How to browmaxx with microblading

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Diremeyer

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A little goes a long way, that's the key to getting microblading right.

And when you microblade, which is tattooing on a few "hairs", those should go beneath existing natural brow hairs. If they're outside the perimeter of your natural brow, then it'll girly and fake. And don't do anywhere near as much as girls do.

What girls do to their eyebrows is equivalent of an Italian bath. You know, so much cologne it reeks. This looks fake due to the amount of hair.

You just want some, a little, a few strands of tattooed hair.

If you want to check whether it'd would work for you, download the image editing app Perfect365 and adjust eyebrows (iPhone, Android). What you'd want is to put emphasis on various places on existing brows. It goes a long way with some adjustment, som more darkness.

So with microblading, don't fill in the entire brow. Rather fill it in in specific places, namely from proximal and outwards, stopping before reaching the very end, thus making the v-shape more apparent. You'll see what I mean in the Perfect365 app. There are many good ways to enhance current brows there, but filling them in throughout usually makes for a less than stellar result.

The results usually last 1 to 1.5 years.

Here's how women do it. Those who don't go completely over the top, that is:

MicrobladingExample.OmDesignAcademy.jpg


On a guy such brows would be too manicured, too much, and filled in throughout. But done right—in moderation—it looks very natural, very good.
 
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why not going for eyebrow transplant? microblading lacks the 3d effect
 
why not going for eyebrow transplant? microblading lacks the 3d effect

It's easier, and it's temporary. That said, eyebrow transplants can look great.

Microblading should rather be compared with brow tinting, as both are temporary. With natural eyebrows, some hair are sticking to the skin, many are not. So when microblading it'd look like the number sticking to the skin has increased. I wouldn't call it 3D, but an illusion of 3D.

Eyebrow tinting lends much of its effect to making the skin appear darker. That is: of course the brows get tinted, but it also tints the skin below. But with microblading you get more control of what of the skin you "tint", you get more control of the shape, and it looks more natural—but the key is moderation, moderation, moderation.
 
You could have a stylist do pen microblades first, to get like a "preview" of how it would look, before getting the real deal.
 
No objections?

I think this could be a mighty fine and subtle way of enhancing the brows. Get some more of that v-shape. Get some more color. And when not overdone, not outside the perimeter of the original brows, then it'd look completely natural.
 

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