Question:

Eye brow die?(worth 10 points)

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okay,

i wanna die my hair darker

but my brows wont match my hair

do u kno if they make eye brow die

and where can i get it

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5 ANSWERS


  1. You can use regular hair dye to color your eye brows the color you want but it's dangerous and not reccomended.

    You can also buy eyebrow 'pencils' at a cosmetic or drug store that will help your brows look darker.

    Your best option is to go to a salon where they can professionaly do your brows to match your hair.


  2. don't dye your eye brows. your skin underneath will turn brown too and the chemicals in the dye could make your eyebrows fall out.

    i suggest using makeup to fill in your eyebrows. you can get it from pretty much any pharmacy, and the cosmetologist will be able to recommend a good one. this is what i did when i dyed my hair black. use a makeup brush with eyeshadow and an eyebrow pencil.

  3. They have special dying kits you can buy at your local drugstore.

    However, make sure you really want to dye it because

    espeically going light to dark, if you ever want it light again

    it will be hard for it to go a decent colour without turning

    orange. Just think it over, goodluck .


  4. If you go to a salon, they will do it for your. When I was dyeing my blonde hair to a medium red, I did it at home and dyed my brows with the same hair dye, but this is dangerous and you do it at your own risk. If dye gets in your eyes it can blind you and beauty is not worth going blind.  That said, i did it and only did so very carefully and made sure none got near my eyes (kinda difficult, but Sally's had a brand of haircolor (Ion) that is gel based so it doesn't get everywhere or travel very much). If you do decide to dye your brows, be very careful when removing it because that may be the time when it has the most chance of getting in your eyes besides when applying it.

  5. Permanent makeup

    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    Jump to: navigation, search

    Permanent makeup is a cosmetic technique which employs tattoos (permanent pigmentation of the dermis) as a means of producing designs that resemble makeup, such as eyelining and other permanent enhancing colors to the skin of the face, lips, and eyelids. It is also used to produce artificial eyebrows, particularly in people who have lost it as a consequence of old age, disease, such as alopecia, chemotherapy, or a genetic disturbance, and to disguise scars and white spots in the skin such as in vitiligo. It is also used to restore or enhance the breast's areola, such as after breast surgery.

    Most commonly called permanent cosmetics, other names include dermapigmentation, micropigmentation, and cosmetic tattooing[1] (the latter being most appropriate since permanent makeup is, in fact, tattooing.) In the United States and other countries, the inks used in permanent makeup and the pigments in these inks are subject to FDA or similar agency regulation as cosmetics and color additives.



    Permanent Makeup - Before, immediately after and healed for Brow, Eyeliner and Lip proceduresContents [hide]

    1 Regulations/Oversight

    2 History

    3 Results

    4 Removal

    5 Adverse Effects and Complications

    6 Examples

    7 References

    8 External links



    [edit] Regulations/Oversight

    Permanent makeup regulations vary from country to country: sometimes by state, province, county or even city to city. For instance, in the US, while in most areas it falls under the cognizance of the Department of Health, State Boards of Cosmetology are often the oversight agency. In fact, in some areas a cosmetology or esthetics license is required, while in other areas, cosmetologists are prohibited from conducting these procedures. Exclusive to Australia, practitioners are prohibited from advertising the procedures as "permanent" since it is their opinion that the "…benefits of cosmetic tattooing are not permanent and will generally only last three to five years."[2] This position is not consistent with the fact that permanent makeup is tattooing and tattooing is a permanent process.[3]

    [edit] History

    Permanent makeup dates back at least to the start of the 20th century, though its nature was often concealed in its early days. The tattooist George Burchett, a major developer of the technique when it become fashionable in the 1930s, described in his memoirs how beauty salons tattooed many women without their knowledge, offering it as a "complexion treatment ... of injecting vegetable dyes under the top layer of the skin."[4]

    [edit] Results

    This section does not cite any references or sources.

    Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources. Unverifiable material may be challenged and removed. (January 2008)

    Results are usually good, and often mimic topically applied cosmetics, such as in complete alopecia of the eyebrows. The skill and the experience of the tattoo artist are fundamental. Before committing to permanent makeup, particularly if for convenience only, clients should be aware of the potential problems of later removal and complications that may ensue. As with tattooing, permanent makeup may take several sessions and may present some minor discomfort. (Although many technicians will use a topical anesthetic to help reduce any discomfort.) Result appear "harsh" just after application, but become somewhat more natural (as natural as makeup can be) after a few weeks.

    Permanent makeup can be useful for women who wish to wear makeup, but cannot apply it easily because they have allergic reactions to makeup materials, have vision deficits, tremors or restrictions of precise movements of the fingers and hands (such as in arthritis, stroke, Parkinson's disease, multiple sclerosis, or other conditions). Permanent makeup may also be used to camouflage scarring on the face or other parts of the body.

    The pigmentation of permanent makeup may fade over time, particularly under the effects of sunlight or when using colors like light brown tones for eyebrows. It usually lasts for a decade or more before fading significantly. Touching up the tattoos may be required to restore the original color as early as two years after the original procedure. Many procedures last a lifetime with little to no intervention

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