Comb wet brow hair through a stencil hole (stencil
Ma#3 below). The hair will follow the shape of the stencil. Gel
holds hair in position.
coloring
the skin.
Looking through the stencil hole the exposed skin is colored
with powder that matches brow hair color.
How To: Flat to angled & high arched
Note the before
Tools: The
eyebrowz
brow comb/brush combo,
Directions: Wet the brows. Brush the water through the brow
hair ensuring the hair gets wet. This will make the hair more
manageable.
Tools:
Eyebrowz
brow powder
Directions: Look through the stencil hole and apply brow powder to spots
that have no brow hair.
Tools: Eyebrowz brow comb/brush
combo, brow
gel
Directions: Brow gel was applied to the hair. After applying the holding
gel, the dual comb/brush again combed the brow hair.
Tools:
Tweezerman slant tip tweezers
or brow razor
Directions: The stencil was removed. The brow hair was left to dry
in position. The hairs directly below the arch were removed. Approximately
15 hairs were removed.
Recreating your brow shape is not as hard as you may
think.
Brow hair (just like
other hair) is easier to manage if you start out with it wet. It can
be combed, gelled and set into a new shape and a stencil can work as
a guide
If you are starting from little brow hair it is as
simple as placing the stencil shape over your existing brows and
filling in with powder. Go lightly at first filling in only the
spots with powder that have no hair underneath.
In most cases, we recommend new brows that are somewhat close to the starting brow. In this case,
however, we went from a
flat brow to a high arch but could not make the stretch without some
tweezing (although not a lot).