6 Eyebrow Trends Dominating 2025 (And How to Achieve Them)

If you've been staring at your brows in the mirror lately wondering why they suddenly feel... wrong, you're not imagining it.

The eyebrow landscape shifted while we weren't looking. That sculpted Instagram arch from 2019? Gone. The feathered soap brow that ruled 2022? Already nostalgia. Right now, in 2025, we're living through what I can only describe as the Great Brow Reckoning — where natural texture matters more than perfect symmetry, and your actual face shape finally gets a vote.

I've spent the last three months obsessively tracking what's happening in brow studios, on runways, and in the bathroom mirrors of people who genuinely don't care about trends but somehow always look current. What I found surprised me. These aren't the usual "bold brow" recycled think pieces. These are legitimate shifts in how we're thinking about the twelve thousand hairs above our eyes.

Why 2025 Feels Different (And Why Your Brows Know It)

Here's what nobody's saying out loud: we're tired.

Tired of performing. Tired of filters. Tired of spending twenty minutes on brows that are supposed to look like we didn't spend twenty minutes on them. The pendulum swung so far toward "effortless" that it became... effort-full. We laminated, we tinted, we microbladed ourselves into uniformity, and then we woke up one day and realized everyone's brows looked like they came from the same franchise.

2025 is the correction. Not a rebellion — a correction.

The brows dominating right now have one thing in common: they look like they belong to an actual person with an actual life. Someone who might've slept four hours. Someone who doesn't have ring lights in every room. Someone whose eyebrows have a personality that doesn't match their best friend's.

I'm not romanticizing it. I'm just telling you what I'm seeing.

1. The Lived-In Lamination (Or: When Perfect Gets Boring)

You know that slightly undone look you get on day three of a brow lamination, when the hairs start remembering they have opinions? That's the starting point now.

We're not abandoning lamination — we're letting it breathe. The 2025 version isn't about every hair standing at military attention. It's about creating a flexible structure that still allows for personality. Some hairs go rogue. Some clump together. Some refuse to participate entirely.

How to get it: Get your brows laminated if you want — I'm not the boss of you — but ask your technician to use a lighter hold solution. If you're doing it at home (and honestly, after three years of at-home lamination kits, most of us are), leave the setting solution on for 30% less time than the instructions suggest.

When you style them, use a clear brow gel with a light hold — not the industrial-strength stuff that could anchor a boat. Brush them up and slightly outward, but here's the key: don't go back and fix the strays. Let three or four hairs do whatever chaotic thing they're doing. That's not a mistake. That's the point.

The goal isn't perfect. The goal is "I have good brows and also I have a life."

The mistake I keep seeing: People laminating their brows into submission and then wondering why they look like they're perpetually surprised. Your face has gravity. Your brows should acknowledge it.

2. The Asymmetry Acceptance Movement (Finally)

I cannot tell you how long I've been waiting for this.

Your eyebrows are siblings, not twins. We've all heard this. We've all nodded. And then we've all spent forty-five minutes with a pencil trying to make them identical anyway, slowly losing our minds as we over-correct one side, then the other, then back again until we're basically wearing two caterpillars that vaguely resemble each other if you squint.

In 2025, we're done. Not because we're lazy — because we're realistic.

The most current brows I'm seeing embrace their natural asymmetry. One arch slightly higher. One tail a bit longer. One that grows in thicker at the inner corner. Instead of fighting it, we're working with it. Enhancing what's actually there instead of drawing what we wish was there.

How to achieve it: Put down the Instagram grid. Stop comparing your left to your right in 10x magnification.

Instead, take a step back from the mirror — like, actually three feet back — and look at your whole face. That's what people see. At that distance, you'll notice your brows balance your face even if they don't match each other exactly.

When you fill them in, work with each brow's individual shape. If your left brow naturally arches higher, don't force the right one to match. If your right brow is fuller at the head, celebrate it instead of overcompensating on the left. Use a brow pencil or powder to enhance what exists, not to create a fantasy.

The only rule: make sure the general vibe is consistent. Both should feel like they're attending the same party, even if they're wearing different outfits.

Real talk: I spent seven years trying to make my right eyebrow match my left. It has a scar from a childhood accident and grows in patchy near the arch. Last month I stopped trying to force it. I just... worked with it. Three separate people told me my brows looked better. Nobody could articulate why. But I know why. They finally looked like mine.

3. Boyish Brows Are Back (But Make It Thoughtful)

The straight, slightly brushed-up, minimal-arch brow that dominated the '90s is having a moment again — except now it's deliberate instead of accidental.

This isn't about over-plucking until you have two thin lines. This is about softening the arch, creating a more horizontal flow, and letting the natural fullness remain. Think less "surprised" and more "focused." It reads as confident without trying too hard. Elegant without being formal.

I'm seeing this especially on people with angular faces or strong bone structure. The straighter brow creates a counterbalance — softens the geometry without diminishing it.

How to achieve it: This one requires restraint, which is the hardest skill in brow maintenance.

If you have a naturally high arch, you can't remove it entirely without losing your brows altogether. But you can soften it. When you fill in your brows, concentrate color and texture on the lower edge of the arch and the front of the brow. This creates an optical straightening effect.

If you're grooming, tweeze conservatively from the bottom only — and only remove hairs that are significantly below your natural brow line. Do not touch the top. The top is sacred.

Brush your brows straight up first, then angle them slightly outward toward your temples. Use a brow gel with a matte finish — the goal is texture, not shine.

The warning: If you have round or soft features, this trend might work against you. Straight brows can make round faces appear wider. Not a rule — just something to consider before you commit.

4. Textured Tails (The Detail That Changes Everything)

Here's something subtle that's making a huge difference: the tail of the brow — that outer third that tapers toward your temple — is getting more attention and more texture in 2025.

For years, we faded the tail to near-invisibility or kept it crisp and linear. Now? We're letting it be full, feathery, and slightly wild. Hairs going in different directions. Visible individual strands instead of a solid block of color. It creates this interesting visual weight distribution that makes the whole brow feel more dynamic.

It's one of those details that most people won't consciously notice, but their brain will register as "something's different... in a good way."

How to get it: Stop being so precious with the tail.

When you fill in your brows, use a brow pencil or a fine-tipped marker to draw in individual hair strokes in the tail area — but make them slightly longer than the hairs actually are, and angle them in varied directions. Not chaotic. Just... not uniform.

If you're using powder, apply it lightly at the tail and then take a clean spoolie and brush through it in multiple directions. You want to break up the solid line.

For next-level texture, try a fiber gel on the tail only. These products have tiny fibers that cling to existing hairs and create the illusion of more density and movement. Apply it, let it dry for ten seconds, then brush through it gently with a brow brush. The fibers will catch on some hairs and not others, creating that imperfect, lived-in texture.

What I've noticed: This technique works especially well if your tail is naturally sparse. Instead of trying to draw a solid line where hair doesn't exist, you're creating the suggestion of texture. It reads as more believable.

5. The Undone Inner Corner (Let Them Breathe)

This is the trend I resisted the longest... and now I can't unsee it.

We've been so focused on creating crisp, defined brow starts — that clean inner corner with every hair accounted for — that we forgot brows don't naturally begin with a hard edge. They fade in. They're softer at the bridge of the nose and gradually build density as they move outward.

In 2025, that natural fade is intentional. The inner corners are brushed but not filled to full opacity. There's visible skin. There's softness. It makes the entire brow look less drawn-on and more... grown-on.

How to achieve it: This requires unlearning.

When you apply brow product, start filling in from about a quarter inch past your natural starting point — not at the very beginning. Use your product with a light hand in the inner third, gradually increasing pressure and saturation as you move toward the arch and tail.

If you usually brush your brows straight up at the inner corner, try brushing them slightly inward toward the bridge of your nose instead. This creates a softer, more diffused beginning.

For extra credit: take a concealer brush with a tiny bit of foundation or concealer on it and gently tap it along the inner edge of your brow start. This blurs the line between skin and brow, making the transition seamless.

The fear: "Won't this make my brows look unfinished?"

Maybe. For about two days. Then your brain adjusts and you realize the "finished" look you were attached to was actually making your brows look painted on. This looks like you grew excellent brows and simply maintained them. Big difference.

6. Warm Tones Are Winning (Even If You're Cool-Toned)

I don't know who decided that everyone needed ash-toned brows, but that person is no longer in charge.

The most current brows have warmth. Not orange — warmth. A slight golden or reddish undertone that makes them feel alive instead of flat. Even if your natural brow color is cool-toned, adding a hint of warmth in your brow product creates dimension and makes the brows feel more integrated with your face.

I think we got so afraid of looking too warm (read: dated, brassy, 2010) that we overcorrected into lifeless territory. Warm doesn't mean outdated. It means your brows look like they have blood flow.

How to achieve it: If you're using a brow pencil or powder, choose a shade that's one tone warmer than you think you need. If you usually reach for "taupe" or "ash brown," try "soft brown" or "warm brunette."

If you love your current cool-toned product, layer it. Start with a warm base, then go over it lightly with your usual cool product. This creates depth and prevents that flat, monochromatic look.

For a really subtle warmth boost, use a clear brow gel and mix in a tiny amount of a warm-toned cream eyeshadow or concealer before applying. This tints the gel and adds dimension without looking like you're wearing colored mascara on your brows.

The exception: If you have very light blonde or gray brows, warmth can read as orange fast. In that case, stick with neutral or slightly cool tones, but add warmth to the rest of your face through blush or bronzer placement to create balance.

What This All Actually Means

These aren't random trends. They're symptoms of a bigger shift.

We're moving away from the idea that there's one correct eyebrow. The "ideal" arch angle, the "perfect" thickness, the "right" length — all of that prescriptive stuff is losing its grip. What's replacing it is something harder to quantify: appropriateness. Do your brows suit your face? Do they feel like yours? Can you maintain them without a master's degree in cosmetic artistry?

That's what 2025 is asking.

I can't tell you which of these six trends will work for you. I don't know your face. I don't know your brow density or your commitment level or whether you're the kind of person who enjoys the ritual of grooming or finds it tedious. But I can tell you this: the common thread in all of these trends is permission. Permission to stop performing perfection. Permission to acknowledge that your face isn't a canvas — it's your face, with history and asymmetry and hairs that grow in weird directions because that's what bodies do.

The system wasn't built for that kind of honesty. But it's starting to make room for it.

You don't need permission to try these trends. You don't need perfection. You just need to start. Maybe with one. Maybe with the one that scared you a little when you read it. That's usually the one that fits.

Save this. Come back to it when you're ready. And if you figure out which trend works for you — or if you discover a seventh one I missed — don't keep it to yourself. The rest of us are still learning too.

6 Eyebrow Trends Dominating 2025 (And How to Achieve Them)

If you've been staring at your brows in the mirror lately wondering why they suddenly feel... wrong, you're not imagining it.

The eyebrow landscape shifted while we weren't looking. That sculpted Instagram arch from 2019? Gone. The feathered soap brow that ruled 2022? Already nostalgia. Right now, in 2025, we're living through what I can only describe as the Great Brow Reckoning — where natural texture matters more than perfect symmetry, and your actual face shape finally gets a vote.

I've spent the last three months obsessively tracking what's happening in brow studios, on runways, and in the bathroom mirrors of people who genuinely don't care about trends but somehow always look current. What I found surprised me. These aren't the usual "bold brow" recycled think pieces. These are legitimate shifts in how we're thinking about the twelve thousand hairs above our eyes.

Why 2025 Feels Different (And Why Your Brows Know It)

Here's what nobody's saying out loud: we're tired.

Tired of performing. Tired of filters. Tired of spending twenty minutes on brows that are supposed to look like we didn't spend twenty minutes on them. The pendulum swung so far toward "effortless" that it became... effort-full. We laminated, we tinted, we microbladed ourselves into uniformity, and then we woke up one day and realized everyone's brows looked like they came from the same franchise.

2025 is the correction. Not a rebellion — a correction.

The brows dominating right now have one thing in common: they look like they belong to an actual person with an actual life. Someone who might've slept four hours. Someone who doesn't have ring lights in every room. Someone whose eyebrows have a personality that doesn't match their best friend's.

I'm not romanticizing it. I'm just telling you what I'm seeing.

1. The Lived-In Lamination (Or: When Perfect Gets Boring)

You know that slightly undone look you get on day three of a brow lamination, when the hairs start remembering they have opinions? That's the starting point now.

We're not abandoning lamination — we're letting it breathe. The 2025 version isn't about every hair standing at military attention. It's about creating a flexible structure that still allows for personality. Some hairs go rogue. Some clump together. Some refuse to participate entirely.

How to get it: Get your brows laminated if you want — I'm not the boss of you — but ask your technician to use a lighter hold solution. If you're doing it at-home (and honestly, after three years of at-home lamination kits, most of us are), leave the setting solution on for 30% less time than the instructions suggest.

When you style them, use a clear brow gel with a light hold — not the industrial-strength stuff that could anchor a boat. Brush them up and slightly outward, but here's the key: don't go back and fix the strays. Let three or four hairs do whatever chaotic thing they're doing. That's not a mistake. That's the point.

The goal isn't perfect. The goal is "I have good brows and also I have a life."

The mistake I keep seeing: People laminating their brows into submission and then wondering why they look like they're perpetually surprised. Your face has gravity. Your brows should acknowledge it.

2. The Asymmetry Acceptance Movement (Finally)

I cannot tell you how long I've been waiting for this.

Your eyebrows are siblings, not twins. We've all heard this. We've all nodded. And then we've all spent forty-five minutes with a pencil trying to make them identical anyway, slowly losing our minds as we over-correct one side, then the other, then back again until we're basically wearing two caterpillars that vaguely resemble each other if you squint.

In 2025, we're done. Not because we're lazy — because we're realistic.

The most current brows I'm seeing embrace their natural asymmetry. One arch slightly higher. One tail a bit longer. One that grows in thicker at the inner corner. Instead of fighting it, we're working with it. Enhancing what's actually there instead of drawing what we wish was there.

How to achieve it: Put down the Instagram grid. Stop comparing your left to your right in 10x magnification.

Instead, take a step back from the mirror — like, actually three feet back — and look at your whole face. That's what people see. At that distance, you'll notice your brows balance your face even if they don't match each other exactly.

When you fill them in, work with each brow's individual shape. If your left brow naturally arches higher, don't force the right one to match. If your right brow is fuller at the head, celebrate it instead of overcompensating on the left. Use a brow pencil or powder to enhance what exists, not to create a fantasy.

The only rule: make sure the general vibe is consistent. Both should feel like they're attending the same party, even if they're wearing different outfits.

Real talk: I spent seven years trying to make my right eyebrow match my left. It has a scar from a childhood accident and grows in patchy near the arch. Last month I stopped trying to force it. I just... worked with it. Three separate people told me my brows looked better. Nobody could articulate why. But I know why. They finally looked like mine.

3. Boyish Brows Are Back (But Make It Thoughtful)

The straight, slightly brushed-up, minimal-arch brow that dominated the '90s is having a moment again — except now it's deliberate instead of accidental.

This isn't about over-plucking until you have two thin lines. This is about softening the arch, creating a more horizontal flow, and letting the natural fullness remain. Think less "surprised" and more "focused." It reads as confident without trying too hard. Elegant without being formal.

I'm seeing this especially on people with angular faces or strong bone structure. The straighter brow creates a counterbalance — softens the geometry without diminishing it.

How to achieve it: This one requires restraint, which is the hardest skill in brow maintenance.

If you have a naturally high arch, you can't remove it entirely without losing your brows altogether. But you can soften it. When you fill in your brows, concentrate color and texture on the lower edge of the arch and the front of the brow. This creates an optical straightening effect.

If you're grooming, tweeze conservatively from the bottom only — and only remove hairs that are significantly below your natural brow line. Do not touch the top. The top is sacred.

Brush your brows straight up first, then angle them slightly outward toward your temples. Use a brow gel with a matte finish — the goal is texture, not shine.

The warning: If you have round or soft features, this trend might work against you. Straight brows can make round faces appear wider. Not a rule — just something to consider before you commit.

4. Textured Tails (The Detail That Changes Everything)

Here's something subtle that's making a huge difference: the tail of the brow — that outer third that tapers toward your temple — is getting more attention and more texture in 2025.

For years, we faded the tail to near-invisibility or kept it crisp and linear. Now? We're letting it be full, feathery, and slightly wild. Hairs going in different directions. Visible individual strands instead of a solid block of color. It creates this interesting visual weight distribution that makes the whole brow feel more dynamic.

It's one of those details that most people won't consciously notice, but their brain will register as "something's different... in a good way."

How to get it: Stop being so precious with the tail.

When you fill in your brows, use a brow pencil or a fine-tipped marker to draw in individual hair strokes in the tail area — but make them slightly longer than the hairs actually are, and angle them in varied directions. Not chaotic. Just... not uniform.

If you're using powder, apply it lightly at the tail and then take a clean spoolie and brush through it in multiple directions. You want to break up the solid line.

For next-level texture, try a fiber gel on the tail only. These products have tiny fibers that cling to existing hairs and create the illusion of more density and movement. Apply it, let it dry for ten seconds, then brush through it gently with a brow brush. The fibers will catch on some hairs and not others, creating that imperfect, lived-in texture.

What I've noticed: This technique works especially well if your tail is naturally sparse. Instead of trying to draw a solid line where hair doesn't exist, you're creating the suggestion of texture. It reads as more believable.

5. The Undone Inner Corner (Let Them Breathe)

This is the trend I resisted the longest... and now I can't unsee it.

We've been so focused on creating crisp, defined brow starts — that clean inner corner with every hair accounted for — that we forgot brows don't naturally begin with a hard edge. They fade in. They're softer at the bridge of the nose and gradually build density as they move outward.

In 2025, that natural fade is intentional. The inner corners are brushed but not filled to full opacity. There's visible skin. There's softness. It makes the entire brow look less drawn-on and more... grown-on.

How to achieve it: This requires unlearning.

When you apply brow product, start filling in from about a quarter inch past your natural starting point — not at the very beginning. Use your product with a light hand in the inner third, gradually increasing pressure and saturation as you move toward the arch and tail.

If you usually brush your brows straight up at the inner corner, try brushing them slightly inward toward the bridge of your nose instead. This creates a softer, more diffused beginning.

For extra credit: take a concealer brush with a tiny bit of foundation or concealer on it and gently tap it along the inner edge of your brow start. This blurs the line between skin and brow, making the transition seamless.

The fear: "Won't this make my brows look unfinished?"

Maybe. For about two days. Then your brain adjusts and you realize the "finished" look you were attached to was actually making your brows look painted on. This looks like you grew excellent brows and simply maintained them. Big difference.

6. Warm Tones Are Winning (Even If You're Cool-Toned)

I don't know who decided that everyone needed ash-toned brows, but that person is no longer in charge.

The most current brows have warmth. Not orange — warmth. A slight golden or reddish undertone that makes them feel alive instead of flat. Even if your natural brow color is cool-toned, adding a hint of warmth in your brow product creates dimension and makes the brows feel more integrated with your face.

I think we got so afraid of looking too warm (read: dated, brassy, 2010) that we overcorrected into lifeless territory. Warm doesn't mean outdated. It means your brows look like they have blood flow.

How to achieve it: If you're using a brow pencil or powder, choose a shade that's one tone warmer than you think you need. If you usually reach for "taupe" or "ash brown," try "soft brown" or "warm brunette."

If you love your current cool-toned product, layer it. Start with a warm base, then go over it lightly with your usual cool product. This creates depth and prevents that flat, monochromatic look.

For a really subtle warmth boost, use a clear brow gel and mix in a tiny amount of a warm-toned cream eyeshadow or concealer before applying. This tints the gel and adds dimension without looking like you're wearing colored mascara on your brows.

The exception: If you have very light blonde or gray brows, warmth can read as orange fast. In that case, stick with neutral or slightly cool tones, but add warmth to the rest of your face through blush or bronzer placement to create balance.

What This All Actually Means

These aren't random trends. They're symptoms of a bigger shift.

We're moving away from the idea that there's one correct eyebrow. The "ideal" arch angle, the "perfect" thickness, the "right" length — all of that prescriptive stuff is losing its grip. What's replacing it is something harder to quantify: appropriateness. Do your brows suit your face? Do they feel like yours? Can you maintain them without a master's degree in cosmetic artistry?

That's what 2025 is asking.

I can't tell you which of these six trends will work for you. I don't know your face. I don't know your brow density or your commitment level or whether you're the kind of person who enjoys the ritual of grooming or finds it tedious. But I can tell you this: the common thread in all of these trends is permission. Permission to stop performing perfection. Permission to acknowledge that your face isn't a canvas — it's your face, with history and asymmetry and hairs that grow in weird directions because that's what bodies do.

The system wasn't built for that kind of honesty. But it's starting to make room for it.

You don't need permission to try these trends. You don't need perfection. You just need to start. Maybe with one. Maybe with the one that scared you a little when you read it. That's usually the one that fits.

Frequently Asked Questions About 2025 Eyebrow Trends

What eyebrow shape is in style for 2025?

The dominant eyebrow shape in 2025 moves away from heavily sculpted arches toward natural, slightly straighter brows with soft curves. The trend emphasizes your natural brow shape rather than forcing a universal ideal. Boyish brows with minimal arch are particularly popular, especially for those with angular features, while others are embracing their natural asymmetry instead of creating identical twins. The key is finding what complements your specific face shape rather than following a one-size-fits-all template.

How long does brow lamination last in 2025?

Brow lamination typically lasts between six to eight weeks, but the 2025 approach intentionally uses lighter-hold solutions that may reduce longevity to four to six weeks. This shorter duration is actually preferred because it allows for a more natural, lived-in appearance rather than the overly stiff look of traditional lamination. The trade-off is worth it for most people because you get movement and personality in your brows instead of that frozen, surprised expression. You can extend the life of your lamination by using nourishing brow serums and avoiding oil-based cleansers directly on the brow area.

Are thin eyebrows coming back in 2025?

No, thin eyebrows are not making a mainstream comeback in 2025. While straighter, boyish brows are trending, they maintain fullness and natural density. The difference is in the arch and shape, not the thickness. The 2025 aesthetic values texture, dimension, and natural hair density over the pencil-thin brows of the late '90s and early 2000s. Even the most minimal current brow trends emphasize keeping your natural fullness while adjusting the shape. If you over-plucked in previous decades, now is the time to let them grow and work with what you have rather than removing more hair.

What is the best brow product for natural-looking brows?

For achieving the natural, textured brows trending in 2025, brow pencils with fine tips or brow pens that create hair-like strokes work best for filling sparse areas. Pair these with a light-hold clear or tinted brow gel to set without stiffness. Many people are finding success with fiber gels, which contain tiny fibers that attach to existing hairs for added texture and volume. Avoid heavy pomades or waxes that create a solid, painted look. The winning combination is usually a pencil for definition, powder for softness, and a flexible gel for hold. Choose products one shade warmer than your natural brow color to add dimension and life.

How do you fix asymmetrical eyebrows?

In 2025, the goal isn't to fix asymmetrical eyebrows but to work with them intentionally. Start by stepping back from the mirror to see your full face rather than scrutinizing each brow in isolation. Fill in each brow according to its individual shape instead of forcing them to match. Use your brow product to enhance the natural arch, thickness, and length of each brow separately. The key is maintaining a consistent overall vibe rather than identical measurements. If one brow has a higher arch, embrace it and fill that one to emphasize the curve while keeping the other softer. Most facial asymmetry is imperceptible at normal conversational distance and actually adds character to your appearance.

What color eyebrows are trending in 2025?

Warm-toned eyebrows are dominating 2025, even for those with naturally cool-toned hair. The trend has shifted away from ashy, gray-based brow colors toward shades with golden, amber, or soft reddish undertones. This doesn't mean orange or overly warm brows, but rather colors that have life and dimension instead of appearing flat. If you typically use ash brown or taupe, try switching to soft brown or warm brunette. For those with very light hair, neutral tones work better than warm to avoid looking orange, but you can add warmth through makeup placement on the rest of your face to create overall balance and cohesion.

How often should you get your eyebrows done professionally?

For maintenance of the 2025 brow trends, professional appointments every four to six weeks work well for most people. This allows your technician to clean up growth, adjust shape as needed, and refresh any tinting or treatments. However, the current emphasis on natural, slightly undone brows means you can often stretch appointments longer than you could with more sculpted styles. Some people are successfully maintaining their brows with professional visits every eight weeks while doing light maintenance at home. If you're doing brow lamination, schedule those separately every six to eight weeks, though the lighter-hold 2025 version may need refreshing closer to four to six weeks.

Can you do eyebrow lamination at home?

Yes, at-home brow lamination has become quite accessible and effective, especially with the lighter-hold approach trending in 2025. Numerous at-home lamination kits are available that include all necessary solutions and tools. The key to achieving the current natural look is reducing processing time by about thirty percent compared to package instructions and using a lighter-hold setting solution. Always perform a patch test first to check for allergic reactions, and be conservative with your first attempt. The benefit of at-home lamination is you can customize the hold and finish to your preference. However, if you have very unruly brows or have never done it before, getting it done professionally first helps you understand what results to aim for.

What face shape suits straight eyebrows?

Straight eyebrows work best on oval, heart-shaped, and long face shapes, as well as those with angular or prominent bone structure. The horizontal line of a straight brow creates visual balance and can soften strong features. However, straight brows can make round faces appear wider by emphasizing horizontal lines, so those with round or square face shapes might want to maintain a soft arch. The 2025 interpretation of straight brows isn't completely flat but rather minimizes the arch while keeping natural fullness. Before committing to this trend, try using makeup to create the illusion of straighter brows for a few days to see how it suits your features before making permanent grooming changes.

How do you make eyebrows look thicker naturally?

To create naturally thicker-looking brows aligned with 2025 trends, focus on texture and dimension rather than solid color. Use a brow pencil to draw individual hair strokes in sparse areas, varying the direction and length slightly for authenticity. Apply these strokes in the same direction as your natural hair growth. Then use a tinted brow gel or fiber gel to add volume and hold. The fiber particles in fiber gels cling to existing hairs, making them appear fuller. Brush brows upward and slightly outward to maximize coverage and create the illusion of density. Avoid harsh lines or solid fills. For long-term thickness, consider using brow growth serums with peptides, though results take several months to become noticeable.

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