns fast, the bridge of your nose again, because there's such a thin covering of skin, the touch of your cheekbones, your chin, those who get impacted the most. It's expressed by General reddening of all these areas, and obviously, the longer you stay in the sun the rhetoric gets. Now if you're real fanatic, all the little character lines would actually be white.
If you ever noticed, when you get a sunburn, the rays don't get into these little fine lines. So you get all these white lines which are almost impossible to paint in but you can always go back and try to take some of the color So I'm going to start with a brush. A big brush because I'm covering a big area and I want to do it in a quick amount of time and using our alcohol palette. I'm going to quickly give a general reading had a wee bit of boost tone into the red, especially on the nose to make it a little more. go over it with a simple to find and model a little more mature little more interesting. Also, take away any hard edges.
This could be used as a form of first agreement Burn or sunburn can be the wind can do this if you're out on a boat on the lake. Please look like this many a time after being on location shooting and rock quarries where there's no way to escape the sun. When you get close to the eye, again, have your model keep their eyes closed and slowly build the color up. If your actor was wearing sunglasses and you would, when need to come around the ICF to know what they were wearing wardrobe was and again you talk to the director, talk with the actor, the different department and wear makeup is a collaborative work. It's not all about you. It's about what the director wants What the producer wants, what the actor wants.
Kind of lastly what you want. Make sure you did the ears as well. You can go down the neck, and so on. can watch for hard lines. Okay, this would be your general first degree burn. Now I'm going to continue on this burn and turn it into a second degree.
Now the difference between a first degree burn and a second degree burn is the introduction of blistering and he would blister on the brow bone, your nose, the high point of your cheeks again, because the skin is a synthesizer and that's where we cook and again, like a black eye or any other injury to the body, your skin starts to flush liquid or fluid to the day damaged area. And it's why the blisters appear because it's trying to repair itself from protect itself from that