Top Brown Lash Mistakes Lash Artists Make

21 jun 2025

The Brown Lash Dilemma Nobody Talks About

I remember the first time I tried brown lashes, I was hoping for that beautiful “soft glam” look, but instead I got “why do the lashes look orange?” It felt so disheartening! Brown lashes really draw attention, yet many people assume they can just switch from black to brown and be done with it. But that’s a common misunderstanding. With the right techniques (and some great products!), brown lashes can truly elevate your lash game! Honestly, once you master the art of rocking them, you’ll find yourself reaching for those brown trays way more often than you’d expect!

Mistake #1: Thinking Brown = Boring

This one gets me fired up. So many lash artists, especially newbies, think brown lashes are only for blondes or redheads, or worse, that they’re just "dull". Wrong! Brown lashes can be soft, romantic, editorial, and earthy. They add dimension and a super natural vibe that black just can’t match in certain sets. I've used brown on olive skin tones, medium complexions, even deeper tones, and guess what? Total slay.

Want proof? Just check out my brown lash sets using the Mega Lash Academy Brown Volume Lash Collection. The richness of the tone is chef’s kiss. ✨

Chocolate Brown Volume Lashes Extensions

Mistake #2: Not Matching Brown Tones to Skin Undertones

All brown lashes are not created equal, babe. You need to match undertones! If your client has warm skin, rich chocolate or golden brown lashes will enhance their glow. If they’re cool-toned, stick with more neutral or taupe-based browns so the lashes don’t clash with their complexion.

Quick tip: Hold the lash tray up to their cheek in good lighting. If the color melts in beautifully, you’re golden (literally). When in doubt, Mega Lash Academy Chocolate brown lashes come in a perfectly balanced tone that suits most undertones, curated by yours truly after way too many awkward-orange lash fails. 😬

Mistake #3: Ignoring Lighting in Your Studio

This one is a silent killer of good lash work. Brown lashes are more subtle than black, which means if your lighting sucks, you’re going to miss gaps, crooked placements, and all kinds of things you’d catch with a darker lash. 

Use a ring light that mimics natural daylight and position it slightly above your client’s face, not directly overhead. It helps brown lashes show up clearly so you can lash confidently and flawlessly. Your sets will look better and your photos will pop!

Mistake #4: Mixing Brown with Black the Wrong Way

Mixing black and brown lashes = yes. Mixing them badly = nope. If you don’t layer and blend intentionally, the contrast looks patchy or just plain weird. I love using brown as a base and layering black for dimension in the outer corners. It creates this sultry ombré effect that clients adore.

Pro tip: Use the same curl and thickness when mixing, and stagger your placement. Want a shortcut to blends that always work? I built my brown lash trays at Mega Lash Academy to pair perfectly with our Cashmere Matte black lash trays. Easy-peasy seamless sets. 

Mistake #5: Using the Wrong Curl or Length

This one hurts, literally. One time I used my CC curl on a client with super straight natural lashes, thinking “it’ll lift just fine.” Big mistake. Brown lashes need the right curl and length to really show. If your brown lashes look invisible, it’s probably not the color, it’s the curl, sis.

Because they’re softer in tone, brown lashes require more strategic mapping to make impact. My go-to? Use a D, M or L curl for lift, and mix in shorter inner corners with long, wispy mids for that pop. All my brown lash trays are available in multiple curls and lengths for a reason, shop them here.

Mistake #6: Not Photographing Brown Lashes Correctly

Whew, this one is common. You finish an amazing set, go to take that money shot for Instagram, and… the lashes vanish in the photo. Brown lashes need proper lighting, angles, and editing to show up on camera. They’re not like black lashes that demand attention in every lighting condition.

Use warm-toned ring lights and don’t be afraid to up the contrast slightly when editing. Also? Position your camera slightly above the lash line, not straight on. Trust me, your set will suddenly glow in all its brown-toned glory. And yes, all my brown lash IG photos are using these exact tricks. 😉

Caramel Golden Brown Lashes Volume Mega Extensions

Mistake #7: Thinking Brown Lashes Are Just for Natural Looks

Oh no no no. Brown lashes are not just for the barely-there look. You can go glam, dramatic, and even editorial with brown. Think mocha smokey eyes, soft megas, or even reverse ombré where brown pops out of black. It's a whole vibe.

Mistake #8: Not Educating Clients on the Look

So real. You finish a brown lash set and your client looks in the mirror and says “...wait, where are they?” Not because you did a bad job, but because they’re expecting the drama of black and don’t understand how subtle and classy brown looks.

Solution? Educate before the appointment. Show them photos, explain how brown works with their skin and eye color, and hype it up as a fashion-forward choice. When you frame it as luxury, not lack, clients are obsessed. Bonus: they feel like trendsetters. 💅

Mistake #9: Not Having the Right Brown Lash Inventory

I’ve been there, trying to build a brown set using whatever scraps are left in the corner of my lash cart. Brown lashes aren’t just “an option” anymore, they’re a must. You need them in different curls, lengths, diameters, and undertones to serve your full clientele.

That’s why I built my own line with Mega Lash Academy. From soft caramels to rich chocolates in B, C, CC, D, M and L curls. I gotchu. Your clients deserve choices, and you deserve tools that work. Period.

Brown Lashes Collection for Mega Volume Lashes Extensions
We spent months testing shades, curls, diameters, and shine levels until everything aligned perfectly. Our clients were the first to try them (and they LOVED the results), and now we’re proud to make them available to lash artists everywhere.

Mistake #10: Buying Cheap Brown Lashes That Look Red or Orange

Ugh, this is the worst. You think you’ve found a deal on brown lash trays, only to open them and realize they’re giving major shiny copper clown vibes. Not cute. Poorly pigmented brown lashes can lean way too warm and end up looking red, orange, or even brassy once applied. And yes, clients notice.

This is exactly why we developed the Mega Lash Academy Brown Lash Collection. The tone is rich, balanced, and tested under multiple lighting conditions. No weird undertones, no surprises, just beautiful, consistent color that photographs like a dream and wears even better.

Pro Tips: My Favorite Brown Lash Mapping Styles

Want to know my go-to brown lash looks? Here are a few client faves that always get booked out:

  • Mocha Cat Eye: D-curl brown lashes with a little black in the outer corners. Subtle drama, total elegance.
  • Soft Wispy Brown: Mix 6mm–13mm brown fans with spikes for a fluffy, effortless set.
  • Golden Hour Glam: Full brown volume with shimmer outer, gorgeous for warm-toned clients and bridal sets.

Each look is easy to create with MLA Lash Collection, they come in all the lengths and curls you need to customize with confidence.

Brown Lashes Deserve Their Moment

If you’ve been avoiding brown lashes, now’s the time to level up. They’re not boring. They’re not basic. They’re a bold, chic, and modern way to elevate your artistry. Whether you want to soften a look, enhance an eye color, or just stand out from the sea of black, and brown is your new bestie.

Give them a try with our Brown Volume Lash Collection and watch your sets (and bookings) glow up. ✨


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