Throw Your Tweezers Away - NY Times article | the Fashion Spot

Throw Your Tweezers Away - NY Times article

Kimkhuu

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Throw Your Tweezers Away

Source: nytimes.com

By Natasha Singer
August 17 2006

WHETHER fake or farm-raised, fur makes a fashionable fall accessory. But this season the trendiest fluff is not the trim on coats or handbags. Autumn’s most prized pelt is the hairy eyebrow.

“For women who overpluck, this season will be about growing your eyebrows back so that they have a natural arch that extends out and ends in a beautiful point,” said Pat McGrath, a makeup artist for Max Factor and CoverGirl and the creative director for Procter & Gamble Beauty.

Ms. McGrath is one of the trend-setting stylists responsible for unleashing the feral eyebrow as this season’s beauty signature. At the Prada fall fashion show in Milan in February, she combed models’ eyebrows up with clear mascara so that they fanned out like plumage, lending their faces a wild expression which Ms. McGrath described as “sauvage.”

Her exaggerated runway look is already having an impact on personal grooming. Some women who once plucked zealously are now hoping that the thin brown lines on their foreheads bloom into thickets.

“On both coasts, everybody wants a thicker brow that reminds you of Elizabeth Taylor and Ava Gardner,” said Robyn Cosio, an eyebrow stylist who works at the Salon by Maxime in Beverly Hills and Eiji salon in Manhattan. “People love that I leave the two bottom layers of undergrowth and don’t take out so much in between the brows so that they can stick up and look feathered.”

Ladies, lay down your tweezers. Facial hair hasn’t been this much in demand since the advent in 1978 of Brooke Shields. Indeed, this month French Vogue devotes an entire page to the tinted, brushed and glossed eyebrow, recommending a “dense and proud” brow as the best way to structure a face.

The fringed frons is making a comeback because of chunky, angular fall fashions, said James Kaliardos, a makeup artist in New York and Paris. Previous seasons were full of frilly, delicate, ladylike clothes best complemented by pink-hued cosmetics and a thinner hyper-groomed brow.

But this season’s outfits with their pared-down constructivist silhouettes call for a more natural-looking face anchored by a prominent brow, he said.
“With a stronger, more graphic quality to the clothes like the fall collection from Balenciaga, you want strong eyebrows that make you look intelligent and empowered, and you want to keep the rest of the face clean,” Mr. Kaliardos said. For the fall advertising campaign for Chanel, for example, he strengthened the already well-endowed brows of Daria Werbowy, a Polish-born Canadian model, by shading them with an eyebrow pencil, but he left her other features almost unadorned, he said.

In addition to Ms. Werbowy, a clique of naturally Dracula-browed Eastern European fashion models —that means you, Natalia, Vlada, Eugenia, Sasha and Snejana — is inspiring a return to the bold brow. But the hairiest of them all is Hilary Rhoda, a fresh-faced American model possessed of eyebrows as furry as tufted caterpillars, whose eerie resemblance to Ms. Shields recently landed her on the covers of Italian and French Vogue.
“That baby face with an eyebrow that says ‘I know what I want’ is what made Brooke Shields so incredible,” Mr. Kaliardos said. “Hilary has that pure rich-kid look about her like Margaux Hemingway.”

To achieve the furry but tamed Hemingway eyebrow, Ms. McGrath suggested an appointment with a professional eyebrow groomer.
“Giving yourself a beautiful eyebrow is not one of the easiest things to do,” Ms. McGrath said.

For those who want to create fuller brows at home, she suggested a way to ensure that they look evenly shaped. Start by drawing over the straggly hairs you want to remove with a white eyeliner pencil to guarantee that the placement is right before tweezing them.

Next, to create fullness, use a brow pencil or brow powder that is two shades lighter than your natural eyebrow color to fill in between the hairs. The brow should look blended rather than drawn on, she said. Finally, use clear mascara or eyebrow gel to fluff hairs — push them up so they are almost vertical — and then brush them back down, fixing them into shape, she said.

For those with very sparse brows, some salons offer eyebrow extensions. At LuxLash on Newbury Street in Boston, for example, Suzanne Cats, the owner, thickens brows by gluing a tiny fiber onto each existing hair. The process, which costs $75 to $250, can take 45 minutes to two hours and the false eyebrow effect lasts two weeks, she said. She also offers brow prosthetics — hairpieces for the eyebrows — in 20 different shapes and shades.

“It’s for women who previously had their brows made too thin,” Ms. Cats said.

But Ms. Cosio, an author of a book on the history of brows called “The Eyebrow,” said that a furry fringe does not fit everyone.

“If you have wild, thick, dense hair, a thicker brow can make you look heavy, harsh and mad,” Ms. Cosio said.

For those who do wish to emphasize the brows, Mr. Kaliardos recommended playing down other facial features by going easy on foundation and wearing sheerer lipsticks in natural-looking pink-brown hues.

“The slightest amount that you do to your eyebrows makes a big statement,” Mr. Kaliardos said. “If you are not careful, you will end up looking like Groucho Marx.”
 
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Hilary Rhoda
Source: style.com
 

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Anouck Lepere
Source: style.com
 

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Snejana Onopka
Source: style.com
 

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Sophie Vlaming
Source: style.com
 

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Eugenia Volodina
Source: style.com
 

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Emina Cunmulaj
Source: style.com
 

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Loving the whole unplucked, natural, full brow look. :heart:

I have full black eyebrows but I often feel the shaped is incorrect. I am trying to get them to grow out and make them a bit more straight, fuller and only arched towards the end. I noticed newer hair growing out was much darker and coarser, will I eventually end up with hair uneven in size for my brows?
 
I never liked thin eyebrows

I always wanted to have brooke shields eyebrows :wub:
 
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i personally love girls with thicker or long eyebrows:heart:
 
I've always had thick eyebrows... they look way better than thin ones IMO
 
I think it really depends ...I would never look good with such thick brows :doh:

I think only Sophie Vlaming and Emina Cunmulaj look ok with such brows here, sorry :innocent:
 
i like strong brows with little other make up...
always have though...
it;'s weird when what you have always done suddenly becomes a 'trend' and you start to see people who look like you more and more...

i haven't really noticed anything like this yet- will be interesting to see what people look like at shows in september...


thanks for posting kim..:flower:
 
I've always agreed more with healthy groomed eyebrows, and have prefered the lights of Natalia's, Emina's & of course Eugenia's bold brows! Last year i grew mine out a little to be more fuller and used Talika Lipocils Gel to encourage the growth quicker, which worked quite well. I read a tip in Elle last month that squaring the shape off at the inner corners creates the appearence of a stronger eyebrow and thicker ones altogether actually make you look younger.

Doutzen Kroes style.com

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I pretty much stopped plucking my eyebrows a year or so ago. Exception for getting the occasional wild hair that springs up in weird places, tweezers don't touch my brows (though I do trim them with little scissors to cut back on the outward 3D bushiness).

I have always LOVED the Brooke Shields/Doutzen Kroes look....very elegant and natural ^_^

Finally I'm vindicated :lol:
 
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I hate my eyebrows, they just look like big caterpillars, I am trying to grow them out just so I can have them shaped again, but its difficult, I've been plucking so long that i'm not sure if they'll grow out.
 
Kimkhuu said:
. I noticed newer hair growing out was much darker and coarser, will I eventually end up with hair uneven in size for my brows?

Well I do this all the time, I let my eyebrows grow out for months then go get them done, repeat. And I find that while the new hairs are new, yes, they look much darker and coarser and uneven, but eventually, once the growing out process is complete, it looks balanced.
 
this reminds me that I need to get my eyebrows done :innocent:

I've always had this look. I can't stand the extremely thin brows where people have to end up using an eyebrow pencil (and don't even get me started on those permanently done-eyebrows :yuk:)
 

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