Mario Dedivanovic is one of the most recognisable makeup artists in the world – with his own cosmetic range and the responsibility of painting the faces of A-list celebrities like Salma Hayek, Gabrielle Union, and Kim Kardashian. Today, his career has seen him crowned the king of contour – famed for the kind of sculpted features and signature soft glam that defined an entire era of beauty: precise, diffused, and impossibly polished, like the makeup equivalent of a perfectly tailored black dress.
Thank you for reading this post, don't forget to subscribe!But ask anyone who understands his approach to makeup, and the philosophy is never really about excess. It’s about control. Soft layering. Skin that still looks like skin beneath everything else.
And that philosophy doesn’t stop at foundation. Dedivanovic has often leaned into the idea that great makeup begins with restraint, not accumulation – a method built on building product slowly, intentionally, rather than overwhelming the face in one pass. And in that kind of routine, even the most unexpected tools become essential.
Including something as unglamorous as a baby wipe.
In professional kits, wipes aren’t a beauty statement. They’re a utility. A way to reset the skin between steps, remove excess product without disrupting texture, and maintain a clean surface when everything else is being carefully layered on top.
Interestingly, instead of heavily fragranced cleansing products or overly complex removers, Dedivanovic has spoken about using simple, sensitive-skin-friendly wipes for light makeup removal – particularly for moments like soft correction, smudged mascara, or lip clean up during application.
The more we understand skin – particularly how it responds to repeated contact, friction, and product layering – the more those in beauty are rethinking what “a simple cleanse” actually looks like. Skin isn’t static between steps. It’s constantly reacting, recalibrating, and responding to what’s being applied and removed in cycles.
Which means the tools used in that process matter more than they once did.
For years, wipes were designed primarily around convenience. Strength. Portability. A product that could perform anywhere, anytime. But that design logic often relied on synthetic fibres for durability – materials that don’t fully align with either skin biology or environmental breakdown.
However for beauty girls who love smooth skin a much as sustainability, a newer generation of cleansing cloths is moving away from plastic-based structures entirely, instead using plant-derived fibres that behave more like natural systems – designed to break down rather than persist, and to work in harmony with the frequency of real life use.
One of the best locally made offerings is Kine Australia – whose For Your Baby Cloths use 100% renewable cellulose fibres and a pH-balanced, hypoallergenic, dermatologically tested formula. It is an approach that reflects modern skin thinking: minimal irritation, maximum compatibility. Aloe vera and vitamin E add a soft botanical layer that supports comfort without overwhelming the skin barrier. There’s no excess fragrance, no unnecessary complexity – just a focus on how skin actually behaves under repeated cleansing.
Even the material logic follows that same restraint. The cloths are certified to Australia’s AS/NZS 5328 standard and disperse in water under appropriate conditions, moving them away from permanence and towards transience – a small but significant shift in how everyday cleansing tools sit within both skin care and environmental systems.
And like much of modern beauty, the production story is part of the philosophy. Manufactured in South Australia, the process reduces supply-chain emissions compared to offshore production, reflecting a broader move towards proximity, transparency, and reduced environmental layering.
Because whether it’s backstage at a runway show or inside a celebrity makeup kit, the most important tools are often the most overlooked…













