Helen Mirren reveals her best beauty secret: Eyebrow tattooing

Even at the Oscars in March, Helen Mirren wasn't heavily made-up by most standards. Source: Getty

Helen Mirren is rarely seen with very heavy make-up even at formal events and happily posts snaps of herself on social media without having done any preening, but there is one beauty secret she reckons makes her look a lot better than she otherwise would.

The 72-year-old actress recently had her eyebrows tattooed and now swears by the procedure.

I was fed up of my brows barely being there, and when one of my girlfriends got it done, I thought they looked great“, she told Women & Home magazine in the UK. “They’re very lightly and delicately done, but it means that when I get up in the morning and I have no make-up on, at least I have eyebrows! It’s made a huge difference.”

Eyebrow tattooing, and cosmetic tattooing generally, has been around for decades but eyebrow tattooing specifically has become hugely popular in recent years with the advent of so-called feather-touch tattooing, in which individual hairs are etched into the skin by the cosmetic tattoo artist, rather than a line or block that is ‘coloured in’.

The technique produces a much more natural look and can be used to fill in gaps left by long-term plucking, as well as to replace whole brows. It’s not hugely painful – at least, by the standards of anyone who has endured a bikini wax – and lasts for a year or more before it requires touching up.

Feather-touch brows can cost anywhere from a few hundred dollars to $1,000, depending on the experience of the cosmetic tattoo artist – Amy Jean is one of the most famous purveyors of the art in Australia – and usually consists of two appointments, the first to do most of the work and the second to ensure no spaces were missed.

Healing takes less than a week, with most feather-touch fans reporting that the only noticeable sign of the work is slightly darker brows for a few days and a little bit of flaking of the skin underneath the brow hairs.

Mirren herself says that having her brows refreshed with tattooing gave her a confidence boost, particularly as she says she usually chooses not to wear much make-up.

“I look back at some photos of myself and think, ‘Oh my god, I look awful!’,” she told Woman & Home. “Ninety-nine per cent of time, it’s because I’ve been wearing too much make-up. I’m finding that as I get older, I wear less because make-up is so advanced now that you can do more with less, can’t you?”

Have your eyebrows suffered from a lifetime of plucking and waxing? Do you draw them on or would you consider cosmetic tattooing?