The Secret to Sarah Pidgeon’s Red Carpet Glow Is a $20 Tool in the Smithsonian
NewBeauty Facebook Pinterest Instagram Youtube find a doctor Face Adult Acne Antioxidants Anti-Aging Celebrity Chronic Skin Conditions Eye Hydration Hyperpigmentation Makeup View All Eyebrows Eye Color Foundation Fragrance Lip Color Makeovers Male Skin Care Peels Pre-Event Prep Sensitive Skin Skin Care Skin Health Smile Sun Care Treatments Fillers Microneedling Post-Procedure Skin Care Neurotoxins Regenerative Aesthetics Skin Lifting Body Body Sculpting Breasts Butts Cellulite Hair Removal Hands + Nails Legs Pregnancy Find a Doctor Hair Bond Repair Celebrity Dry Hair Frizzy Hair Gray Hair Hair Color Hair Growth Hair Repair Scalp Health Styling + Tips Awards NB100 Awards 15th Annual Beauty Awards 2025 NewBeauty Readers’ Choice Awards Shopping Gift Guides Product Reviews NewBeauty Storefront Wellness Fitness GLP-1s Health Menopause About Us TESTTUBE Search for: Search HomeAward Shows The Secret to Sarah Pidgeon’s Red Carpet Glow Is a $20 Tool in the Smithsonian The red carpet technique that kept her skin looking like skin. Liz Ritter Published: Mar 2, 2026 We may earn commission from links on this page. Each product featured has been vetted and chosen by our editors. Getty Images / Axelle/Bauer-Griffin When Love Story’s Sarah Pidgeon stepped onto the Actor Awards red carpet last night, her skin told a story: luminous and impossibly seamless, yet still unmistakably skin. The secret behind the glow? Celebrity makeup artist Emily Cheng relied on precise technique—and a $20 sponge that’s earned its place in beauty history. Below, Cheng shares exactly how she created Pidgeon’s polished, dimensional finish—and why the right tool makes all the difference. Cheng’s hero for the night was the Beautyblender Original, the cult-favorite $20 sponge that revolutionized makeup application and now sits in the permanent collection at the Smithsonian Institution.