Electrolysis and Tweezer

Do you have to feel any tugging from a tweezer? I went to a new one that uses gloves, which I wasn’t comfortable with the one that didn’t wear gloves. I have had experiences with a few electrologists and sometimes you do experience tugging.

Do you have to experience any kind of tug when they use the tweezer after treating the follicle? I know when you pull a hair, you may see like a clear kind of bulb covering the root, so I don’t know if that’s what makes it difficult to remove easily? Thank you for your help.

If the hair has been treated can be taken out without using tweezers (using gloved fingers), you will have many assurances that this follicle has been properly treated.

Sometimes the size of the bulb is so much larger than the shaft that without turning up the treatment energy, one can’t make a path large enough for it to come out without a “popping” sensation. If you feel the same thing you feel when you pull a hair out at home, that is poor treatment.

I felt a lot of that “popping” most of the time, and I wasn’t sure if that was normal. For me to pluck, I have to yank it, but she just pulled it out without yanking the hair follicle. I’d still feel a tug until she pulled the hair out after treating it. She said she had to use tweezer because they were short. It’s because I use depilatory to remove them for bathing suit, but I left it long enough to be visible. She said that the power that she used was averaged normal for most people. I am doing bikini, by the way, if that helps. Also, I noticed that I barely have any redness, which is what I liked, too. The other electrologist left a lot of red dots that lasted for days, which with other treatments I didn’t have much redness either. If I did have some, it didn’t last a long time. I thought that I’d have to buy bikini shorts to cover the bikini area while I did treatment.

Do most of your clients wear bathing suits or underwear? What’s more comfortable?

Your practitioner is obviously using the best protocol to give you elimination of the hairs, without surface damage, so much so, that the successfully treated hairs are popping out without making a full path through the smaller shaft.

Having bulbs that are fatter than the shaft is common in the Bikini area, especially if one has waxed, tweezed, or used a product like Nair in the past. These hairs are also frequently distorted, and shaped like bananas, causing one to need to pull them through a curve to release them. All this contributes to this popping sensation.

Most of my clients have just a little redness for some hours after treatment, and it fades. They feel comfortable wearing what ever underwear they normally wear. The treatment doesn’t effect this choice.

My clients wear underwear and sometimes nothing at all. I leave it up to them. Whatever is comfortable for them is comfortable for me.

What aftercare product(s) do you use?

Most of our clients are women, so the bikini area is one of the most work.
During the session, we ask our clients who come with a thong panty or ourselves we have provided a disposable.
For aftercare, press the point that they should not be used panties too tight, too tight an elastic contact with the treated area can cause problems such as itching. We also insist much unused jeans, the dye that is applied in this tissue type can infect the area.
In this area there are two factors that hinder the work of electrolysis, a thin skin and a deep root. This is a combination that makes it difficult for non-immediate redness and small scabs few days later. Not always occur, but is quite common.
Whether you are scabs or not, are not recommended sun exposure until the skin fully recovers its original color. The clear skin is transparent and solar hyperpigmentation is a risk that should be avoided.