I would love to have a boyfriend one day.

I've been singing, literally, since I was born.

YouTube videos and practice have taught me all I know.

I can be confident with bare skin and with a full face.

I've always wanted to create athleisure; it's my thing.

I always like to pop on a Lilly Lash in the style Miami.

I'm still confident as a boy, and I will always be a boy.

I always wear colored prescription contacts for my looks.

I'm very bad at talking to boys. I'm not that great at it.

When I started doing makeup, I had no intention of doing drag.

I love doing supercrazy, avant-garde but still stunning looks.

I do love a good dark guy. Maybe a beard - some sister scruff?

I feel like it's hard to create a really good product. It really is.

I always take photos from my left side because my jaw line is stronger.

I used to do hair styling before I even thought about joining the makeup world!

I love to do glam. But I also love a lot of creative, outside-of-the-box stuff.

I'm having fun. I'm being myself. I'm doing what I love. That's all that matters.

I think it's so important to love who you are and be comfortable in your own skin.

I try new techniques and styles almost every day, so I'm always challenging myself.

There's been thousands of very, very funny and also very, very nasty tweets about me.

Men in makeup, obviously, is a very new concept. It has not been widely accepted in the past.

I've always been a very artsy person, and I always preach self-confidence and knowing your worth.

My style, I'd definitely describe as athleisure with a twist of gay, which I really, really live for.

Makeup is kind of becoming a more genderless concept, which is so cool and something that I'm all for.

I hope to inspire others to be confident in their own skin and to love themselves with makeup or without.

You can do anything you want because, at the end of the day, it washes right off. It's just make-up, after all.

Breaking gender norms just comes instantly as soon as a boy is comfortable and confident enough to put on makeup.

I'm self-taught, and fake eyelashes definitely took the longest to master. I glued my eyes shut at least 15 times.

Makeup is an art form for me. It's a form of expression, and it's such a cool way to get my creative juices flowing.

I get really negative comments all the time, but the comments that really bother me are the ones that question my character.

Men in makeup is becoming more widely accepted. But it's going to take so much more open-mindedness to have it be a common thing.

I'm a super creative person and have always loved drawing and painting since I was super young, but makeup was a new avenue for me.

Classic glam is beautiful and will never go out of style, but I like to try to push the envelope and create something new and inspiring.

Makeup is where my career is going, but I would love to also indulge in music. It's still one of my absolute favorite things in the world.

My parents started questioning me about whether or not I was transgender - whether or not I was trying to be a woman. It was a big argument.

I definitely do prefer more of masculine streetwear type of clothing, but I see a lot of young girls rocking the same type of stuff that I do.

If you're ringing my doorbell eight times every three minutes and hiding behind my garbage cans, I will call the police. That is literally harassment.

I don't usually leave the house with makeup on. I wear it only for special occasions; I'm too lazy to get up in the morning before school and get glam.

I'm very thankful for the platform I've been given, and I realize that I'm a role model for many people. I want to use my platform to spread positivity.

As much as I love make-up and the creativity behind this, the Internet can be a horrible place, and sometimes, with so much negativity and hate, it's hard.

Sometimes the only thing that keeps me going is knowing I can help inspire young kids to be themselves, that they're waiting for me to put out awesome content for them.

Faux-freckles are definitely a James Charles touch to any makeup look. I love adding them and have seen so many other people start trying them as well! They're so cute!

My brows have definitely underwent quite the transformation since I started doing makeup. They used to be disgusting, and now they're a lot better, and I'm happy with them.

CoverGirl putting my face on such an international scale did make a huge leap forward for men in makeup and for boys in beauty and for anybody wanting to express themselves.

I was very immature - who isn't at age 12? Let's be real. Once I kind of figured myself out and grew as a person, I now have a ton of different friends and learned who I was.

I'm very, very open. I don't really have a specific taste that I go for, just someone who gets it and is just fun and happy to be around and is proud of me is the No. 1 thing.

I get a lot of fans who deal with poor mental health. But that's the good thing about the Internet - that there are so many kids who can confide together and help each other out.

Beauty is for everyone, and I think that CoverGirl, being such a timeless and iconic brand, recognizing that is so important. It truly shows that we are becoming a more accepting industry.

I don't care if someone makes fun of me, but if someone calls me a mean person or something, I reply. If you don't like me in makeup, that's OK. But I would like people to like me as a person.

I would love to do a video with Harry Styles and sit with him and talk about, like, his music and One Direction and everything he has going on and all his amazing songs that have been coming out.

Share This Page