Permanent Makeup Aftercare: 10 Expert Tips from LA Artists
Permanent Makeup Aftercare: 10 Expert Tips from LA Artists
You've invested in permanent makeup. The artistry is complete. The strokes are precise. Your features are elevated.
What happens next determines everything.
Aftercare isn't an afterthought — it's where the transformation becomes permanent. Skip a step, and you risk uneven fading. Rush the healing, and you compromise the pigment retention. Treat your skin with the same precision your artist applied, and you'll wake up to results that last.
After 15 years of perfecting microblading, lip blushing, and permanent eyeliner in Los Angeles, these are the ten things every master artist wants you to know about permanent makeup aftercare.
Why Permanent Makeup Aftercare Matters More Than You Think
Permanent makeup is a collaboration between artist and canvas. Your artist controls the technique, pigment selection, and placement. You control the healing.
Poor aftercare leads to:
- Premature pigment loss (up to 50% in some cases)
- Uneven color retention
- Extended healing time
- Increased risk of infection
- Color shifts that require correction
Proper aftercare ensures:
- Optimal pigment retention (70-85% after first session)
- Even, natural-looking results
- Faster healing with minimal discomfort
- Longevity that justifies your investment
The difference between brows that last two years versus six months? Often, it's the fourteen days after your appointment.
1. Keep the Area Completely Dry for the First Week
Water is the enemy during initial healing.
No exceptions. No shortcuts.
This means:
- No direct shower spray on treated areas
- No swimming, hot tubs, or saunas
- No sweaty workouts that drench your face
- No steam rooms or facial steaming
When you shower, keep your face tilted away from the water. Pat — never rub — if any moisture touches the area. Use a gentle cleanser around (not on) the treated zone.
For microblading in Los Angeles, this is non-negotiable. Water softens scabs prematurely and pulls pigment out before it settles into the dermal layer.
The same applies to ombre powder brows, lip blush, and eyeliner work. Each technique requires the skin to heal without interference.
2. Apply Aftercare Ointment Exactly as Directed
Your artist will provide specific ointment instructions. Follow them to the letter.
Typical protocol:
- Clean hands before every application
- Use a rice grain-sized amount (less is more)
- Apply a thin, barely-there layer
- Reapply 2-3 times daily for 7-10 days
Over-application suffocates the skin. It traps moisture and bacteria, creating the perfect environment for infection or poor pigment retention.
Under-application leaves skin dry and prone to cracking, which also affects color retention.
The goal is moisture balance — not drowning, not desert.
3. Do Not Pick, Scratch, or Peel
This is the hardest rule to follow. It's also the most important.
As your permanent makeup heals, it will scab. Those scabs will itch. They'll flake. They'll look uneven and patchy. You'll be tempted to help them along.
Don't.
Every time you pick at a scab, you pull out pigment. What looks like "just a little flake" is actually the color your artist carefully deposited into your skin.
Let the scabs fall naturally. Even if one piece is hanging on by a thread. Even if it's driving you crazy. Even if it looks worse before it looks better.
This applies to all services — from lip blush tattoos in Los Angeles to eyeliner tattoos. Patience during this phase directly correlates with final results.
4. Avoid Sun Exposure and Tanning for 30 Days
UV rays break down pigment faster than any other external factor.
During the first month:
- No direct sun on treated areas
- Wear a wide-brimmed hat when outdoors
- No tanning beds or spray tans near the area
- Skip the beach vacation if possible
After the initial healing period (4-6 weeks), always apply SPF 30+ to permanent makeup. This isn't just for the healing phase — it's a lifelong practice if you want your results to last.
Sun exposure causes:
- Premature fading (especially in reds and warm tones)
- Color shifts (browns can turn ashy, pinks can fade to gray)
- Uneven lightening
Your permanent makeup in Los Angeles was designed to last years, not months. Protect it accordingly.
5. Skip Makeup on the Treated Area for 10-14 Days
No foundation. No concealer. No brow pencils or lipstick.
The treated area needs to breathe. Makeup introduces bacteria and chemicals that interfere with healing. It also requires removal, which means rubbing and cleansing — both of which disrupt the delicate healing process.
For brow services like combination brows, this means your brows might look darker or more intense than expected. That's normal. The color will soften 30-40% as it heals.
For lip blushing, expect significant color variation during healing. Lips go through distinct phases: vibrant, then flaky, then pale, then the true color emerges around week three.
Trust the process. The inconvenience is temporary. The results are not.
6. Avoid Blood-Thinning Substances
For the first week after your procedure, avoid anything that thins your blood:
- Alcohol
- Caffeine (limit to one cup daily)
- Ibuprofen or aspirin (use acetaminophen instead)
- Fish oil and vitamin E supplements
- Intense exercise that elevates heart rate significantly
- Bruising and swelling
- Pigment loss through excess lymph fluid
- Slower healing
- Uneven color retention
7. Sleep on Your Back (Especially for Brow Work)
For the first week, sleep position matters.
Side sleeping puts pressure and friction on your brows or face. This can:
- Smudge pigment before it sets
- Cause uneven healing
- Transfer color to your pillowcase (and out of your skin)
- Create asymmetry
If you're a committed side sleeper, try these strategies:
- Use a travel pillow to keep your head elevated and centered
- Place a rolled towel on either side of your head
- Set a reminder to check your position if you wake during the night
For permanent eyeliner, sleeping on your back also prevents eye rubbing and reduces morning puffiness that can stress the healing area.
This is particularly important if you've combined services through a brows and eyeliner package — both areas need undisturbed healing time.
8. Expect the Healing Timeline (and Trust It)
Permanent makeup healing happens in predictable phases. Knowing what to expect prevents panic.
Days 1-3: The Honeymoon Phase Everything looks amazing. Color is vibrant. Shape is perfect. You're thrilled. Days 4-7: The "What Have I Done?" Phase Scabbing begins. Color looks too dark. Shape seems uneven. You question your decision.This is normal. This is temporary. This is not the final result.
Days 8-14: The Ghosting Phase Scabs fall off. Color appears too light or even gone. You panic.The pigment is still there — it's just under a layer of new skin. It will resurface.
Days 15-28: The Emergence True color begins to show. You remember why you did this. Days 28-42: The Reveal Final results are visible. This is what you'll see until your touch-up.Understanding this timeline — especially before getting microblading in Koreatown LA or any permanent makeup service — prevents unnecessary stress and helps you resist the urge to interfere with healing.
9. Avoid Certain Skincare Products and Treatments
For 30 days after your procedure, keep these away from treated areas:
Skincare ingredients to avoid:- Retinoids and retinol
- Alpha hydroxy acids (AHAs)
- Beta hydroxy acids (BHAs)
- Vitamin C serums
- Glycolic acid
- Benzoyl peroxide
- Chemical peels
- Microdermabrasion
- Laser treatments
- Facials
- Microneedling
- Dermaplaning
Even after healing, avoid applying these products directly on permanent makeup. Work around the area, or accept that your results will fade faster with continued use.
10. Schedule Your Touch-Up (and Keep the Appointment)
Permanent makeup is a two-step process.
The initial appointment creates the foundation. The touch-up (typically 6-8 weeks later) perfects it.
During the touch-up, your artist will:
- Assess how your skin accepted the pigment
- Adjust color if needed
- Fill in any areas that healed lighter
- Refine shape based on how the first session settled
Some clients think they can skip the touch-up if they're happy with initial results. This is shortsighted.
The touch-up isn't just about correction — it's about longevity. It reinforces the pigment and ensures results that last years instead of months.
Your PMU touch-up is included in your service investment for a reason. It's not optional. It's essential.
What to Do If Something Doesn't Look Right
Contact your artist immediately if you experience:
- Signs of infection (excessive redness, pus, fever, spreading warmth)
- Severe swelling that worsens after day three
- Intense pain that doesn't respond to over-the-counter pain relief
- Allergic reaction symptoms (hives, difficulty breathing, extreme itching)
For cosmetic concerns — color too dark, shape not quite right, asymmetry — wait until the full healing period is complete before panicking.
What looks concerning at day five often resolves beautifully by week six.
If you still have concerns after complete healing, your artist can address them at your touch-up appointment. This might include color adjustment, shape refinement, or additional strokes for density.
Master artists build correction time into the process. It's expected. It's normal. It's how permanent makeup achieves custom results for every unique face.
Long-Term Aftercare for Lasting Results
After the initial healing period, permanent makeup maintenance is straightforward:
Daily:- Apply SPF 30+ over treated areas
- Use gentle cleansers (avoid harsh scrubbing)
- Moisturize with non-comedogenic products
- Aggressive exfoliation directly on permanent makeup
- Retinoids on the treated area
- Extended sun exposure without protection
- Schedule touch-ups every 1-3 years depending on your skin type, lifestyle, and desired intensity
- Oily skin fades faster (annual touch-ups recommended)
- Dry skin retains longer (touch-ups every 2-3 years)
The Difference Between Good Results and Exceptional Ones
Two clients receive identical microblading in Los Angeles from the same master artist using the same technique and pigment.
One follows aftercare precisely. One doesn't.
Six months later, their results look completely different.
The client who followed protocol has crisp, natural strokes with 80% pigment retention. The client who didn't has patchy, uneven brows with 40% retention.
Same artist. Same technique. Different outcomes.
Aftercare is where you honor the artistry and protect your investment.
Your Permanent Makeup Journey Continues
You've chosen a master artist. You've prepared properly (if you followed our preparation guide). You've received meticulous, precise work.
Now the responsibility shifts to you.
These ten aftercare principles aren't suggestions — they're the foundation of results that last. They're the difference between permanent makeup that enhances your life and a procedure you regret.
Follow them exactly. Trust the healing process. Keep your touch-up appointment.
Your features, elevated. Your confidence, restored. Your mornings, transformed.
That's the promise of permanent makeup done right — and cared for properly.
Ready to begin your permanent makeup journey with an artist who values aftercare as much as artistry? Explore our services and book your consultation at Perfect Line's Koreatown studio, where precision is a form of care.
Master-level artistry.
Koreatown's PMU studio.
Seoul-trained. 15+ years of precision. Every technique is tailored to your skin type, bone structure, and lifestyle. No cookie-cutter results.