How to Shape Your Eyebrows at Home

Photo credit: Christopher Robbins
Photo credit: Christopher Robbins

From Oprah Magazine

If your brows are looking less Brooke Shields and more Bert from Sesame Street, join the club. As large portions of the country continue to social distance, seeing a pro right now for your usual shape-up is not an option. While shaping your eyebrows at home can seem daunting, there’s some basic maintenance that can be easily executed with a little know-how.

Photo credit: Hearst Owned
Photo credit: Hearst Owned

Properly groomed eyebrows can make a big difference in your overall appearance, helping to frame your face and balance your overall features. “Most people aren’t completely symmetrical,” says Benefit Cosmetics Global Brow Expert Jared Bailey, “But properly looked-after brows can actually create the illusion of evenness.” Not to mention the fact that our brows naturally thin with age, so maintaining them is like a little drop of the Fountain of Youth. Personally, I’d be lost without my Sania’s Brow Bar pencil.

But before you begin, know that now is not the time to do anything crazy. “I wouldn’t recommend attempting a complete brow overhaul,” Bailey says. Also, don’t rush. “This isn’t something you want to do if you only have ten minutes before a Zoom meeting,” adds brow specialist Joey Healy, owner of the New York City-based Joey Healy Brow Studio. Set aside about a half hour of your time, and follow these simple steps to shape your eyebrows at home.

Step 1: Gather your supplies—and find natural light.

The right tools are the foundation of every good eyebrow shape—both in a salon and at home. You’ll need a brow pencil, slanted stainless steel tweezers, a spoolie brush, and a pair of small, sharp brow scissors, says Healy. Instead of the brush, Bailey recommends a clear brow gel—your choice, really. Another item you may want to have at the ready, adds Bailey, are some cold compresses you’ve created by soaking cotton rounds or soft paper towels in water and chilling them in the fridge (more on that below).

One other step before you start shaping your eyebrows: Wash your face. Cleansing will remove any makeup and residue from skincare products that may make it harder for tweezers to cling to tiny brow hairs, says Healy.

As it is with fruit flavors, when it comes to lighting, natural is best. One surprising spot Bailey suggests: Your car. “You’ll get plenty of natural light and there’s a mirror already in there,” he says. (Important side note: A locked car also offers respite from family members or roommates who may be driving you a little quarantine-crazy.) And both Bailey and Healy recommend ditching the magnifying mirror altogether. “When you get too close, you can’t see the forest for the trees and that’s when you over-shape,” says Healy.

Step 2: Identify your natural brow shape using this map technique.

Bailey and Healy stress that you must start by identifying three key parts of your eyebrow: the head (the part closest to your nose), the arch (where your brow is naturally the highest), and the end of the tail (the part nearest to the outer corner of your eye).

Bailey relies on Benefit’s brow mapping technique, which pinpoints those key areas using your nose as the point of origin. “This is how you customize your brow shape for your face and create balance and symmetry,” he says. Start by resting a thin pencil (Healy recommends a closed brow tweezer) vertically against your nose—where it touches your brow is the head. “That’s where your brows should start,” says Bailey. Mark this spot with a microliner like the Benefit Precisely, My Brow pencil.

Rotate the pencil outward (like it’s one of the hands on a clock), stopping at the outer edge of your iris. This is where the brow would naturally arch—Healy says it’s typically two-thirds of the way from the head to the end of the tail. Mark that spot and move the pencil further, stopping at the outer corner of your eye. This is the end of the tail; mark this spot. Once you’ve repeated this process on both eyebrows, connect the three markings with straight lines both just above and just below your brow—this creates a map that shows you which hairs to tweeze (anything outside the lines) and which to leave alone (anything inside).

Step 3: Tweeze with care. And set a timer!

If you’re using Bailey’s technique, the hairs outside of your “map” can go. He recommends using two hands to tweeze properly—hold the skin taut with one and gently remove a hair at a time by tweezing in the direction of growth. “This protects the follicle so the hair will grow back,” Bailey explains.

Healy recommends setting a timer for fifteen minutes—and putting the tweezers down the minute your alarm pings. “You’d be surprised how many people start tweezing and can’t stop,” he says. “It becomes a compulsion.” His key cleanup areas include the space between the heads of both eyebrows, the forehead area just above the temples and just below the arches—but groom with caution. “You just want to tidy up underneath the outer one-third of your brow,” he says. “There will be some hairs you’ll question—leave them be. Now’s not the time to take them.”

Oh, and remember those cold compresses? This is when you’d want to apply them to the area to help calm any redness or irritation from the plucking. “Make it a little spa moment,” Bailey suggests.

Step 4: Trim any strays using a scissor.

Once you’ve tweezed your eyebrows, the next step is to snip any outliers down to size. Comb your brows upward using the spoolie or clear brow gel, which Bailey says helps to keep hairs in place and make them easier to cut (just wait for it to fully dry). “The key is to look for those curly outliers, the ones that are jumping out of the brow,” says Healy, who also recommends snipping one hair at a time with the scissors at a downward angle so you don’t obstruct your view of your own eyebrow. “If you can’t see it, you don’t know what you’re going to end up with,” he explains.

This is another opportunity to exercise caution. “Brow trimming is not like a haircut,” Bailey insists. “Not every hair needs to be trimmed.” If, for example, when you comb upward some eyebrow hairs fall mostly back into place, leave them alone. “Those hairs aren’t ready to be trimmed; they just need to be brushed,” he adds.

Healy recommends focusing most of your trimming efforts on the first part of your eyebrow, from the head to the arch, and being scrupulous with anything in the tail portion. “If you trim too much on the tail, you can wind up with gaps,” he explains. “The tails are naturally sparser, and you’re relying on the length of those hairs to fill them out, so be frugal.”

Step 5: Fill ‘em up with a pencil.

So here we are: You’ve tidied up what Mother Nature has blessed you with—now it’s time for a little enhancement. IMO, a wax-based eyebrow pencil like the Benefit one is the most user-friendly, and I’ve bumped up my eyebrows with gels, pomades, and powders, too. So once you’ve cleaned up the area—dusted away any snippets of hair, cleaned your skin to remove any markings—fill any sparse spots with short, hair-like strokes. Keep the natural eyebrow shape in mind—thicker at the head, thinner by the tail.

A sharp pencil is the gateway to the most natural-looking fill. If the tip of yours has rounded, it will deposit too much color and the finished look may appear too bold (been there). Try this quick tip from Bailey: Twist the pencil so the color retracts back in, leaving the rounded part of the end visible. Then tap it against any hard surface to flatten it out and create those crisp edges that will make your eyebrows look their best.

Another important step, according to Healy, is to run a spoolie through your brows after you’ve filled them in to blend the pencil. This, again, will help make the finished look appear as natural as possible. And there you have it: beautiful eyebrows without too much hassle.


For more ways to live your best life plus all things Oprah, sign up for our newsletter!