Hey, holiday rebels! If you’re anything like me, the thought of decking the halls in red and green is so boring – Enter the Grinch: that gloriously grumpy, green-furred anti-hero. This year, I decided to channel my inner Who-hater with a full Grinch makeup tutorial. We’re talking emerald skin, crinkly nose and a smirk that says, “Bah humbug… but make it cute.”

Why Grinch makeup? Because who needs perfect angel wings when you can rock villainous chic? It’s beginner-friendly, budget-savvy, and guaranteed to spark convos at every ugly sweater party. Plus, in a world of elf ears and snowflake lashes, standing out as the green meanie feels like a plot twist.

Grinch Makeup Tutorial Step by Step
Ready to shrink your heart three sizes? Grab your brushes;

Step 1: Prep Like You’re Plotting a Heist
First things first: skincare is your invisibility cloak. The Grinch’s look thrives on a smooth canvas—flaky skin turns green into swamp monster territory, and nobody wants that.
Start with a gentle cleanse.
Pat dry, then slather on a lightweight moisturizer
Step 2: Go Full Emerald Envy
Okay, this is the moment we’ve all been waiting for: turning yourself the exact shade of a jealous Christmas villain.
Color-correcting hack first
Before slapping on the main green, grab a bright yellow face paint and lightly neutralize any darker areas – under the eyes, around the mouth, and the apples of the cheeks. This stops the final green from looking muddy or zombie-ish.
The perfect custom green
I didn’t have the exact Grinch shade in one pot, so I mixed my own using color theory (and panic):
- 70% light green
- 20% yellow (to brighten and make it less olive)
- 10% white
It’s water-activated paint, so drop a dime-sized amount onto a metal palette or the back of an old plate, add a few drops of water, and mix until it’s the texture of thick smoothie – creamy, not runny.

Application
Use a flat synthetic foundation brush or a dense kabuki – NOT a Beauty Blender (it drinks half the product and you’ll be scrubbing green out of it until next Christmas). Start in the center of the face and work outward in stippling motions. Carry the green all the way down your neck, ears, and even the tops of your shoulders if they’re showing. Seamless = scary good.

Troubleshooting:
Too sheer? Add another layer while it’s still damp. Patchy? Smooth it out – DUH. My first try looked like I lost a bet with Shrek, but round two? Flawless Who-ville invader.
Set everything with a light dusting of translucent powder –Laura Mercier’s is luxe, my ride-or-die because locks the color without caking.
PS: Coty Airspun is another gem

Eyes – Wide, Wicked, and Pure Cartoon Menace – Grinch Makeup Tutorial
The Grinch’s eyes are everything: wide, wicked, glowing, and dripping with “I’m about to steal your presents” energy. Here’s exactly how to nail them:
Prime the lids with a creamy green base. I used Revlon ColorStay Crème Shadow (NYX Jumbo Eye Pencil in Matcha is the perfect dupe).
Pack on the star color: a bright glittery green shadow. Juvia’s Place Zulu palette is killer. Pat it all over the lid with a flat shader brush until it looks toxic.

Liner time: Black kohl on the upper and lower waterline. I swear by Maxfactor Kohl eye pencil – it does NOT budge, even if you tear up laughing at your own reflection.

Finish:Do two generous coats of Maybelline Colossal Mascara in Blackest Black.
Boom – one glance in the mirror and even Max the dog would run. Those peepers say, “I see you, Cindy-Lou Who… and your pudding is mine.” 🟢👀
Step 3: Facial Features That Scream All I Want for Christmas Is Solitude”
The iconic bulbous Grinch schnoz – DIY prosthetic edition
No latex allergies allowed to ruin the fun, so here’s my zero-latex hack that still looks pro:
I used cooking dough (or u can use modeling kind kids use – super cheap at any craft store).
- Roll a fat butterfly shape for the base of the nose.
- Make a smaller ball for the tip, poke two nostril holes with a back of makeup brush, and squish it on top.
- Blend the edges into your skin with a tiny bit of green paint while the clay is still soft.
- Paint the whole thing Grinch-green and add a black dots on the base of the nose.
Contouring like you live on Mount Crumpit
Grab a dark green cream or shadow (two shades deeper than your base) and carve out those dramatic hollow cheeks, a sharp jawline, and sunken temples. The Grinch’s face is long and gaunt – exaggerate everything. Then, highlight the center forehead, bridge of the prosthetic nose, and chin with a pale mint-green.
Draw the expression lines first
Grab a black water-activated face paint. Start at the corners of your nose and drag two deep, curved lines toward the apples of your cheeks. Then draw two shorter lines downward from the corners of your mouth. Make them thick and a little wobbly on purpose; the Grinch isn’t polished.

Deepen and diffuse
Take a smudgy black eyeshadow on a small pencil brush and trace right inside those lines .Then switch to a fluffy blending brush and softly diffuse the black outward so it fades into the green skin. Suddenly your face looks like it actually has texture.
Hair and brows: If your locks aren’t green, clip in green hair wig- we’re going for “I eat roast beast with my hands” energy.
Stand back, look in the mirror, and force the biggest, most evil smirk you can. Guaranteed – small children wouldn’t instinctively back away. You’ve officially got the grin that could cancel Christmas single-handedly. 🟢😈

Why This Look Stole My Heart:
This Grinch makeup tutorial isn’t just paint—it’s therapy. It’s your permission slip to be unapologetically you. I MEAN IT!
So, mix that green, arch those brows, and grin wide. Who knows? You might just discover your heart’s grown after all.
—let’s make Whoville weird. Merry Grinchmas, fam! 🎄🟢
Safety notes: Patch-test products; green can stain clothes