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I had my eyebrows threaded today.

34 replies

SoupDragon · 01/07/2009 16:05

Holy cr*p it was painful! I wanted gas & air.

I do have wonderful brows now though.

OP posts:
rubyslippers · 01/07/2009 16:09

yes - it is the only method that gives a fab shape IME

hurts like hell but worth it

bleh · 01/07/2009 16:10

Ah yes. First time I had it done I thought "this can't be too bad. I've been plucking them for years". Yes, it can be. Had tears streaming down my face in the middle of a shopping centre

woodenchair · 01/07/2009 16:19

I didn't think it hurt, bugger, was thinking of having my top lip done ...

Rhubarb · 01/07/2009 16:20

What does that mean?

shinyshoes · 01/07/2009 16:22

I though it was painless that why it was more popular than waxing.

stuff that I will rather endure the pain of the dreaded wax pot

goingslowlyroundthebend · 01/07/2009 16:29

More painful then waxing, but much quicker and much better results

NervousNutty · 01/07/2009 16:30

I love having mine threaded but yes it does hurt, especially under your eyebrow.

It makes my eyes water alot too so I look like I am crying , i'm not honest.

hobbgoblin · 01/07/2009 16:30

It never hurts me what are you lot ON about?

Rhubarb · 01/07/2009 16:31

But what does it entail? What more could you do other than pluck your eyebrows? I have this image of eyebrows being plaited now!

monkeysmama · 01/07/2009 16:49

Pulling the hairs out with a thread. So the therapist uses a piece of thread to put them out one by one. I've been having mine done for years & it stops hurting so much. Looks great too I reckon.

hocuspontas · 01/07/2009 16:53

What is the point when you can tweezer for half the pain?

Also, how can it look better? Are you just hoping it does? What's the scientific reasoning? [pooh-pooh emoticon]

PortAndLemon · 01/07/2009 17:03

Top lip does hurt in a very ouchy way, woodenchair (and made me sneeze a lot) but the results are fab .

hocus, I think it may be that because she's using the thread to pluck out several hairs at once in a straight line it's easier (paradoxically) to get a curve. Did you ever do that curve stitching thing at primary school where you drew straight lines between points on two axes and ended up with a curve? Kind of like that.

You don't tweezer for half the pain, anyway. You tweezer for exactly the same amount of pain, spread out over a longer period. Threading gets it over and done with in one fell swoop.

goingslowlyroundthebend · 01/07/2009 17:03

It somehow looks 'sharper' I think because they wipe out all the downey hair too

CMOTdibbler · 01/07/2009 17:04

It made my eyes water, but wasn't terribly painful - and at least it is all gone once it is done - no red and sore skin like waxing.

And I've been to a lot of places to have my brows done over the years, and only one place that used tweezers and a mag lamp came anywhere near the quality of the threading I get done for 6.99

SusieDerkins · 01/07/2009 17:07

How long does the threading last? Longer than waxing?

hocuspontas · 01/07/2009 17:08

Eurgh! I didn't realise it was done in multiples! There's no way I could go through that.

PortAndLemon · 01/07/2009 17:21

I wonder if how much it hurts relates to how shaggy you are to begin with? For the first quite-a-few threads I was sitting there thinking to myself "what are they on about, it doesn't hurt..." but then the cumulative effect kicked in and it most definitely did. In my natural state (which I was, pre-threading) I do resemble what pagwatch described on another thread as a partially chewed Denis Healey, though.

pinkmagic1 · 01/07/2009 17:22

I don't find it painful at all, far less painful than waxing. I get my whole face done every few weeks by an Iraqi friend of my husbands and it costs me £3!

MrsSeanBean · 01/07/2009 18:03

I really struggle to undersdstand how this method can achieve any kind of finesse or accuracy. It all sounds a bit haphazard to me.

But I know many people are fans, so it must get good results somehow

monkeysmama · 01/07/2009 19:12

The method's been used for centuries (not that everything old's good) in Asian countries. I pay £3 to have mine done on Green Street. They kind of thin the brow out too which makes them look so much more groomed. I plucked recently having not got to threaders for a while & it just wasn't the same. I'd really recommend it for a quick fix.

shhhh · 01/07/2009 20:37

I have mine done and have been for a while now...Im not hairy and just have my brows done, usually monthly or so...

I love the effect, better than what I can do with tweezers...if I do it myself I get carried away yet if threaded I love the shape etc. Also get them to tint them.

BUT it hurts like hell...I can cope with it to start with but then its eyewatering. Imo its a bit like a rope burn on your brows .

Dh watched me having them done last week and had to walk away..

SoupDragon · 01/07/2009 21:19

pinkmagic, you get your whole face done?? Are you a werewolf or something??

It is definitely a much sharper result than waxing or tweezering.

OP posts:
MrsSeanBean · 02/07/2009 07:45

But where do they put the threads? Do they sort of line them up where they want the end line to be? Or just 'thread' randomly through the brows (and somehow it ends up a nice shape?) If they are going fast (as I imagine you would have to for it to work) how do they manage to get a nice shape?

Not disputing that it works - just puzzled!

HeadFairy · 02/07/2009 07:53

for those that find it hard to picture how they thread eyebrows this nbc news item shows it

It does flipping hurt, but I find it does give a better shape, and it doesn't damage the skin as much as tweezering, which can sometimes scar my skin.

stitchtime · 02/07/2009 07:57

mrsseanbean, shaping eyebrows is an art. whether you do it using tweezers or wax, or threading. its somethinng very different from being able to wield the threads.
i can thread my upper lip, because i know how to make the scissor action using the thread, but, ask me to shape someones brows, and i'll end up hackinginto them, coz i cant wield the threads to do a straight line.