Thursday, November 5, 2009

Permanent Make-Up Artist 101

Permanent make-up artists enhance their clients' natural appearance with long-term cosmetic tattooing. Also known as micropigmentation, permanent make-up is the injection of color under the skin for long-term eyeliner, eyebrow shaping or lip color. More advanced permanent make-up techniques include scar camouflage and permanent blush.

Permanent make-up artists may receive specialized training, in addition to their standard training as licensed cosmetologists, electrologists, estheticians or nail technicians. Nurses, tattoo artists and physicians are also increasingly interested in adding this specialty to their portfolio of services, according to the Society of Permanent Cosmetic Professionals (SPCP).

If you have the following qualities and skills, permanent make-up may be a great career choice for you:

  • An eye for symmetry and knowledge of facial morphology
  • A steady hand and excellent fine motor skills
  • Good eyesight, which can be further enhanced by magnifiers
  • Effective communication skills
  • Commitment to marketing yourself


Your Permanent Make-Up Education

What You’ll Study

Permanent make-up schools are still rare, but permanent make-up training is available from many experienced and reputable trainers. The Society of Permanent Cosmetic Professionals (SPCP) recommends choosing a permanent make-up training program that teaches the following:

  • Skin and facial structure
  • How to design a look clients want
  • All aspects of sterilization and pertinent health factors
  • Complete understanding of equipment, needles, autoclaves, etc.
  • Color and pigment issues
  • Business and marketing skills

You should learn how to work with all three types of permanent make-up devices:

  • Traditional coil/tattoo machine
  • Rotary/pen machine
  • Nonmachine/hand method

Most importantly, you need to get hands-on experience working on real people under the observation of a teacher. The SPCP says that four procedures on live models should be the absolute minimum offered.

Average Length of Study

There are many two-day beginner programs, which are affordable and can be a great way to get started. However, more training is highly recommended to reduce the risk of serious problems ranging from undesired results to allergic reactions, excessive bleeding and scarring.

A 2006 industry study by the SPCP found that over 30 percent of practitioners had received at least five days of initial training. Twenty-four percent had received between six days and two weeks of initial training.

Apprenticeship with an experienced permanent make-up artist is another excellent way to develop your skills. This form of training usually takes from six months to a year and is recommended after your initial training period.

Average Tuition

The 2006 SPCP study found that initial training costs ranged from under $1,000 to over $5,000, with the majority of students spending between $1,500 and $3,500. This does not include the cost of equipment.


Permanent Make-up Artist Certification and Licensing

Permanent make-up artists must comply with local, state and federal laws that dictate business operations. Licensing requirements vary. In most cases, your existing license as an esthetician, cosmetologist or electrologist is adequate to cover the additional service of permanent cosmetics.

Certification is available through many organizations, including the SPCP and the American Academy of Micropigmentation.


Permanent Make-Up Artist Career Overview

Most professionals who offer permanent cosmetics are already established in a related business. The 2006 SPCP industry profile study found that most permanent cosmetic professionals also work in one of the following professions:

  • Esthetician (36.2 percent)
  • Cosmetologist (23.8 percent)
  • Electrologist (10.0 percent)
  • Nurses (10.0 percent)
  • Nail Technician (8.9 percent)
  • Traditional Tattoo Artist (7.2 percent)
  • Physicians (1.4 percent)

Other professionals who may add permanent make-up to their services include massage therapists, medical assistants and dental hygienists.

Over 70 percent of permanent make-up artists are self-employed. They work in a wide range of settings including spas, salons and medical offices. Some practitioners may operate their business from home and may meet local health department and city ordinance requirements.

The most popular permanent cosmetic procedures, which are taught in fundamental classes and performed by most permanent make-up artists, include eyebrows, eyeliners and lip liner. Other procedures—full lip color, areola repigmentation after breast surgery, scar camouflage, eye shadow and cheek blush—are considered advanced and require additional training.


Permanent Make-Up Artist Career Outlook

Over the past fifteen years, permanent make-up has come into its own as a full-fledged profession. Professional organizations have been established, and the field is growing rapidly.

Permanent cosmetics have become increasingly popular option for many individuals:

  • Cancer survivors who have lost eyebrows and eyelashes
  • People with allergies to conventional make-up
  • Active people who don't want their make-up to run or sweat off
  • People with vision impairments that make it difficult to apply make-up
  • People with unsteady hands who can't apply their own make-up
  • Busy people who don't have time to spend on their make-up

Permanent Make-Up Artist Salaries

Most permanent make-up procedures cost between $400 and $600. Advanced work may be charged at $150 to $250 per hour. Touch-ups may be needed after healing to perfect the look. At least one touch-up is usually included in the initial cost of the procedure. After that, color can last for a decade or more before it begins to fade, although a touch-up may be recommended after three to five years.

According to the 2006 SPCP survey, permanent make-up artists perform an average of 11.6 new procedures per month. That would equate to a gross annual income—before costs such as equipment, supplies, insurance, marketing and rent—of roughly $55,000 to $80,000 per year.


From http://www.spabeautyed.com/


Thursday, October 8, 2009

Insurance...


Either as a PMU Technician or a Beauty Business Owner, the question will pop-up:
Do I need insurance for my permanent makeup business?

Just like any business, a good insurance will help you to protect yourself and your customers. There are several insurance companies that provide coverage for PMU technicians and/or PMU business. However, we'd like to let you know our Top 3 insurance companies based on our technicians/customers experience:
Now, we strongly recommend you to check each of them, request detailed information as much as you can and then evaluate it and decide which is the best suiting your needs...

We hope you to use this tip on behalf of your own good...


Tuesday, October 6, 2009

Tatuajes y Maquillaje Permanente

Antes de hacerse un tatuaje o aplicarse maquillaje permanente, debe saber lo siguiente.

Un tatuaje es una marca o diseño hecho sobre la piel. Un tatuaje permanente se hace para que dure para siempre, hecho con una aguja y tintas de color. La aguja se usa para poner la tinta en la piel. Algunas de las tintas de colores también se usan en imprentas o para pintar automóviles y no se han hecho pruebas para estar seguros de que no causen daño. De hecho, la FDA (Administración de Drogas y Alimentos) no ha aprobado ningúna tinta de color para que sea inyectada en la piel. Algunas personas que se han hecho tatuajes temporales o permanentes han reportado reacciones alérgicas.


Tipos de tatuajes

Hay varios tipos de tatuajes. Por ejemplo:

  • Los tatuajes permanentes: Se usa una aguja para tinta de color en la piel.
  • El maquillaje permanente: Es un tatuaje permanente que parece maquillaje, tales como los delineadores de cejas, de ojos, de labios, o rubor para mejillas.
  • Los tatuajes con henna (mehndi): Se usa una tinta vegetal llamada henna o mehndi para teñir la piel. Este tipo de tatuaje no usa agujas. El color dura de dos a tres semanas. La FDA sólo ha aprobado la henna para ser usada en tintes para el cabello. No ha sido aprobada para ser usada en la piel.
  • Tatuajes temporales hechos con calcomanías (Stickers): El diseño del tatuaje está en un pedazo de papel cubierto con una sustancia adhesiva, que luego se aplica a la piel con agua o se lo frota para fijar el tatuaje a la piel. Los tatuajes temporales sólo duran unos pocos días y deben estar elaborados únicamente con colores aprobados para uso en cosméticos aplicados en la piel.

¿Por qué alguien desearía hacerse un tatuaje o maquillaje permanente?
  • Desean volver a tener una apariencia natural en la cara o los pechos, en especial luego de pasar por una cirugía.
  • Se les hace difícil ponerse maquillaje debido a un problema médico.
  • Han perdidos las cejas.
  • Les parece que es algo atractivo.
  • Por influencia cultural o de la sociedad.

¿Cuáles son lo riesgos?
  • Infección: Las agujas sucias pueden transmitir graves infecciones de una persona a otra, tales como la hepatitis o el VIH.
  • Es posible que usted sea alérgico a alguna sustancia usada para hacerle el tatuaje. Aunque poco común, éstas pueden causar graves problemas de salud. En un caso en el que estuvo implicado un fabricante, se reportaron a la FDA más de 150 casos de reacciones graves debido a ciertos tipos de tintas para aplicar sombras permanentes. Algunas mujeres quedaron desfiguradas de modo permanente. La compañía tuvo que retirar del mercado muchas de sus tintas.
  • Se pueden formar abultamiento o chichones alrededor del área tatuada con tintas de colores.
  • Puede que a las personas se les hinche o se les queme el área tatuada de la piel cuando se hagan imágenes de resonancia magnética (MRI). Esto es muy poco común y no dura mucho tiempo.

¿Qué tal si no me gusta mi tatuaje?

  • Puede que no le guste su tatuaje, aún si queda bien hecho. Es muy común quitarse un tatuaje porque a la persona no le gusta.
  • Si decide quitarse un tatuaje, ésto suele tomar varios tratamientos y costarle mucho dinero.
  • Cuando se hace o se quita un tatuaje, le pueden quedar cicatrices.

Recuerde...

Piénselo bien antes de hacerse un tatuaje. La mayoría de los tatuajes son permanentes. Quitarse los tatuajes y el maquillaje permanente puede ser difícil y costarle mucho dinero. Y a veces no es posible quitar los tatuajes, lo que a menudo resulta en cirugías y cicatrices.


¿Cómo puedo quitarme un tatuaje?

  • Los tatuajes deben quitarse en una clínica o con un médico, y no en el lugar o comercio donde se hizo el tatuaje. Hay varias maneras que puede tratar para quitarse un tatuaje, pero no siempre dan resultado. Puede costarle mucho dinero y requerir varios tratamientos.
  • Consulte a su médico o a otro profesional de la salud para conocer la mejor manera de quitar su tatuaje.

¿Establece controles la FDA para los tatuajes?

  • La mayoría de los estados, ciudades y pueblos supervisan la práctica comercial para hacer tatuajes o maquillaje permanente; por ejemplo, exigen el uso de equipo limpio. Las mismas tintas para tatuaje son cosméticos, lo que por ley federal exige el uso de colores que hayan sido probados que no causan daño. Sin embargo, ninguna de las tintas ha sido aprobada para hacer tatuajes y no son controladas rigurosamente por la FDA.
  • La FDA esta tratando de descubrir por qué algunas mujeres sufren reacciones adversas a ciertos tipos de tintas paras maquillaje permanente. Tan pronto haya más información, la FDA decidirá qué acción tomar para que no haga daño hacerse tatuajes.

¿Cómo puedo dar una queja o reportar una reacción adversa?

Lo puede hacer en la oficina de distrito del FDA en su localidad, que aparece en las páginas azules de su directorio telefónico. Además, puede comunicárselo al Sistema para Reportar Eventos Adverso
s (CAERS, siglas en inglés) del Centro para Salubridad Alimentaria y Nutrición Aplicada, adscrito a la FDA (CFSAN, siglas en inglés) de las siguientes maneras:

Por teléfono al 1-800-FDA-1088
Por correo electrónico a CAERS@cfsan.fda.gov

Monday, October 5, 2009

Medical Use of Permanent Cosmetics

Medical tattooing was practice in WWII. This outdated procedures provided social security numbers and blood types to be tattooed on military personnel in case of injury or death. In today's technology, there is a new medical procedure known as Corrective Pigment Camouflage. This procedure is especially effective in the repigmentation of skin lightening from scarring due to illness, injury, birthmarks, surgical scars, disfigurement in burn survivors and cancer patients.

Persons who need to wear corrective make-up to mask vitiligo or alopecia, for, instance, or who have physical impairments preventing them from applying make-up benefit from these procedures. Persons who have allergies or wear corrective lenses will benefit from permanent makeup.

Corrective Pigment Camouflage (CPC), also known as Microdermal Pigmentation, is a process of inserting insoluble opaque pigment into the papillary and reticular layers of the skin to camouflage visible scar tissues and blend skin tones.

Procedures such as full up color camouflage will benefit both men and women who have burn scars. Lip deformities (including clef lip), scars from accidents, surgery and even post-inflammatory hypo-pigmentation from a fever blister or scars from infection can be improved. Hair simulation, especially in the area of the eyebrow and head lost to trauma, disease, or natural thinning will also be beneficial. Re-pigmentation of the skin includes correcting the skin tones and color mismatch in persons with vitiligo, which is a well known condition whereby the patient loses pigment in random areas on the skin. It is well documented that paramedical tattoos can camouflage this condition and when properly applied the artist can match the pigment to the skin color. However, Vitiligo is not the only medical procedure that can benefit from permanent makeup. A medical doctor attempted to remove a tattoo using a laser. The procedure was not successful and left the dark skinned patient with not only with the tattoo but with dispigmented skin. Permanent makeup camouflaged the problem.

Reconstructive camouflage on mastectomy patients may include creating the coloration of the aureole, nipple and masking of the incision scars. Hyper and hypo-pigmentation and mottling from second-degree burns can be camouflaged with corrective pigmentation as well.



Friday, September 25, 2009

Is permanent makeup right for you?


Permanent makeup is a common procedure for many women who are constantly on the go or who have difficulty applying makeup. Permanent Makeup is a serious decision and every aspect should be considered carefully before deciding to get the procedure done.

Why should I get a permanent makeup?
Women get permanent makeup for many reasons. If you are allergic to materials in makeup, for example, permanent makeup might suit your needs. If you have a physical disability that prohibits you from applying makeup, you might want to get permanent makeup . Women who have facial scarring can also consider makeup as viable option. Women athletes might consider permanent makeup if they want to keep makeup on while playing and perspiring. As well as people with alopecia for instance...

What are the long-term effects?
Permanent makeup pigmentation usually fades over time. This goes double if the makeup is exposed to sunlight frequently. Expect your permanent makeup to last for ten years before it shows signs of fading. You can also get touch ups on your permanent makeup to restore fading colors.
After the application of permanent makeup, the coloring is much darker than the final outcome, so don’t worry! You will need to wait a few weeks after the procedure is complete to see how your permanent makeup will look in the long run. Removing permanent makeup later can be a difficult process, particularly if the permanent makeup is placed on the lips or eyelids.

Permanent makeup options
There are many permanent makeup options for you to explore. For instance, you can get permanent pigment applied to your eyebrow area to help create more uniform, fuller, eyebrows. Or, you can have permanent makeup to replace eyeliner in order to make your lashes and eyes more defined. Additionally, you can also get the outline of your lips to replace lip-liner. You may even get your entire lip so you’ll never have to apply lipstick again. You can even get permanent eye shadow onto your eyelids.


The cons of permanent makeup (permanent-makeup-side-effects)
There are several drawbacks to consider when making the decision to get a permanent makeup. The first thing to consider is the natural change the human body undergoes as it grows older. Permanent makeup may not look as appealing in ten years as it did when it was first applied. Your skin tone and color may also change, which can have a negative impact on the look of your permanent makeup.
You should also consider the changing styles and seasons of fashion. A fresh makeup face today might look dated in a few years, leaving you stuck with an unfashionable look. When considering permanent makeup, be sure to go with a low-key look that can adapt to many fashion trends. Permanent makeup is gaining popularity for many women. You should consider the pros and cons of permanent makeup carefully before deciding whether it’s right for you.


Saturday, September 19, 2009

Refreshing knowledge...

It is good from time to time to remember certain tips on any matter...
Here is a video which we think will help you refreshing some knowledge or you can share it with your potential customers...
Enjoy it...

CLICK HERE... to watch it!




Monday, September 14, 2009

SPECIAL...

From Sep'15 until Oct'15: Get a Deluxe MOSAIC Machine Kit + US$350 -or more- in MOSAIC accessories and you'll get an Anesthetic Kit (BioQuick, Instant Numb, BioGel & VeraGel) absolutely FREE + FREE Standard S&H... More than US$150 for FREE...!!! Enter the coupon "Facebook2009" in the Customer Coupon field as you check out...


Desde Septiembre 15 a Octubre 15: Adquiera un Deluxe MOSAIC Machine Kit + US$350 -o mas- en accesorios MOSAIC y tendra un Kit de Anestesias (BioQuick, Instant Numb, BioGel & VeraGel) totalmente GRATIS + Costos de Envio GRATIS... Mas de US$150 GRATIS...!!! Ingrese el cupon "Facebook2009" en el cuadro de 'Customer Coupon' al momento de pagar...

Is there anything we can do to help you...?

Hello & Welcome to our NEW BLOG!

We are more than pleased with this innovation and also, we want this to be the beginning of a great idea and teamwork...

So, to start we'd like to ask something very simple:

Is there anything we can do to help you...?



Hola y Bienvenidos a nuestro NUEVO BLOG!


Estamos muy complacidos con esta iniciativa y esperamos que sea el inicio de una gran idea y trabajo de equipo... Por lo que, para empezar, nos gustaria preguntar algo muy sencillo:


Hay algo que podamos hacer para ayudarle?