The mistake lies in how the eyeshadow is applied, namely in the area where the color goes from the outer corners of the eyes into the crease.
This picture should make things clearer for you:

The photograph above makes it clear that the eyeshadow only highlights the sagging outer corners of the eyes and the hooded eyelid.
Eyeshadow should never be applied below the lower eyelid line if you have hooded eyelids, even though these hues are meant to cover up these kinds of defects. The outer corner should be the continuous line of the lower eyelid.

To achieve this, you should:
Avoid sketching sharp lines in the corners of your eye.
Don’t draw too-black lines in the corners of your eyes.
You don’t just go around expressionless all day; everyone has facial expressions. Your eyes appear unattractive when you smile because it distorts the sharp, black lines in the outer corners of your eyes.
I’ll now compare the potential effects on the eyes of making this eyeshadow application blunder, emphasizing all the wrong components.
And this is how it should look exactly.







