Tattoo removal is illegal in most States. Even
"attempted" tattoo removal is illegal. So first and
foremost go to the tattoo regulations in your State or County.
Why? Because of the complications which include:
1) Infection
2) Scar Formation
3) Prolonged Redness
4) Inadequate removal despite all efforts to
remove
5) Expensive
6) May be considered a medically invasive
procedure to "treat" a patient and therefore the
practice of medicine.
Having said this, old timers say the best way
to remove a tattoo is the same way you put it in! Meaning, opening
the skin with needles and forming a scab which will hopefully
remove pigment in the process. Chemicals definitely lighten cosmetic
tattoos over time but avoid acids which commonly create scars
and have resulted in lawsuits. Also, chemicals and lasers can
change the chemical composition of the tattoo and result in an
allergic reaction that had not been a problem until the attempted
removal occurred.
I have had success with using a handtool over
a small area, an eyebrow thin line for example, and using an inert
paste to tap into the desired skin. One of these pastes is Softap's
Lightening which is a sea clay and lemon oil mixture. Be careful
to keep it out of the eye! Others report success, or a lack of
it, with the saline or salt removal method which dates back to
approximately 1543. Literally rubbing salt into the wound, which
you make with your needles, and letting it "draw" out
cellular fluids and hopefully pigment too. Again, one is inflicting
tissue injury deliberately and non-specifically and hoping the
healing process will help remove unwanted color.
Unfortunately, some brows are beyond repair and
need to be surgically removed by a plastic surgeon. So
never try to do tattoo removal but you can try a "test"
area that is small with your needles and do NOT overwork the skin.
Let the skin heal DRY, no ointments, so as to encourage scab formation
and removal of some pigment. Here is a case I had recently where
the client had 3 sets of eyebrows plus the camouflage pigment
had separated, I believe, into a "red" organic pigment
from the titanium dioxide and/or iron oxide and therefore the
"rash" appearance under her eyebrows. I sent her to
my friend, a gifted plastic surgeon here in Hawaii, and he excised
her brows. We had to decide which of the three brows to excise.
She will heal for 6-12 months and I'll tattoo hairstrokes, very
conservatively, into her brows.
| Purple
gray brows surrounded by camouflage pigment below and above. |
|
Even the camouflage pigment had
separated into its components which were organic and inorganic. |
Here my colleague Liza Lawrence
pinches the problem brow to see how much tissue can be removed. |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
You can see that we chose to excise the lower brow area which had
the camouflage pigment and red "rash" of, I believe, organic
red pigment. This will give her a pleasing "eyedlid" lift
simultaneously. See how the area was excised and sutured closed.
She looked better immediately after surgery that she had looked
with the botched corrective areas. I'll share the final result with
you in 2004.
| Surgery was October
13, 2003. This picture was taken Jan. 7, 2004. You cannot
even see the scars. |
The scars are invisible thanks
to Dr. Robert Flowers, MD and plastic surgeon. Note: My Pient
has full knowledge and has given her permission for me to
show these photos to you. |
Not quite 3 months have passed
since surgical excision so we'll wait another 1-3 months. |
After inspecting her brows I
applied Goldilocks with a fine tipped makeup brush to see
how the color looked over the purple/gray old color. It's
fine so we'll use it next. |
 |
 |
 |
 |
| First color session after surgery: January
23, 2004 Bootcamp Procedure done by P.c. |
Pigment
exfoliation of remaining undesired pink dots/flesh color at
inferior border R brow tail and superior border of R. brow
tip. |
Colors used: Goldilocks, Chocolate Mousse
for hairstrokes (lightened slightly); used #2 sideways for
hairstroke. Cashmere. |
|
 |
 |
 |
|
|