Gray eyebrows in permanent makeup: is it an inevitable outcome
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Before you start reading, take a moment to think about the fears and difficulties you experience when it comes to your permanent makeup work. Have your clients ever been dissatisfied with the outcome of the treatment? Have you ever been disappointed in the results you've achieved? I know these are tough and unpleasant questions, but it's okay. We've all been there at some point. That's why I can guess your answers to these questions.
Gray Eyebrows in PMU
Eyebrows that become gray, blue, or cold in tone over time have never been desirable. That's one of the main reasons both artists and clients become disappointed and dissatisfied with the results they get. There are no techniques that can prevent this from happening if the pigment is of low quality. You can be an amazing PMU artist and still get these results.
Red Eyebrows in PMU
If brows don't turn gray over time, they must turn red, right? Red eyebrows are as undesirable and unnatural looking as the gray ones. One of the two outcomes often seems inevitable, and the only question that seems to be is which of the two will happen to you and your clients. Well, it doesn't have to be like that. There is a third option. There is an option for eyebrows not to turn neither gray nor red over time but to stay the same color as long as they last. I understand if you are skeptical; your experience has taught you to be, but there is a solution.
Tattoo Effect
Even though it's called permanent makeup, it is not supposed to last forever. Each pigment that stays in the skin for longer than one to two years will eventually need to be removed by laser. I'm sure you don't want that outcome for your clients. You want clients who regularly come back for corrections, every year to year and a half, happy with the results and with trust in your work. You don't get that by causing a tattoo effect on your clients. That's why it's important to pay attention to the structure of the pigments you are using. Too many tattoo components mean only one thing: the brows you are working on will eventually turn into a tattoo.
Solution
By changing the pigments that you use, you completely change the outcome of your work too. With smart and cautious choosing, you will find pigments that fade from the skin naturally. What you want are pigments that would completely fade out from the skin over a year and a half to two years if not refreshed in color. If correctly done, permanent makeup has its duration. If not, then it's a tattoo. And that's not why your clients come to you.
The permanent makeup field, like any other, has its own weak spots. How many times has it happened to you to find a brand that promises color persistence, but soon after implementing it, you find your client's eyebrows starting to turn cold in color? That's what usually happens. With knowledge about the most common problems in the permanent makeup industry, we have developed our R line so that PMU artists can be relieved from all the listed difficulties. Over the years, we have perfected the balance of the components in our pigments so that gray or red brows and the tattoo effect can stay forever in the past.