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- Mar 18, 2026
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Brow Grooming
OVERHEAD VIEW — YOUR RIGHT BROW
Glabella — the gap between both brows
Tool: tweezers
Stand in front of a mirror with good lighting. Feel the bridge of your nose with your finger — that bony ridge between your eyes. Any hair growing on or between that ridge, in the gap between the two brows = Zone A.
DO: Pluck every hair in the gap until there is clear skin visible between the two brows. This is the highest-impact change you can make.
DON'T: Go past the inner corner of each brow (where the brow starts above your nose). Stop there.
Tool: tweezers
Stand in front of a mirror with good lighting. Feel the bridge of your nose with your finger — that bony ridge between your eyes. Any hair growing on or between that ridge, in the gap between the two brows = Zone A.
DO: Pluck every hair in the gap until there is clear skin visible between the two brows. This is the highest-impact change you can make.
DON'T: Go past the inner corner of each brow (where the brow starts above your nose). Stop there.
Underside — the bottom edge of the brow
Tool: tweezers
Look straight ahead in the mirror. The bottom edge of your brow is the line closest to your eyelid. Right now yours has hairs scattered below that line — those are stray hairs falling into Zone C.
DO: Starting from directly above your pupil, pluck the lowest 1–2 rows of stray hairs that fall below the natural brow line. Go slowly — pluck one hair, step back, look. Repeat.
DON'T: Go more than 3–4 hairs deep into the brow. You're just defining the lower border, not thinning the brow. Stop the second it looks clean.
Tool: tweezers
Look straight ahead in the mirror. The bottom edge of your brow is the line closest to your eyelid. Right now yours has hairs scattered below that line — those are stray hairs falling into Zone C.
DO: Starting from directly above your pupil, pluck the lowest 1–2 rows of stray hairs that fall below the natural brow line. Go slowly — pluck one hair, step back, look. Repeat.
DON'T: Go more than 3–4 hairs deep into the brow. You're just defining the lower border, not thinning the brow. Stop the second it looks clean.
Tail — the outer end near your temple
Tool: tweezers
The "tail" is the far outer end of the brow — the part closest to your ear. Yours fades into sparse scattered hairs rather than ending cleanly.
DO: Find where the main dense part of the brow noticeably thins out. Everything past that thinning point — those sparse, individual stray hairs — pluck them. The tail should end with a clean stop, not fade into wisps.
DON'T: Shorten the tail aggressively. You're just removing the stray ends, not cutting the brow short.
Tool: tweezers
The "tail" is the far outer end of the brow — the part closest to your ear. Yours fades into sparse scattered hairs rather than ending cleanly.
DO: Find where the main dense part of the brow noticeably thins out. Everything past that thinning point — those sparse, individual stray hairs — pluck them. The tail should end with a clean stop, not fade into wisps.
DON'T: Shorten the tail aggressively. You're just removing the stray ends, not cutting the brow short.
Main body — leave it alone
Tool: nothing
The thick, dense main body of the brow is your biggest asset. The fullness is masculine and reads high-testosterone. Do not touch the top edge. Do not thin the middle. Do not shape the arch aggressively.
DO: After steps 1–3, brush the brows upward with a spoolie (or a clean toothbrush) so the hairs lay uniformly.
DON'T: Pluck anything from the upper edge or the central mass. Ever.
Tool: nothing
The thick, dense main body of the brow is your biggest asset. The fullness is masculine and reads high-testosterone. Do not touch the top edge. Do not thin the middle. Do not shape the arch aggressively.
DO: After steps 1–3, brush the brows upward with a spoolie (or a clean toothbrush) so the hairs lay uniformly.
DON'T: Pluck anything from the upper edge or the central mass. Ever.