Arguably, one of the best things about Halloween is the chance to dress up and become someone else for a day—something we rarely get to do. But few people pull it off as flawlessly as transformation guru Annie Thomas, better known as Creative Cliche.
Using makeup as her magic tool and her own face as the canvas, she brings to life everyone’s favorite characters, from Morticia Addams to Beetlejuice. Her transformations are so realistic it’s hard to believe it’s actually her beneath all that paint. And the best part? She doesn’t just do it on Halloween, she does it all year round.
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Today, Annie Thomas has grown her audience to over 2 million followers on TikTok and gathered millions of views across social media.
Her jaw-dropping transformations have turned her into a full-blown internet sensation, proving that makeup can be so much more than just eyeliner and contour, it can be pure art.
Her rise to fame began unexpectedly with a single cosplay look that went viral.
“I originally started my Instagram to practice special effects makeup [after] being inspired by FaceOff on SYFY, but I randomly decided to do a cosplay of the character Cynthia from Rugrats,” Thomas told Allure. “That post tripled my following at the time, so I switched my focus to mainly cartoons and cosplays.”
From that moment on, her fans have been hooked.
Special effects makeup, or SFX makeup, is the art of using prosthetics, paint, and other materials to create realistic illusions on the skin, anything from monsters and superheroes to lifelike injuries.
According to Studio Binder, this cinematic craft dates back to the early days of film, when artists used flour and glycerin to fake effects, later moving on to latex, foam rubber, and airbrushing in the 1970s.
Though Annie isn’t using these techniques for movies, she uses them to turn herself into the very stars of it.
Thomas describes herself as an “unprofessional makeup artist” who taught herself everything she knows. She told Business Insider that she always had a passion for drawing, especially cartoon characters.
“Funny enough, drawing cartoons was my biggest passion as a kid—I have boxes upon boxes filled to the brim with drawings of Nickelodeon characters,” she said. “It’s crazy that it all came full circle without me realizing!”
On top of painting her face, Thomas takes things a step further by adding extra details like paper cutouts and props to complete each look.
When she transformed into Angelica Pickles from Rugrats, for instance, she combined bold face paint with precisely placed paper pieces to bring the animated troublemaker to life.
As she told Insider, “Creating full-on cartoon characters, using my body as a canvas, came very naturally to me—I’m assuming from drawing them on paper so many times as a kid. I guess it’s a weird form of muscle memory.”
Her process is as fascinating as the results.
“I typically start out by gluing down my eyebrows and applying a bald cap, this helps me visualize myself as a flat surface without any details to distract me,” she explained to Allure.
Next, she sketches out the character with eyeshadow to perfect the dimensions before filling everything in. “It just takes practice at manipulating lines to make them appear to be drawn on a flat surface, but that challenge is the fun part!” she said.
It’s a slow, meticulous art. Each look usually takes Thomas three to five hours, though some have stretched far longer. Her most time-consuming transformation, Boo from Monsters, Inc., took a staggering 12 hours.
She also doesn’t test her looks beforehand. What you see online is always the first and only take. “Everything is a first attempt for me. I just keep going until I’m happy with it. Once I’ve put four hours into a look, I figure ‘might as well put an extra two hours in to get it right,’” Thomas told Allure.
“I guess I just never go in thinking that a second attempt is an option. I’m also a soul-crushing perfectionist so I feel that I would be more disappointed in myself for giving up,” she added.
When it comes to materials, Thomas swears by Mehron paints for their skin-friendly formulas.
“I pretty much exclusively use Mehron paints which don’t affect my skin much at all,” she said. After removing the paint with Banila Co’s Clean It Zero Cleansing Balm, she follows a careful skincare routine with Estée Lauder’s Advanced Night Repair serum and IT Cosmetics’ Confidence In A Cream to keep her skin hydrated.
Even the act of removing her makeup has become part of her TikTok identity—she posts those videos too, saying, “I’m so glad that I have more to show for my looks besides just a photo; it makes the taking off process less depressing after spending hours on them.”
Despite her growing fame, Thomas remains down-to-earth. She encourages others to try makeup art without worrying about fancy gear or high-end products.
“I get a lot of frustrated messages from followers who say that they would love to do what I'm doing, but they don’t have the money to do so,” she told Insider. “I started with a cheap paint set, my camera phone, and poster boards I got from the dollar store that I used as backdrops for my photos.”
It’s proof that creativity, not budget, is what truly makes an artist.
