I’m taking Sukuna’s fury off the screen and onto skin with 16 looks that mix crimson smoke, razor-black liner, and imperfect curse marks. Think glossy halo lids against soft-focus skin, split-face contrasts, and metallic flashes that catch low light.
I’ll show you transfer-proof mapping, alcohol-activated inks for lasting sigils, and seal-gloss sequencing so nothing smears mid-shot. If you want anime intensity that still photographs editorial-clean, start here—because the first transformation sets a ruthless standard.
Soft Crimson Glam With Subtle Curse Marks

Although it nods to Sukuna’s sinister charm, this Soft Crimson Glam keeps things wearable and chic.
I blend a rosy wash over the lids, deepen the crease with wine, and tap a satin scarlet on the center for glow. Fluffy lashes, soft liner, and muted berry lips balance it.
Then I sketch faint, imperfect curse marks near temples and jaw—thin, diffused, and irresistibly cool.
Gold accents can be added to highlight and elevate the look for a timeless glam finish.
Double-Lined Demon Eyes With Graphic Red Accents

Let’s turn up the menace with precision double liner that carves out a razor-sharp, twin halo around your eyes.
I map a tight black wing, then echo it with a clean second line to frame space for those cursed red accents.
A few graphic slashes of crimson—inner corner flicks, lower lash strikes, or a floating shard—make the gaze look wicked and cinematic.
For added drama, pair your smoky black eye makeup with smudged liner and volumizing mascara for that intense, Smoky Black Eye finish.
Precision Double Liner
Slice through the silence with razor-sharp lines: I map a double wing that frames the eye like Sukuna’s own gaze, then punch it up with graphic red accents that read powerful, not playful.
I start thin at the inner corner, split the wing at mid-lash, and mirror the angle. Tightline for depth, lock with smudge-proof gel, then clean edges with micellar-soaked swabs. Precision equals menace. For extra sultry impact, emphasize the flick with cat eye shaping to elongate and lift the eye.
Cursed Red Accents
Sometimes the eye just needs blood-red voltage, so I thread crimson between my double wings to channel Sukuna’s cursed glare.
I stamp a razor-thin scarlet line under black liner, then spike the outer corners with graphic shards.
Inner corners? A quick red flick.
I soften edges with a haze of burgundy.
Gloss on lids, matte skin, tight waterline—boom: possessed, precise, and dangerously pretty.
For finishing touches, I borrow Euphoria’s bold layering techniques and glitter placement to punctuate the look with sparkling intensity.
Smudged Scarlet Smokey Eye For Grunge Impact

Usually, I reach for clean lines, but a smudged scarlet smokey eye hits harder—gritty, hot, and undeniably Sukuna-coded.
I pack crimson on the lid, then drag it outward with a stubby brush. Layer burgundy near the lashline, blur the edges with chocolate. Add kohl in the waterline, tap shimmer on the center.
Finish with spiky lashes and a lived-in, feral stare. Smokey eyes often use layered blending techniques to build depth and intensity, emphasizing contrast with smudging and layering.
High-Contrast Monochrome With Blacked-Out Lip

Let’s map out sharp placement and symmetry so the monochrome reads crisp, not chaotic.
I’ll prep a poreless matte canvas to keep contrast bold and true.
Then we’ll lock in a blackout lip—liner for edges, layered pigment for depth, and a velvety seal so it won’t budge.
Placement and Symmetry
Even before I pick up the brush, I map symmetry like a blueprint: center line down the nose, equal spacing from pupils, and mirrored arcs across the cheeks.
I place Sukuna-inspired markings where light meets shadow, keeping angles crisp and balanced. I align the blacked-out lip with that spine, corners equidistant. I test balance by squinting—shapes should read identical silhouettes left to right.
Matte Skin Prep
Symmetry locked, I set the canvas. I blot shine, then press a gripping, oil-control primer where light hits hardest—center forehead, nose, chin.
I feather a velvet-matte foundation outward, keeping edges clean for high-contrast impact. Next, I pinpoint-conceal, then set with a micro-fine translucent powder, pressing, not swiping. Finally, I blur pores with a soft-focus powder, sculpting flat planes that make monochrome pop.
Black Lip Techniques
Ink for the mouth—clean, opaque, and ruthless. I map the cupid’s bow razor-sharp, then flood lips with lacquer-black for a Sukuna-level stare-down.
I tightline edges, blot once, and seal with powder for grip. The rest stays pared-back, letting the void do the talking.
- Prime, conceal, outline, fill.
- Use brush for corners.
- Layer matte then vinyl.
- Press translucent powder.
- Clean edges with micellar.
Negative-Space Wing With Minimalist Markings

From the sharp flick of a liner to the whisper of skin peeking through, a negative-space wing with minimalist Sukuna markings nails edgy without feeling heavy.
I map the wing first, leaving a clean cutout that breathes. Then I add two tapered marks near the outer corner, thin and deliberate.
Keep lines crisp, spacing intentional, and balance the gaze with brushed-up brows and soft, blurred cheeks.
Metallic Red Halo Eye With Vein Detailing

Sweep molten red across the lid, then punch light right through the center so the eyes glow like embers. I buff metallic pigment in a halo, edge it with berry depth, and thread faint “veins” from the inner corner for cursed intensity.
Keep the shimmer wet, the lines whisper-thin, and the blend seamless—drama without heaviness.
- Metallic red cream
- Cranberry matte
- Foiled inner pop
- Ultra-fine liner
- Setting mist
Split-Face Cosplay: Human vs. King of Curses

While I love a full-character beat, nothing hits like a split-face: one side soft and human, the other carved with curse-born menace.
I map a razor-straight center line, lock it with concealer, then build contrast.
Human side: hydrated skin, gentle brow, blush, glossy lip.
Sukuna side: stark tattoos, bleached brow effect, smoke-shadowed eye, cracked-lip stain.
Finish with asymmetric highlight for cinematic tension.
Sculpted Cheekbones With Blade-Sharp Contour

Carve the face like a curse sigil—clean, precise, unapologetic. I map shadows under my cheekbones, pulling pigment toward the ear like a katana slice. I blend upward, never down, to lift.
Cool-toned contour creates that Sukuna-level menace; a razor-sharp line seals the drama. I keep highlight tight, matte, strategic.
- Cool taupe contour stick
- Angled brush, firm
- Minimal matte highlight
- Micro-sculpt with powder
- Final edge with concealer
Textured Scar Effects With Glossy Lids

Let’s craft layered scar dimension that actually looks raised, then set it against high-shine lids for a slick, supernatural contrast.
I’ll show you how I stack texture with tint so the marks read real on camera while the gloss pulls the eye.
We’ll keep it safe and snug with skin-friendly adhesive techniques that won’t irritate or lift mid-scene.
Layered Scar Dimension
Because Sukuna’s etchings read like topography, I build layered scar dimension that looks raised, healed, and a little wicked—then balance it with high-shine lids. I map curves, tap thin latex or wax, and shade edges so light catches like real texture.
You’ll read depth before color even speaks—clean, sculpted, intentional.
- Micro-stipple base
- Soft taupe under-shadows
- Thin wax ridges
- Matte blush veining
- Targeted gloss halo
High-Shine Lid Contrast
Those raised, healed etchings set the stage, and now I turn the contrast up top.
I slick a mirror glaze across the lids—think wet vinyl catching neon. Pigment hugs the crease, then melts into glassy sheen.
The scars read matte and gritty; the eyes flash liquid and alive. I tap inner corners, feather the edges, and let that wet-look intensity sharpen Sukuna’s menace.
Safe Adhesive Techniques
With precision in mind, I reach for skin-safe adhesives that won’t wage war on your face while building Sukuna’s textured scars next to glossy lids.
I map lines, tap adhesive thin, then stipple latex or silicone for raised ridges.
I seal, powder, and gloss lids last to avoid transfer.
Removal’s gentle: oil, patience, no tugging.
- Patch test first
- Use silicone-safe remover
- Layer thinly
- Seal with powder
- Gloss after curing
Ombre Blood-Red Lip With Diffused Edges

Sweep into Sukuna mode with an ombre blood-red lip that blurs at the edges like fresh ink. I stain the center with a deep crimson, then tap outward using a fingertip to haze the borders—no harsh lines.
A soft pencil defines shape, then I press a tinted balm for sheen. Blot once, re-layer the core. The result: wicked, plush, and mesmerizing.
White Ink Highlights Over Matte Charcoal Base

Under a velvet wash of matte charcoal, I map razor-clean “white ink” highlights that hit like moonlight on obsidian. I keep lines crisp, then blur the charcoal edges so the contrast feels cinematic, not harsh.
Strategic placement sculpts cheekbones, bridges temples, and sharpens the gaze without heaviness.
- micro-tipped brush for surgical strokes
- cream white, set with translucent powder
- tap, don’t drag
- highlight inner corners sparingly
- lock with soft-focus setting spray
Floating Liner With Under-Eye Rune Stamps
That clean moonlit structure sets me up to play higher on the lid—hello floating liner and under-eye rune stamps.
I sketch a crisp arc above the crease, leaving space so the eye looks lifted and otherworldly.
Then I tap tiny rune stamps along the lower lash line—symmetry optional, attitude required.
Pair jet-black ink with a soft blur, seal with setting spray, and let the gaze command.
Full Bodypaint Neck Marks With Clean Beauty Skin

Let’s map Sukuna’s neck tattoos with crisp guides so every curve lands where the collarbones and tendons naturally frame it. I’ll show you seamless bodypaint techniques—feathered edges, micro-layering, and transfer-proof setting—so the marks look etched into skin, not painted on.
Before any pigment, we’ll lock in clean skin prep: gentle exfoliation, balanced hydration, and a soft-matte base that grips without texture.
Mapping Sukuna Neck Tattoos
Although the neck looks simple at a glance, mapping Sukuna’s tattoos here is all about symmetry, flow, and skin prep. I plot centerlines with a nude pencil, then mirror curves along the sternocleidomastoid for that ominous sweep.
I keep edges razor-clean and negative space intentional.
- Cleanse, lightly moisturize, prime
- Mark vertical and horizontal axes
- Use reference points: clavicle, jaw, Adam’s apple
- Sketch thin; build thickness later
- Seal guides before inking
Seamless Bodypaint Techniques
Usually, I start full-bodypaint for Sukuna’s neck marks by perfecting skin texture so the ink reads crisp and skin still looks like skin.
I switch to alcohol-activated palettes for budge-proof lines, then blend edges with a micro-sponge so strokes melt seamlessly.
Feather a diluted wash for depth, set with micro-mist, and tap cream highlight along tendons.
The result: razor-sharp marks that still feel breathable.
Clean Skin Prep Essentials
Those razor-sharp neck marks only read that clean because the canvas is. I prep like I’m priming a wall: gentle cleanse, strategic exfoliation, featherweight hydration, then grip.
You’ll see the ink glide, not skip. Keep it breathable so pores don’t rebel when the red hits. Ready to lock it down?
- Gel cleanse, pH-balanced
- Enzyme exfoliant
- Silicone-free moisturizer
- Gripping, alcohol-free primer
- Setting spray, dewy-firm blend
Wet Look Lids Paired With Matte Crimson Stripes

Glazing the lids with a glassy sheen, I balance the shine by slicing in matte crimson stripes that read fierce and editorial. I tap clear gloss over a nude cream base, keeping it tight to the mobile lid.
Then I knife-thin crimson across the crease and outer corner. The contrast feels dangerous yet polished—slick reflection, ruthless geometry. Pair with clean lashes and softly veiled skin.
Editorial Negative Brow With Stenciled Sigils

Because restraint can be louder than pigment, I carve a crisp negative brow and let stenciled sigils do the talking.
I map clean space with concealer, then float sharp symbols along the orbital bone for Sukuna energy—graphic yet airy. Think runway severity with occult charm, perfectly balanced.
- Blade-thin bleached brow illusion
- Vinyl-black gel liner sigils
- Transfer-proof stencil technique
- Bone-white skin prep contrast
- Soft shadow halo framing
I’m leaving you with a brush in one hand and pure cursed confidence in the other. Whether or not you’re into glossy halo lids, gritty smudges, or razor‑sharp double lines, there’s a Sukuna spin that’ll electrify your look.
Play with soft-focus skin, metallic flashes, and those imperfect marks—then seal, gloss, and go. Tag me when you try a split-face or neck sigil moment. Let’s summon drama, not demons—and make every stare feel like a final boss fight.





