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Discussing innovations in cosmetic applicators and brushes—and why performance depends on design compatibility, material choice & formula.
April 24, 2026
By: Marie Redding
Senior Editor
Precision, control, and intuitive gestures are key to a successful cosmetic applicator design in beauty. Applicators with new design features can elevate a package’s functionality, inspire a positive user experience, and improve how a cosmetic product looks or feels on the skin.
Fenty Beauty’s new Shake ‘N Play Buildable Liquid Blush is one example of the latest cosmetic applicator innovation on the market. The brand says the packaging is “sensorial and thoughtfully designed from top to bottom.” The shaker-bead bottle, reminiscent of a child’s marker—a squish-tip sponge applicator—features a built-in wiper that loads the perfect dose onto the tip. It delivers a controlled application with zero guesswork.
From brushes and sponges to droppers, packaging suppliers are engineering cosmetic applicators to elevate the user experience while improving product performance. Whether it’s a built-in applicator that also dispenses the product, a separate wand, or a stand-alone makeup brush, the development process is equally complex and must account for the formula’s properties.
“Applicator development is guided by a balance of performance, design, and user experience—ensuring applicators not only deliver results, but feel intuitive to use,” explains Sara Zanafredi, CEO, Pennelli Faro.
“Many brands come to us with a strong vision of the look and feel they want to create. But, they are not always aware of how much the technical details influence performance,” says Huong Bister, Head of Global R&D at Geka. “We help brands understand how design features, material selection, and formula compatibility work together.”
As suppliers push innovation forward, it’s clear that performance isn’t driven by a single feature—but by how everything works together.
A makeup brush’s bristles, for example, shouldn’t be too short or coarse for a soft formulation. A wand applicator needs to pair with a compatible wiper and formula to deliver a mess-free look. And developing a mascara brush requires an in-depth knowledge of the materials and shapes that will produce the intended lash look.
Geka’s Bister explains, “A successful applicator is never defined by a single feature, but by the seamless interaction of elements. The applicator, the formula, and the packaging must work together in perfect harmony to create the desired performance, feel, and payoff.”
Laetitia Beavogui, Marketing Manager at Albéa Cosmetics & Fragrance, agrees. She says harmony among every element is essential. And, it takes a “perfectly synchronized system” for an applicator to work as intended. “The wiper controls the amount of formula retained on the applicator, while the applicator design determines how the formula is distributed and spread across the targeted area. The dosage and distribution directly influence the final makeup effect. Each component interacts with the others,” she explains.
Alessia Bernardi, Marketing Manager at Pennelli Faro, emphasizes the importance of formula compatibility. She says it’s a fundamental part of cosmetic applicator development. “An applicator does not exist on its own—it only works in combination with a specific formula,” she explains. “Texture, viscosity, pigmentation, and volatility are all elements that influence how the product is picked up, released, and blended. If the applicator is not developed with the formula in mind, performance won’t be optimal.”
Paola Mazza, Marketing & Communication Director at Pibiplast SPA, mentions mascara, noting that its performance is not defined solely by the brush or formula, but by the entire system. “The opening gesture, ergonomics, wiper interaction, stem length, applicator geometry, and formula compatibility all work together to deliver the expected result on the lashes.”
Anisa Telwar Kaicker, Founder and CEO of Anisa International, describes what it takes to design a high-performing brush or tool. “It’s rarely one hero feature—it’s alignment across the full usage experience,” she says. “The elements of a makeup brush must be in sync. These include the handle length, diameter, fiber type, and tip geometry. Each of these elements needs to pair with the right formula.”
Nuon Medical is reinventing what an applicator can do with its “active applicators.” “We don’t approach applicators as accessories. We see them as delivery systems that directly influence whether a formulation performs as intended,” says Alain Dijkstra, Founder and CEO of Nuon Medical.
As experts weigh in, it’s clear that an applicator isn’t a secondary component. The applicator plays an important role in product performance, and its development requires engineering various components.
Beauty trends and new cosmetic formulas often drive demand for new applicators, and packaging suppliers continually develop new designs.
“Good design is not only aesthetic — it’s functional. It supports technique and enhances an applicator’s performance,” says Pennelli Faro’s Bernardi.
Design and ergonomics directly affect an applicator’s performance, especially for a makeup brush. “The shape, density, cut, and overall architecture of an applicator head directly impact precision, control, and the final effect,” Bernardi explains. “At the same time, ergonomics affects the user experience. The balance, handle length, grip, and flexibility all contribute to making the application intuitive and comfortable.”
Finding ways to simplify the application of makeup and skincare products is appealing to beauty consumers. For this reason, “dual-ended, multi-functioning applicators that consolidate steps are popular right now,” says Brian Lee, Director at CTK Packaging Group.
CTK’s Bottom Up Stick incorporates a brush as part of the package. The integrated applicator makes using the product fast and easy, which is appealing to consumers.
Marco Sorze, Sales & Marketing Director at Pennelli Faro, says beauty brands are looking for applicators that deliver high performance while maintaining distinctive design. “It’s no longer enough for an applicator to work well—it also needs to stand out,” he says. “There’s growing demand for unconventional shapes and recognizable design elements that make the tool both functional and visually distinctive.”
Steven Ostrower, President, The Penthouse Group, says decorated cosmetic applicators are a brand asset. “Custom printing on a powder puff, a printed logo on a sponge, or a bespoke colorway that mirrors the product’s packaging. These details contribute to brand recognition, gifting appeal, and social media shareability,” he explains. “We’re in an era where unboxing videos and product aesthetics drive organic discovery. An exquisitely designed applicator is not a luxury; it is a marketing channel.”
Ostrower says brands are requesting embossed patterns, UV printing, and hot-stamped finishes on sponges, puffs, and applicators to help them stand out.
Verena Regina Fiori Ferreira, Marketing Director at Virospack, says its dropper applicators combine enhanced functionality with cutting-edge designs. The supplier offers extensive customization options. These include metallization, aluminum sleeves, screen printing, and a wide variety of colors. The supplier offers in-house decorating. “These premium finishing options allow brands to create distinctive designs, enhancing both market positioning and consumer appeal,” she says.
In makeup categories such as loose powder, cushion foundation, and complexion products, puffs and sponges are taking on a more strategic role—both functionally and visually.
The Penthouse Group’s new generation of puffs and sponges, made from advanced materials, are tailored to modern formulas. They’re helping to redefine how consumers experience makeup, the supplier says. The Penthouse Group’s sponges come in teardrop, disc, and other sculpted shapes. They’re designed to interact effectively with specific viscosities and product textures.
Ostrower emphasizes the importance of considering the formula when developing a sponge or puff. “Brands developing a formula without simultaneously considering the applicator are designing only half the product,” he says.
“The relationship between a cosmetic formula and its applicator is deeply symbiotic,” he says, “especially for complexion products.”
A buildable liquid foundation, for example, may require a sponge with a dense but porous internal structure. This type of sponge will absorb a controlled amount of product and progressively release it during use. “If the sponge is too absorbent, product is wasted. If it’s too compact, the formula may sit on the skin instead of blending evenly,” Ostrower explains.
To address this issue, The Penthouse Group has expanded its range of cushion sponges to offer low-absorption polyurethane foams. Polyester velour sponges, with various pile heights and material weights, are also available.
Metal is finding its place, unexpectedly, in the wand applicator category—and it’s a great fit for prestige beauty.
At Cosmopak, the team sees a growing demand for cosmetic applicators in Zamac. The supplier offers a range of shapes and sizes for lip products, including glosses, oils, and stains. According to Chris Suda, VP of Operations, these applicators are valued not only for their durability, but also for the elevated, cooling, sensorial experience they provide.
As with other applicator types, performance depends on how well the components work together. “The type of formula the brand will be working with, as well as the overall package selected, is most important—and making it a cohesive story that performs in unison is the goal,” Suda explains.
For all types of lip color, mascara, and concealer, the wiper is an important part of the applicator system. It shouldn’t be overlooked, Suda says. “They significantly affect an applicator’s performance. The wiper controls dosage and product load, and must be properly aligned with a formula,” he advises.
Suppliers are developing a new generation of cosmetic applicators that balance sensoriality with performance—something beauty brands are increasingly prioritizing.
At Albéa, Purr represents a new generation of highly sensorial applicators developed for both makeup and skincare formulas. “This non-flocked applicator features ultra-soft, highly flexible bristles that ensure smooth, even application while delivering a unique sensorial experience,” says Beavogui. “Its design enhances formula pickup and release, resulting in controlled, effortless application.” Users can expect a smooth, even application, especially for skincare-infused hybrid makeup formulas.
Overall, applicators now include more intuitive features—and sensoriality is playing a bigger role. “Soft, cushion-like applicators for skincare-infused makeup are popular. They complement the comfort and sensoriality that many brands now aim to deliver,” explains Geka’s Bister.
The developments indicate that comfort is a priority in applicator design—along with ease of use and the material’s feel against the skin.
Complexion makeup formulas are becoming more sophisticated, and applicators are evolving to match the latest product innovations.
At Geka, precision tools for detailed areas of the face, such as brows, are in demand. “Trending makeup looks that are polished, yet natural, are driving interest,” says Bister. “As cream and liquid formulas dominate the makeup industry, flocked applicators are always in high demand,” he explains. Geka’s hybrid fiber technology delivers a softer, more uniform application.
Pennelli Faro’s recent developments reflect the growing need for cosmetic applicators that are tailored to a specific formula’s features and benefits. The company’s Concealer Studio Collection features a range of applicators that offer brands “precision and versatility,” the company says.
Designed for concealer makeup, the applicator collection features convex, diagonal, tapered, and rounded shapes. The different designs offer targeted correction, micro-sculpting, and seamless blending.
The collection reflects the growing trend toward lighter, more fluid, and hybrid makeup products that offer skincare benefits. Applicators for these products must deliver a natural finish, but with controlled placement.
Pennelli Faro’s other innovations focus on adaptability. Double-ended formats, such as those in the company’s DUO collection, support multi-functional use. These allow consumers to layer, blend, and refine using a single tool.
These developments align with current trends in face applicators—tools are becoming more specialized, more precise, and better aligned with how modern formulas behave on the skin.
As consumers embrace simpler makeup routines designed to save time, larger-format applicators, such as brushes designed for full-face use, are becoming popular.
Geka recently introduced bigBALLERINA and gleamingTOUCH large-format applicators, both of which feature an integrated reservoir zone. This built-in feature allows the applicator to pick up and release the ideal amount of formula, enabling a controlled, even application.
The oversized format, combined with optimized surface geometry and a soft-touch feel, makes these cosmetic applicators especially well-suited for modern textures. They pair perfectly with products such as liquid highlighters, serum foundations, and cream blushes. They deliver multiple benefits to the user, including faster application, better blending, and a more elevated, sensorial experience.
Anisa recently launched its ProPress Collection. It contains complexion brushes in various sizes, and some are designed to cover a large area of the face quickly. The complexion brushes have iron-shaped heads. The brush heads are made from fibers of varying densities, with a tapered tip for micro-controlled application.
Telwar Kaicker advises, “Two brushes that look the same can perform totally differently depending on how the fiber is extruded and the head shape is controlled.”
Despite the rise of new packaging formats, droppers remain a staple, particularly for low-viscosity skincare and haircare products.
Virospack continues to innovate in this category with its push-button dropper systems, designed to deliver precise, controlled dosing. These applicators are ideal for facial and haircare serums and oils.
Virospack’s push-button dropper range includes multiple formats, including high-dosage, duo-dose, ring push, and syringe-style systems. “By delivering an accurate amount of product with each use, they offer consumers a professional-grade application and a more elevated experience. Beyond precision, this push-button system enhances the perception of a premium product. It caters to consumers seeking luxury, high-quality solutions,” explains Virospack’s Ferreira.
Virospack’s droppers pair with its tubular glass bottles, which include a wiper to ensure a clean pipette swipe. “Additionally, we offer glass pipettes in various tip formats, allowing for further personalization to enhance product differentiation,” adds Ferreira.
Mascara remains one of the most technically driven applicator categories, where even subtle changes in brush design can dramatically impact performance.
The no-mascara look and “ghost lashes” are a trend now, which is aligned with the types of mascara brushes that suppliers say are most often requested by beauty brands. “We see a high demand for mascara brushes that create defined, natural-looking lashes with clean separation and subtle volume,” says Geka.
Geka has introduced a new collection of mascara brushes featuring playful, unconventional shapes, including heart and star-shaped designs. While visually distinctive, these designs are engineered with high-quality fibers in functional shapes that can deliver the product onto lashes with precision and even distribution.
In molded brush technologies. Geka’s featherBRUSH represents a new design approach. It features a shape and diameter aligned to the natural curvature of the eye for a more ergonomic fit. Its 30-degree angled bristles are designed to support the instinctive zig-zag motion used during application, helping to capture each lash while improving separation.
One of Albéa’s latest innovations is its Hybrush mascara brush. It combines the performance benefits of both plastic and fiber brushes in a single applicator. “This hybrid design allows for a highly customizable makeup result, enabling brands to tailor the applicator to achieve specific effects, from natural definition to more intense volume and separation,” Beavogui explains.
Albéa also offers its innovative Double Thread Brush. “This brush uses multi-braiding technology, rather than single braiding, for more volume, curling, and lengthening. It’s a revolutionary way to distribute the filament, and enables limitless possibilities for different effects on the lashes,” she explains.
Brivaplast introduced its new Blue Pixie (APP650) mascara brush, featuring a winding curve profile that follows the eye’s natural shape.
The brush is made with two distinct fibers—soft black fibers in a solid section, and harder blue fibers in an X-shaped cross-section. “This balanced mix allows Blue Pixie to pick up a great amount of product for a one-stroke application. The thicker blue fibers comb and separate lashes, while the thinner black fibers trap the product for a full, one-coat release,” explains Lucia Francia, Marketing Specialist at Brivaplast.
Pibiplast is advancing mascara packaging with its new system called Two Way. The Two Way system rethinks one of the most repetitive user interactions—opening the bottle. The dual-direction mechanism allows the cap to be twisted either clockwise or counterclockwise. “It is a mechanically simple innovation that doesn’t add production complexity, yet it significantly enhances user comfort and usability,” says Mazza.
The design simplifies the user experience to make opening the bottle more intuitive, ergonomic, and accessible, particularly for left-handed users.
Since sustainability is always a concern, Pibiplast offers its new Recycled PBT Peanut Brush. “The mascara applicator is made from chemically recycled PBT obtained through advanced depolymerization of post-consumer PET bottles,” says Mazza.
Through a proprietary depolymerization and transesterification process, PET waste is rebuilt into high-performance PBT with engineering-grade properties. The result is a fiber that contains 60% post-consumer recycled content, is GRS certified, and delivers mechanical performance comparable to virgin PBT.
These innovations demonstrate how much a mascara’s performance depends upon the entire system—from the opening gesture to wiper interaction, brush shape, and formula compatibility.
At the more advanced end of the spectrum, applications are merging with skincare technology—transforming packaging into a functional part of treatment. “We don’t approach applicators as accessories,” says Alain Dijkstra, Founder & CEO of Nuon Medical. “We see them as delivery systems that directly influence whether a formulation performs as intended,” he says.
Nuon Medical’s Facial Therapy Cap Applicator is a compact, waterproof cream lid that integrates seamlessly into primary packaging. The system combines red light therapy (630 nm), EMS microcurrent, and micro-vibration to enhance how formulas are applied and absorbed.
Rather than introducing a separate device, the goal is integration. These technologies are embedded directly into the packaging to improve delivery consistency and support visible results—without adding extra steps to the consumer’s skincare routine.
This applicator is ideal for treatment-driven skincare categories, including anti-aging creams and brightening formulas.
As applicator innovation continues to evolve, sustainability has become a built-in requirement.
At Virospack, environmental impact is a key driver of development. The company’s push-button dropper systems, for example, are now available using post-consumer recycled (PCR) and chemically recycled plastics across multiple components. The supplier offers options for glass or polypropylene pipettes—and every component is designed with end-of-life recyclability in mind.
This type of material flexibility allows brands to make more sustainable choices without compromising an applicator’s performance.
Sustainability is only one part of what’s shaping the next generation of cosmetic applicators for beauty packaging.
Looking ahead, Geka points to the growing demand for more adaptive, intuitive tools. “We expect strong growth in flexible and adaptive applicators—tools that adjust naturally to facial contours and make it easier for consumers to achieve personalized results without advanced makeup skills,” the company says.
At the same time, material innovation will continue to influence the application experience. “Soft-touch materials will become even more important as hybrid textures expand across product categories,” Geka notes, reinforcing the connection between formula trends and applicator evolution.
Precision will also remain a priority. As consumers seek greater control and more refined results, applicators designed for targeted, detailed application are expected to see continued growth.
These developments point to a clear direction for the category. Applicators that are more personalized to a product’s formula, more comfortable to use, and more sustainable will continue to drive demand.
The bottom line: the most successful applicators aren’t defined by a single feature or innovation—but by how well every element works together.
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