The winter wedding aesthetic
Winter weddings in New Brunswick have a specific magic. Snow as backdrop, candlelit interiors, the bride in cape or faux fur, the photographs that result are some of the most cinematic possible. The makeup approach is built to complement that atmosphere — luminous, hydrated, slightly more polished than summer, less concerned with humidity-proofing.
The winter skin challenge
December through March in NB averages -5 to -15°C with low humidity (often 40-50%). Add indoor forced-air heating and your skin can be working against you:
- Skin is drier than usual
- Foundation can flake or settle into texture
- Lips chap faster
- Eyes can become dry-feeling under makeup
- The bride's natural colour may be paler than usual
All of this is addressable with the right products and prep — but it requires different choices than a July wedding.
Skin prep for winter weddings
The week before
- Hydrating serums and masks daily
- Increase moisturiser to a richer formula
- Lip balm religiously (every 2 hours)
- Humidifier in the bedroom
- 3+ litres of water daily
Wedding morning
- Gentle cleanse (not hot water)
- Hyaluronic acid serum
- Rich moisturiser (heavier than summer)
- Hydrating primer (Charlotte Tilbury Magic Cream + Wonderglow, or Hourglass Veil Mineral Primer)
- NO powder before foundation — let prep absorb fully
Foundation strategy for winter
- Hydrating formulas: Charlotte Tilbury Hollywood Flawless Filter, Giorgio Armani Luminous Silk, Dior Backstage
- Medium coverage built in layers — heavy coverage flakes more visibly in winter
- Applied with a damp sponge for a softer finish
- Set only T-zone with powder — cheeks should stay slightly dewy for that winter glow
Combatting winter pallor
Your skin may be paler than usual in winter. To restore warmth without overdoing it:
- Slightly more pigmented cream blush than your trial recommended (winter pallor washes out subtle blush)
- Warm-toned blush colours — soft corals, warm pinks, peachy roses
- A touch of cream bronzer on the cheekbones and temples
- Cream highlight on the high points — gives that luminous winter-skin glow
The lip in winter
Lips are most vulnerable in winter. Strategies:
- Aggressive lip prep: A lip scrub the night before, lip mask the morning of (Laneige Lip Sleeping Mask is the gold standard)
- Lip balm 10 minutes before lipstick — blotted off before application
- Satin or hydrating finishes over matte (matte settles in winter chapping)
- Berry, mauve, and warm reds photograph beautifully against winter aesthetics
Eyes for winter weddings
Winter weddings often have evening receptions and candlelit settings. The eye can be slightly stronger than summer:
- Warm bronze and gold tones photograph beautifully in candlelight
- Smoked liner over winged liner — softer reads better in warm low light
- Strip lashes that add depth, not just length — winter eye makeup benefits from a slightly more pronounced lash
- Hydrating eye primer essential — winter air dries the eye area visibly
Setting spray for winter
Different priority than summer. You want hydration, not mattification:
- Mac Fix+: Adds moisture, refreshes makeup, doesn't mattify
- Skindinävia Finishing Spray: Long-wear without drying
- Avoid heavy mattifying sprays — they emphasise dryness
Photography in winter light
Winter outdoor light is incredibly flattering — soft, diffused, bouncing off snow. But windows for outdoor photos are short:
- December sunset around 4pm — photos need to start early
- February sunset 5pm
- March sunset 6pm — already noticeably longer days
Indoor warm reception lighting is the other major light condition. Stronger eye and lip pull the face forward in candlelight.
Outdoor photos in cold
For brides doing outdoor portraits in winter:
- Bring a coat, cape, or faux fur for between-shot warmth
- Plan portraits in 10-15 minute bursts, not 30+ continuous
- Indoor warm-up between location shifts
- Touch-up kit accessible — lip balm + powder for any flush
- The MUA may not stay for the full outdoor portrait session in winter (cold is brutal) — confirm before signing
"The most beautiful winter brides aren't fighting winter. They're using it — embracing the pallor, the snow light, the candlelit reception. Their makeup harmonises with the season, not the calendar."
Winter wedding makeup mistakes
- Heavy matte foundation (emphasises dry texture)
- Too much powder (cakes in dry air)
- Cool-toned blush (washes out against pale winter skin)
- Forgetting lip prep (results in chapped lips visible in photos)
- Standard summer setting spray (mattifies skin further)
The short version
Heavier moisturiser, hydrating primer, light-coverage hydrating foundation, less powder, warmer cream blush, bronzer for dimension, satin lip with aggressive prep, eye products with hydrating primer, setting spray that adds (not removes) moisture. Embrace the winter aesthetic; don't fight the season.