As a beauty editor, I’ve tried several aesthetic treatments and facials over my decade of working in the industry. From Botox to lymphatic drainage, I’m a moth to a flame for any treatments that promise to lift and sculpt. So, when I came out of my last treatment review and immediately texted my group chat to explain how it had just transformed my whole face in just half an hour, you might assume that I’d just left an aesthetics clinic. However, it was, in fact, after a brow mapping treatment with one of London’s most sought-after brow artists, Hollie Parkes. Scroll on for what you need to know about brow mapping and how it single-handedly transformed my eyebrows.

What Is Brow Mapping?

Brow mapping is an expert technique used by brow artists to find the best shape for your eyebrows. Drawing upon the principles of the golden ratio, it helps to determine where your brows should start and finish, as well as the placement of your arch, to best suit your facial features.

It’s a kind of brow architecture that is an exact science and requires a good eye; however, Parkes tells me that no two appointments are the same, and she’ll tailor the brows differently from client to client. “I’m taking into consideration the person’s natural hair growth and their features, but I take the rules with a pinch of salt whilst designing something that’s going to really suit that person’s face,” she says.

My Brow Mapping Experience

Eleanor having her brows mapped by Hollie Parkes

(Image credit: @eleanorvousden for Who What Wear UK)

Upon walking into Parkes’ treatment room, she carefully assessed my eyebrows and asked if I had a favourite brow. She tells me that most people often do, and so brow mapping helps to achieve symmetry on both sides. I’ve always preferred the shape of my right eyebrow, and I overplucked my left one as a teenager (and it also grows in a different way from my right side), so I’ve struggled to get a balance between the two of them, even with the best brow pencils and eyebrow gels, and even trying brow lamination in the past, too.

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