Highsnobiety
Double Tap to Zoom

One year ago, TikTok couldn't get enough of the "Fox Eye," a makeup look using concealer, liquid eyeliner, and false lashes to engineer an elongated, upturned eye shape — a technique that Asians (rightfully) slammed as racist and culturally appropriative.

Now, the internet is moving away from the Fox Eye and towards "Puppy Liner," an eyeliner technique that can create the illusion of downturned eyes. The look, which entails applying winged eyeliner to curve down instead of up and out, is an extension of TikTok's recent obsession with "Sad Eyes" and "Sleepy Eyes," makeup aesthetics that focus on accentuating the lower lash line to create a rounded, doll-like look.

Your Highsnobiety privacy settings have blocked this Tiktok.

The shift away from the sharp, angular look of the Fox Eye (which, once again, fetishizes the very same eye shape that Asians are often mocked for) was a long time coming, considering the trend cycle's propensity to toggle between extremes. (As Isaac Newton once proclaimed, every action comes with an equal and opposite reaction.) Take skinny jeans as an example: Once de rigeur, tight-fitting pants began to fall out of favor as mom jeans and wide-legged trousers began to take over the runway. Now, designers are beginning to flip-flop back to skinny jeans, leggings, and slim pants.

Your Highsnobiety privacy settings have blocked this Tiktok.

"We really did reach the peak of Fox Eyes and the angled eyes," TikToker @imonaugust said in a video posted back in September. "I think the natural progression of that is to go in the opposite direction towards downturned eyes."

But should TikTokers even tout eye shapes as trends?

While one can put on and take off a pair of skinny jeans, a face full of gems, or a red lip, TikTok's obsession with eye shape revolves around a genetically determined feature that cannot, at least without surgical intervention, be changed. When beauty trends fixate on unchangeable facial features — features that are sometimes characteristic of particular ethnic groups — they send a clear message: Anyone who wasn't born looking this way is inadequate.

Your Highsnobiety privacy settings have blocked this Tiktok.

This feeling of inadequacy pushes people to go to costly lengths. At the height of the Fox Eye craze, clinics and surgeons began advertising thread lifts, a semi-permanent cosmetic procedure that lifts the brow and eye area, angling them upward. It's not farfetched to think that the aesthetics industry will dream up some newfangled "tweakment" to mimic the look of Puppy Liner.

Now that we've come to the collective agreement that the Fox Eye is problematic, how about eschewing eye shape-based trends entirely?

We Recommend
  • Troye Sivan Talks On-Tour Beauty Routines, TikTok Brainrot & Vampire Facials
    • Beauty
  • TikTok's 'Sleepy Girl Mocktail' Gets a Major Upgrade
    • Beauty
  • Our Favorite Liner Jackets Prove It's What's Inside That Counts
    • Style
  • What Dollcore Says About The Precarious State of Girlhood
    • Beauty
  • Post Archive Faction & On Can't Stop Making Attractive Running Shoes
    • Sneakers
What To Read Next
  • The Weird, Wonderful, & Rugged Beauty of Nike's Outdoorsy Air Max Sneaker
    • Sneakers
  • A Young Designer Lands a Collab With Travis Scott's Cactus Jack. What Next?
    • Style
  • Converse's Military-Level Stomper Boot Is Built to Last
    • Sneakers
  • Nike's Tiffany-Flavored Air Max Looks Like Luxury
    • Sneakers
  • Vans' Mary Jane Skate Shoes? They're Luxe, Chunked-Up Stompers Now
    • Sneakers
  • Stone Island Somehow Invents a New Type of Leather
    • Style