There’s a particular kind of chaos that comes with prepping for an event nobody will confirm exists. For celebrity makeup artist Todd Harris Wolf, that was the reality of the days leading up to the widely reported Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce wedding at Madison Square Garden—a booking that arrived wrapped in NDAs, vague “holds” and a strict no-photos, no-questions policy that lasted almost until the moment he was doing the work.
A Beauty Booking Wrapped in NDAs
Wolf says the first sign something big was coming last Friday wasn’t a call sheet, but silence. Agents couldn’t say what the job was, only that clients needed to “be prepared” and keep the day open. Even the guests getting their makeup done weren’t fully looped in.
“No one knew what we were doing,” shares Wolf, describing how bookings trickled out through vague holds long before anyone confirmed details. “Unless you had a brand deal or some kind of very specific situation, you had no idea. You just knew you were working this day and you couldn’t speak a word of it.”
Agents weren’t looped in either. As Wolf puts it, “your agent wasn’t allowed to tell you what you were doing…all you knew was to just be prepared.” In fact, he didn’t get confirmation of who he’d actually be working on until two days out. “For the week before, it was all just holds,” he says.
Building a Kit for Every Possible Dress Code
With no confirmation of the dress code, weather conditions or how “done up” anyone was supposed to look, Wolf had to build a kit that could flex in either direction: full glam or a version of glam that didn’t read as “done at all.” That instinct, he says, came from an unlikely training ground: 10 straight days on the ground at Cannes, where heat and humidity forced him to master long-wear base products that wouldn’t budge under lights or sweat.
That skill became essential once he learned just how hot it would be on the big day. New York was hitting triple-digit degrees by the end of last week, and every client needed makeup that could survive the heat and humidity without melting.
The Kit That Made It Through the Heat
Asked what products actually got him through the day, Wolf didn’t hesitate to share. “For foundation, I used the Lisa Eldridge Seamless Skin Tint ($49), which, for me, is the holy grail of skin tints. It’s so sheer, but it actually gives you a blurring effect and photographs really beautifully,” he says. “It has skin care in it, so you don’t need to over-prep the skin. That was something that I used on everyone. The shade range from ultra-pale to dark is perfect on everybody.”
Over that, he layered Lancôme’s All Over Concealer ($32), which he describes as “a little bit more matte and has a little bit more coverage, so it always sits and stays” on the skin. “It doesn’t move,” he says. “You can get away with a lighter base and then using that concealer because it just locks in and it blurs everything. You don’t get any camera flashback with it, which is amazing.”
Beyond base products, his exit kit for each client was simple: blotting papers plus a lip color and liner left behind in case a touch-up was needed later, since nobody, including the clients, knew what the bathroom situation would even look like once they arrived at MSG.
Three Clients, One Tight Timeline
Wolf worked with three people that day (two new clients and one repeat) and got lucky in one respect as most of his bookings were clustered close together, with two at the same hotel and a third on the Upper West Side. That geography was the only thing that made a single-day, multi-client sprint even possible.
To stay upright through it, he didn’t load up on coffee, but leaned on a French electrolyte tablet, a product tip passed down from fellow makeup artist Lisa Aharon, favoring it over mainstream hydration mixes because of its lower sugar and citric acid content. Wolf says he stocks up on it whenever he’s in France specifically for days like this one.
But he does describe the toll the heat took bluntly: “We all kept sending pictures of ourselves from job to job, how we looked before and how we looked through the job. We were wrecked!”
Why Timing Mattered More Than Ever
Perhaps the most unusual detail Wolf shared: In an industry where “starting at 3:30 p.m. often means closer to 4:00 p.m.,” every single client he worked on that day was ready the moment he arrived. With strict departure windows and nobody wanting to be late—or to be the person who wasn’t camera-ready last, also known as the coveted “freshest” slot—the entire day ran with a level of discipline he says he’d never seen before.
He compared the pecking order to working a bridal party: The bride goes last so she looks freshest walking down the aisle, and on this job, someone’s agent had clearly made the same calculation for the final client of the day.
No Names, No Photos, No Proof
Wolf was firm on one point: He can’t and won’t confirm who he worked on. Photos of the finished look were a no-go and phones were banned on-site. While gossip account DeuxMoi did post images of two of his clients afterward, Wolf says there’s no evidence tying him to any of it. And, while a handful of other artists may have had permission to document their work, he suspects that simply came down to their proximity to the wedding party itself.
His own social media trail from that day amounts to two cryptic posts: “off to first” and “off to my second.” Nothing else.
That steamy Friday, he got home a little after 5 p.m. Not bad, all things considered, for a job that started as a rumor and ended as one of the most secretive bookings of his career.