Hair-Like Strokes: The Natural Brow Technique
Words by BOB

How to use a 1.7mm tip to draw brows that look like they grew that way.
Follow hair direction
Brow hairs don't all point the same way. At the inner brow they grow upward; through the arch, upward and outward; at the tail, horizontal or slightly down. Before you start, brush the brows up with the integrated spoolie — this shows you where the hairs grow, which gaps exist, and what needs filling. Then work stroke by stroke in those same directions. You're completing the brow, not replacing it.
Build section by section
Work the arch first (highest visibility), then the tail, then the inner brow last — where density is typically lowest and a light hand matters most. Use the spoolie to blend between each section, not at the end. That step is what turns individual marks into something cohesive. One light pass gives a natural result. Two gives definition. Three gives drama — move slowly.
Shade
Medium Brown has a cool, ash-toned undertone that reads as natural across most hair colours without adding warmth that shifts orange in daylight. Dark Brown is deeper and better suited to darker brows or a more defined look. Go one shade lighter than your hair colour when using the hair-stroke technique — the multiplied effect of many strokes reads darker than a single swatch suggests.
Made in Germany. Smudge-proof, sweat-proof, waterproof.

SHOP THE BROW PENCIL
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