By: UFIRST Production
In Miami’s fashion and event scene, Nadezda Kirillova has built a reputation as a makeup artist who treats beauty as more than a finished look. Her work sits at the intersection of fashion training, backstage discipline, and a coaching-influenced approach that centers on how a person feels in their own skin. She is often brought in for runway and creative environments where timing is tight, emotions run high, and the most minor details matter.
Kirillova’s visual instincts showed up early. As a child, she gravitated toward drawing, fabric, color, and form, sketching dresses, sewing outfits for dolls, and imagining textures and silhouettes long before she had words for technique. That pull eventually led her to study fashion design, where she began to see beauty through structure, proportion, balance, and narrative. In her view, every visual choice communicates something, even when it is subtle.
During her student years, she also spent several seasons working as a hair and beauty model, traveling across Russia and participating in national and international competitions. The work placed her in the chair for long hours, giving her a close-up view of how artists move, how confidence can shift in real time, and how a single detail can change posture, mood, and presence. Those experiences helped shape a core belief she still returns to.
“Makeup is never about changing a woman,” she says. “It is about revealing her.”
In 2018, Kirillova relocated to the United States and earned a coaching diploma, then deepened her interest in psychology and emotional intelligence, studying how identity is expressed through gesture, perception, and self-talk. She describes this period as a turning point that changed how she approached beauty, not as surface work, but as a personal ritual with room for calm, attention, and self-recognition.
After becoming a mother, that perspective sharpened. She returned to makeup with a stronger focus on presence and intention, approaching each look as a collaboration rather than a makeover. In her sessions, the goal is not to chase trends or build a mask, but to support a client’s natural features and help them feel more like themselves.
Kirillova’s professional experience also includes three years with Dior Beauty, where she says precision became a daily discipline. She trained alongside experienced artists, learned how products behave under varied lighting and climates, and developed a routine grounded in consistency and detail. For her, technical standards and intuition are not competing ideas. They are meant to reinforce each other.
“Discipline makes space for instinct,” she says. “When the fundamentals are solid, you can listen more closely to what the face needs.”
Today, she works across fashion and art platforms, including Florida Men’s Fashion Week, Miami Fashion Week, Art Hearts Fashion during Miami Art Week, Doral Fashion Week, Miami Art Couture, and The Broward Dream Runway. Backstage, she sees a familiar pattern: excitement layered with pressure, ambition mixed with doubt, and the quiet vulnerability that often comes with being seen.
Her approach in those moments is steady and straightforward. She studies the skin, the face, and the person’s energy before deciding what belongs and what does not. She aims for looks that feel intentional rather than heavy, and expressive rather than performative.
Kirillova believes makeup is at its strongest when a person recognizes themselves in the mirror. She describes the shift as physical as much as emotional: a relaxed shoulder, a softer gaze, a steadier presence. That is the point where beauty stops feeling like a costume and starts feeling grounded.
Three worlds shape her work she continues to build upon: the artistry of fashion design, the technical rigor of luxury beauty, and the sensitivity that comes from coaching and psychological study. She does not separate aesthetics from emotion. She treats beauty as a language, expressed through color, texture, and touch, and translated into confidence, self-acceptance, and alignment.
Whether she is working on the runway, in editorial, or in private sessions, her intent remains consistent. She aims to create beauty that supports rather than overwhelms, elevates rather than disguises, and feels honest to the person wearing it.
“True beauty is not something we put on,” she says. “It is something we remember.”









