Dipetsa FW26 Beauty
Dipetsa FW26 Beauty
Dipetsa FW26 presents one clear beauty directive: untamed hair paired with skin that feels raw and alive, anchored by a flushed, almost feverish color story running from cheek to lid. For makeup artists and brand creative teams, the message reads loud. The glazed-clean aesthetic is officially out. What's in is something far more visceral, more lived-in, deliberately imperfect.
Skin
Coverage stays sheer to light, with zero effort to fill or smooth. The finish reads luminous rather than dewy, closer to a warm skin tint layered over well-moisturized skin, with natural texture visibly intact. Several models show what appears to be a warm amber or terracotta tone under the cheekbones and along the temples, suggesting a light bronzer or tinted moisturizer applied in layers rather than blended out completely.
Eyes
Brows are groomed but not sculpted. They sit in a natural, slightly flat arch with full density and no visible tinting or lamination. No liner. No shadow. No lash product appears on any model, which means the flushed cheek and lip color carry all the expressive weight.
Lips
Nude to barely-there pink. Every lip wears a soft, skin-like finish that reads closer to a blotted stain than actual product. There is no gloss, no lacquer, no overline. Keeping lips quiet was deliberate, redirecting all focus to the skin flush and hair volume, where this show truly invests its energy.
Cheeks and Color
Blush sits warm and high-placed on the upper cheekbone, bleeding softly toward the temple and outer eye socket. The tone ranges from brick-rose to warm coral depending on skin tone, applied with fingers or a dense brush in a patted rather than swept motion.
Hair
Hair makes the loudest statement here, and the direction stays consistent across all nine photos. The dominant look is long, center-parted, with voluminous, slightly disheveled waves that feel air-dried rather than styled. The texture reads set and then pulled apart. Root area shows slight lift and an almost pillow-pressed quality, while mid-lengths and ends carry soft, loose movement instead of defined curl or blowout finish. Photos 6 and 9 introduce a warm copper-auburn that sits between natural strawberry and toned ginger, adding a second color story without shifting the overall styling direction. Photo 4 breaks the mold with a face-framing curtain piece swept across the bridge of the nose, a precise choice within the otherwise undone approach. Photo 3 features the same center-part volume structure but with notably higher lift at the crown, suggesting a back-teased or diffused root technique.
Photo by Photo
Photo 1 The warm brick-rose blush bleeding from the cheekbone up toward the outer eye socket serves as the clearest reference for the show's color placement strategy and works as a standalone example of eye-adjacent blush technique.

Photo 2 Skin reads the most luminous here, with visible warmth concentrated at the center of the face that suggests a light golden highlighter or illuminating base pressed onto the high points only.

Photo 3 Crown volume peaks at its highest, making this the most useful reference for the teased-root approach within the overall air-dried aesthetic.

Photo 4 The single face-framing piece falling across the nose is a precise, intentional choice that cuts against the otherwise symmetrical center-part direction and gives this look sharper, more editorial edge.

Photo 5 Deep auburn hair against very fair, lightly flushed skin creates one of the strongest color contrasts in the show, and blush here leans closer to warm rose-pink rather than the brick-red seen on deeper skin tones.

Photo 7 Tight, defined curls sit in direct contrast to the loosely waved texture worn by every other model, and blush reads more saturated here, placed high and close to the lower lashline.

Photo 8 The longest, most flowing hair in the show sports a warm golden copper tone and a silk-like finish closer to a smoothed blowout than the disheveled wave seen elsewhere. This is the outlier.

Photo 9 Paired with a true red garment, the copper-auburn hair and near-bare face create a warm-toned monochromatic composition that functions as strong reference for balancing saturated clothing with stripped-back beauty.

More Photos

✦ This report was generated with AI — combining human editorial vision with Claude by Anthropic. Because the future of fashion intelligence is already here.