eyebrow microblading

Eyebrow Microblading: Everything You Need to Know

When you’ve tried every pencil, powder, pigment, gel, and stencil at the makeup counter and your brows are still sparse, there’s eyebrow microblading, a more permanent fix for thin brows that promises to change your brow life. Microblading has grown steadily in popularity over the past couple of years and now everyone’s mother knows about the once under-the-radar service. And with good reason: Nothing out there is as long-lasting nor natural-looking. The face tattoo technique isn’t as scary as it sounds.

Eyebrow Microblading is a form of tattooing

Unlike a regular tattoo, microblading is a form of tattoo artistry where pigment is implanted under your skin with a manual handheld tool instead of a machine, we draw hair-like strokes with the tool to mimic natural hairs in your brows. Even though it’s not as deep as the regular tattoo, it’s still a tattoo because pigment is implanted under the skin.

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There are several forms of microblading

The popular beauty service has since evolved, with new techniques introduced such as microfeathering, which is microblading with a lighter touch focused on adding just a little to the brows’ existing shape, and ombré or microshading, which mimics the look of brow makeup with with a more obviously filled-in look instead of hair-like strokes.

 

Microblading - Lash Pilot

Preparation is key

There are some things you need to avoid before getting microbladed, namely, anything that will thin out your blood. If you drink a lot, take aspirin, or use retinol, stop one week before your treatment. Retinol makes your skin thin and then you bleed a little more, adding that profuse bleeding pushes out pigment so that it doesn’t stick as well. Avoid blood thinners, aspirin, anything caffeinated, and alcohol during the healing process.

It doesn’t hurt (too much)

Pain is relative. Some feel more than others. Overall it feels like little scratches. You feel it, but it’s not unbearable. It’s not like having a baby,We prepare our patients’ brows with topical numbing cream and tops up throughout the process to dull the discomfort. If you have a low pain tolerance, it’s best if you apply numbing cream for up to an hour beforehand.

Microblading takes time

We don´t like to rush this process which is why we block off two hours for new clients.

Aftercare is essential

Aftercare means protecting freshly bladed brows from all moisture–no sweaty workouts, swimming, or washing your face with water for a whole week. If you get them wet, the scab comes off too early and you just lose the pigment.

Some patients experience itching and redness during the first week, which Vaseline can alleviate. Brows will look slightly darker at first, but the color will fade 30 to 40 percent. Overall they look great right away and you don’t have to hide, Slight redness and mild swelling is normal.

You will also have to avoid using any makeup and other products on the brows while they heal. Treat it like an open wound.

Results last up to three years

Depending on the skin and lifestyle, normally clients come back for touch-ups once every six months.

The brows’ pigment will change over time

While they will be long-lasting, clients should have realistic expectations and understand the brows will naturally fade. Your body might metabolize pigment faster, or if your skin is oilier, the pigment breaks down faster. Strokes soften and blur a bit. If you think it’ll stay looking exactly like hairs forever and stay sharp, that’s not going to happen. We find we don’t need to do ‘shading’ technique because the body does it on its own.

Source:https://www.elle.com/beauty/a37438/semi-permanent-eyebrow-microblading/