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I’m a scalp tattooist – people come to me when other hair growth treatments fail, it gives the look of density

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BALD spots, thinning hair, and botched procedures — one cosmetic and medical tattoo artist has seen it all.

The New York-area pro has dished the details on scalp micropigmentation, which gives the look of a fuller head of hair.

Debi Barton is a cosmetic and medical tattooist serving the tri-state area
Courtesy of Debi Barton
Courtesy of Debi Barton
The Connecticut-based scalp micropigmentation pro has given countless satisfied customers their confidence back[/caption]

Debi Barton, 58, owner of Scalp Ink CT, a scalp micropigmentation business.

Her services restore confidence to those suffering from various types of alopecia, thinning, and balding.

Some of her clients are simply seeking some added density, lost over time due to age, genetics, illness, stress, and other factors.

Barton is also armed with the experience to tackle even the worst botched tattoo jobs and hair transplants.

In fact, she is affiliated with two hair transplant doctors who send some of their clients to her for extra oomph.

WHAT IS SCALP MICROPIGMENTATION?

Scalp micropigmentation is both a cosmetic and medical procedure to create the appearance of fuller locks by allowing less scalp to shine through by adding the micro dots to the scalp.

The treatment is a longer-lasting way to achieve the effects of powder and spray products used to mimic thicker hair.

“I’m the next level of these colored powders or sprays that people have been using,” Barton told The U.S. Sun.

She explained the process typically takes around three sessions to complete.

“I apply thousands and thousands of microdots in tattoo-form onto the scalp,” she said.

“It’s not done in one session, is typically done in three sessions or more, but usually it’s three.

“And just layering and layering and layering will give it that density.”

The tattooing technique gives the client the look of growing more hair.

“If you look at a person’s scalp and when the hair comes out of the scalp, the hair is the thickest and as the hair grows longer and longer, it gets thinner at the end.

“So it’s a natural occurrence that it looks like a dot on the scalp when your own hair comes out of your scalp.”

She explained that her method mimics natural hair growth.

“It looks as if maybe there’s a little growth.”

Courtesy of Debi Barton
She said her professional technique allows for the ‘look’ of ‘a little growth’ that makes all the difference[/caption]

LADIES FIRST

While many men go for scalp micropigmentation, close to half of Barton’s clients are women.

Whereas men are typically looking for their hairline back, the ladies are after a different desire.

“Women will come in and have really beautiful hair, but too much scalp is shining through,” she said of complaints she hears.

“Whether a hair transplant is not suited for them for whatever reason, or it’s out of their budget, or they want something that’s instant and immediate — they’ll have scalp micro pigmentation,” she said.

“When it comes to females, it’s for the thinning hair.”

Courtesy of Debi Barton
She works on a variety of clients, and in some cases, including those botched by previous procedures[/caption]

Barton often sees women struggling with an issue called traction alopecia, or hair loss due to long-term pulling on the same hair follicles.

“I have clients that will come in in my studio with amazingly gorgeous hair down the mid-back, but they’re thin right in front or they’re thin above their ears,” she said.

“I have a lot of people that come in because they have hairstyles that they’ve chosen for years where they’ve put their hair in braids and then attach a wig or weave on that.

“And they’ve given themselves traction alopecia, so, I repair that.”

Courtesy of Debi Barton
Scalp micropigmentation is a more permanent alternative to scalp sprays and powers which can come off with moisture[/caption]

TRIED-AND-TRUE

Barton said she has recently sought scalp micropigmentation from a professional herself.

“Just recently, I have experienced a bout of alopecia due to stress, and I’m dealing with it,” she said, explaining that a colleague did scalp micropigmentation on her.

“You can’t see the whiteness of my scalp shining through my hair,” she said.

BOTCHED AND BALD

Barton has had her fair share of hair horror stories walk through her door.

“I have had people that have gone the gamut of hair transplant to PRP to even onion juice on their scalp,” she said.

Courtesy of Debi Barton
Barton has worked on individuals with a variety of hair-loss-inducing issues[/caption]

While Barton acknowledges the efficacy of some treatments, she said it doesn’t give the anti-aging look that people seek micropigmentation for.

“There could be a hundred things on the market that will make your hair grow,” she said.

“Whether it’s transplant or onion juice — for you to find that one thing, if it helps it grow, that’s great, but you’ll never get the hair that you had, like when you were 18. That density.

“I have people in my chair that have gone to the best of the best all over the United States, as well as people who have flown to Turkey to go get their hair transplant.

“But yet they’re still in my chair. Why? They’re still looking for that density that they’ve wanted.”

Courtesy of Debi Barton
She said women tend to suffer from ‘traction alopecia,’ which is typically due to wearing the same hairstyle over and over[/caption]

She’s also had some run-ins with some jaw-droppingly botched procedures.

“I think that there are people out there that are very talented — extremely talented — tattoo artists that work on the body,” she said.

Barton said that a tattoo artist isn’t just automatically a scalp micropigmentation professional.

“The same technique that is used on the body cannot be used on the scalp. Even the equipment that’s used for the body tattoo cannot be used on the scalp.

“The pigment, the needles technique, everything is different. However, body work is a tattoo and so is the scalp micropigmentation.

Courtesy of Debi Barton
She said there’s a big difference between traditional tattooing and scalp micropigmentation[/caption]

“But it’s an entirely different lane from equipment to pigment to technique to needles.”

“So I’ve seen some tattoo artists that work on the body, figuring, ‘it’s just dots. I can do that. I can do dots.’

“When body work tattoo equipment is used with body work pigment that are loaded with metals that should never be used on the scalp.

“It becomes a situation where you’ve actually put someone into a situation where they have a completely botched procedure.

“The emotional scarring that it does to someone who is already suffering from hair loss or thinning hair is devastating.

“I do have a lot of repair work that comes to me and there’s certain criteria where I can help them through their botched procedure.

“And once it goes past that criteria, and I tell them that I’m not able to help them.

“What they would have to do is have it removed via a laser.”

Courtesy of Debi Barton
Barton’s services help those suffering from the emotional issues that come with losing hair by creating the look of more density on the scalp[/caption]

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