Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

Eyebrow lamination makes your brows fuller, thicker

- By Danya Issawi

Perhaps you’ve noticed all the bushy eyebrows on TikTok, brushed up to resemble fuzzy caterpilla­rs, and wondered: How?

There are a few possible explanatio­ns: They may be amplified by makeup. The creator could be blessed with naturally thick brows. Or you might be looking at a pair of freshly laminated eyebrows.

Eyebrow lamination — a perm for those wanting their brows to appear fuller, thicker and maybe a little unkempt — is one of the latest semiperman­ent beauty trends (think microbladi­ng, or tattooing on eyebrows). During the pandemic, some aesthetici­ans saw the number of clients requesting lamination­s increase substantia­lly, even though the trend has been around for a few years now.

“I think that we’re all coming out of the thineyebro­w phase, and so many people want to fix their brows from their overplucke­d stages from the past,” said Jasmine Winsett, an aesthetici­an in Boise, Idaho, who charges $55 for her lamination service. She said she has done more than 500 eyebrow lamination­s since she began offering them in 2020.

Winsett credits social media for the increase in popularity. The hashtag #browlamina­tion has been added to around 1.4 million posts on Instagram and has been used in more than 365 million posts on TikTok.

After watching Madison Beer, a singer and influencer, sculpt her eyebrows to fluffy perfection in a makeup tutorial online, Ashley Gross, 26, wanted to try it. Gross began a Google search for cosmetic products that would help her brows reach these new desired heights, but she instead stumbled upon eyebrow lamination.

“I had never heard of that before,” Gross said. “I started Instagram searching it to see how it looked on normal people who aren’t models.”

It might seem like an easy solution, but keeping one’s brows teetering between looking messy and precisely styled takes effort. First, anyone looking to laminate their brows has to grow them out, ideally for four to six weeks. Then, at a salon, an aesthetici­an cleans them with a degreasing solution, and a perming gel is applied to break down the existing bonds in the hair. After that, the brows are brushed and set with a neutralizi­ng gel, with the end result being fullerlook­ing eyebrows.

The bushy-brow craze seemed to start online with a trend known as “soap brows”: Bar soap is applied to the eyebrows with an eyebrow brush to keep the hairs sculpted up and in place.

“I saw it all over TikTok,” said Gross, who has had three eyebrow lamination­s since her first in April. “Lamination gives you the same look. You just wake up looking like that.” She added, “The pandemic really made me super lazy, so I definitely see myself doing it for the foreseeabl­e future.”

Leigh Blackwell, director of the London Brow Co., which specialize­s in lamination products, said the pandemic, aided by social media, changed people’s beauty routines.

“Rather than being as tailored and perfect as a makeup look would be, we realized we can do less and still look OK or decent for our meetings and our Zooms,” Blackwell said.

Her company, which began selling lamination products in late 2019, said its products have been used in about 800,000 lamination­s to date.

Blackwell emphasized the importance, though, of getting your brows profession­ally laminated. As is the case with many procedures that begin in a salon, the impulse to DIY can have serious consequenc­es.

“It’s a chemical. It could degrade the hair to a point where you won’t be able to recover that hair,” she said when discussing at-home lamination kits.

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