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Trial · 5 min read · Published May 2026

What to bring to your bridal makeup trial

Bring 5–10 inspiration photos, a top in your dress colour or neckline, your regular skincare products, any lashes or lipstick you want tested, and arrive with clean moisturised skin (no eye makeup). The single biggest mistake is bringing too many photos — keep your reference set tight.

The essentials

1. Reference photos — 5 to 10, not 50

The single most useful thing you can bring is a small, curated set of reference photos. Not your entire Pinterest board. Five to ten images that, when looked at together, communicate what you want.

The best reference set has variety in close-up:

Too many photos paralyse the artist. The most thoughtful brides bring fewer photos and clearer intent.

2. A top that mimics your dress

Bring a white, ivory, or champagne top with a neckline close to your dress. The colour of fabric you're wearing affects how the makeup reads — skin against white looks different than skin against navy, and your makeup is being designed to harmonise with the dress.

If you can bring an actual fabric swatch from your dress, that's even better.

3. Your regular skincare

Bring (or photograph) your daily skincare lineup, especially:

These affect how foundation sits and how skin behaves. Mentioning them lets the artist make educated product choices and may surface things to adjust before the wedding (some actives need to be paused 2 weeks pre-wedding).

4. Lashes or lipstick you already love

If you have a specific lash style or lipstick brand you adore — bring it. The artist will let you know if it'll hold up for 14 hours of wedding day. Bringing your own forces a real comparison and helps you decide whether to splurge on the artist's professional products or stick with what you know.

How to prep your skin before the trial

The trial morning, your skin should be:

What NOT to bring

What to wear

Something with a wide neckline you can pull down without rubbing the face. A button-up shirt is ideal. Avoid:

What to do after the trial

Wear the trial out for the rest of the day. Treat it like a full wedding-day stress test:

Then email the artist within 48 hours with notes. The trial isn't done until you've debriefed.

"The best trial outcomes come from brides who bring three things: a clear idea of what they want, openness to being told it might not suit them, and a willingness to give real feedback after."

The short version

Curated photos. Neckline-matching top. Your skincare. Clean skin. Realistic expectations. Honest feedback. The trial is a collaboration, not a transaction — and what you bring shapes the outcome.

Common Questions

How many reference photos should I bring to a bridal makeup trial?+
Bring 5 to 10 curated reference photos, not your entire Pinterest board. Include a mix of overall vibe shots, close-ups of eye looks, lip colour examples, and ideally one photo of yourself you love. Too many photos overwhelm the artist and paralyse decisions.
Should I wear my wedding dress to the trial?+
No. Bring a top in a similar colour or neckline to your dress — the wedding dress should stay in its bag. A neckline-matching shirt gives the artist enough information to design makeup that harmonises with the dress.
Should I bring my bridesmaids to my bridal trial?+
It's better to attend the trial alone. Bridesmaids will have opinions that aren't necessarily yours, and the trial works best as a one-on-one collaboration between you and the artist. Save the bridesmaid input for after, when you have photos to discuss.

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Keep Reading

The Complete Guide to Bridal Makeup Trials → Do I Need a Bridal Makeup Trial? → How to Describe Your Dream Bridal Makeup Look → When Should You Book Your Bridal Makeup Trial? →
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