Why Your Microblading Might Turn Gray (Even in Utah)
If you got microblading in Salt Lake City and your brows are slowly turning cool-gray or ashy, you’re not imagining it — and it’s fixable.
The #1 reason this happens in Utah? Cheap iron-oxide pigments reacting with our dry, high-altitude air and hard water. Most bargain artists (yes, even some “award-winning” ones) still use pigments with heavy iron oxides because they’re inexpensive and look dark/beautiful on day one. Six to eighteen months later, the iron oxidizes and the strokes go gray, blue, or even purple.
Other common culprits we see every week:
- Too-deep implantation (pushing pigment into the dermis instead of the upper dermis)
- No custom color theory for cool Utah skin undertones
- Old pigment mixed too thin, causing rapid molecule separation
The good news: gray can almost always be neutralized with targeted color correction or saline lightening before redoing the brows properly — usually in 1-3 sessions.
If you’re staring at ashy brows right now, don’t panic and don’t laser yet. A proper correction artist can warm them back to natural without removing everything.
Want to know exactly why yours changed color? Send a healed photo — happy to tell you what went wrong and what your options actually are.
More truth about Utah microblading here → Microblading Salt Lake City Utah
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