The short version
A salon makeup application is typically $40-$80 in Fredericton. A bridal application is $200. Why the gap?
Three reasons, in order of impact: (1) the application has to last all day, (2) it has to photograph well in unpredictable light, and (3) the artist absorbs more risk and operates on a stricter timeline. Each compounds the cost.
Longevity: 14 hours, not 4
A salon makeup look is usually built for a night out — dinner, drinks, a few hours of dancing. Five hours is a long evening. The products are formulated for that timeline.
A bridal application has to hold from a 7am start through:
- A morning of getting-ready photos (sometimes with the bride crying happy tears)
- The ceremony (more tears, possibly outdoor heat or wind)
- Photos (1-2 hours of sustained pose-and-smile)
- Cocktail hour and dinner
- Speeches (more emotion)
- Cake cutting
- First dance and reception dancing
- Late-night sparkler exit photos
That's 14 hours of constant motion, emotion, and changing light. The products required to hold through all of that are different — longer-wear foundations, waterproof eye products, lip stains that survive food and drink, setting sprays that bind the whole face. The kit is more expensive per ml, and the application requires more setting steps.
Photography: every angle matters
Salon makeup is built for the eye-level mirror. Bridal makeup is built for:
- Window light getting-ready photos (flattering but reveals everything)
- Bright outdoor sunlight (makes everything look thinner; needs more pigment)
- Photographer's flash (can wash out skin; needs strategic finish)
- Indoor reception lighting (often warm; needs cooler undertones)
- Sparkler and candlelight (warm and dim; tricky for shadows)
- Selfie cameras (which lie, but everyone takes them)
A salon artist doesn't need to think about most of those. A bridal artist plans for all of them — adjusting the foundation finish to read well under flash, building the contour so it reads in window light without being heavy in person, choosing a lip that photographs full without looking overdone.
This is technique, and technique scales with experience. A 2-year salon artist and a 15-year bridal artist applying the same products will get very different results in the wedding photographer's flash.
The on-site premium
Salon makeup happens in a controlled chair, with overhead ring lighting, water at the station, and the next client lined up. Bridal happens in a hotel suite, with shifting natural light from one window, a folding table in the corner, and a timeline that depends on five other people getting ready in the same room.
On-site work means:
- The artist hauls in 30+ pounds of kit
- She works in lighting she didn't choose
- She manages the bride's emotional state on her wedding morning
- She coordinates timing with the hair stylist, the photographer, and whichever bridesmaid is running late
None of that is in a $40 salon application. All of it is in a $200 bridal application.
The stakes
If your evening-out makeup runs after dinner, you wash it off. If your wedding makeup runs during the first dance, the photos exist forever. The stakes for bridal makeup are unique. Artists charge accordingly — not because they're trying to charge more, but because the standard of execution required is genuinely higher.
A bridal MUA who's been working for 15 years has learned (sometimes painfully) what fails on humid wedding days. She uses different setting sprays for July versus February. She knows which lipsticks survive a steak dinner and which need re-application after the first sip of champagne. That knowledge is built across hundreds of weddings.
The kit, in numbers
For perspective, here's what a working bridal kit costs to assemble and maintain:
- Professional foundations: 30+ shades at $60-$90 each = $2,000-$2,700
- Concealers, correctors: 12-15 shades at $30-$50 = $400-$700
- Brushes (good ones): 30+ at $25-$80 = $900-$2,400
- Eye palettes: 10+ at $40-$80 = $500-$800
- Lashes, glues: ~$200 annually
- Lipsticks and lip products: 25+ at $25-$50 = $700-$1,250
- Setting sprays, primers: ~$300
- Sanitation supplies: ~$300/year (brush cleaner, alcohol, disposables)
That's $5,000-$8,000 in a working kit, replenished constantly. Spread that across 50-80 weddings a year, you're paying $60-$160 in kit cost per wedding before the artist's time enters the equation.
"The price of bridal makeup is the price of someone showing up with a kit that took 10 years to assemble, and a technique that took 15 to refine."
What you're not paying for
You're not paying for branded markups (no professional MUA gets brand commissions worth quoting on). You're not paying for the experience of a salon (you're getting an in-home experience). And you're not paying for a service that resembles a salon application at all — you're paying for a different service that's been adapted to a specific high-stakes context.
The bottom line
If a $40 salon makeup application would get you the same wedding-day result as a $200 bridal application, every bride in Fredericton would book the salon and the bridal industry would not exist. It does exist, because the gap is real — visible in photos, palpable on the wedding day, and worth the difference for most brides.