I'm the person doing the lift. Not a salon, not a team. Just me, my kit, and your couch.
I noticed most lash work was doing too much. Too long, too dark, too dense. The lashes never quite looked like they belonged on the face they were sitting on.
I wanted to do the opposite. Work with what's there, lift it gently, and stop. So I trained with AM Lashes and Beauty here in Melbourne (cert May 2026) and started Arched Aesthetics out of my place in Clarinda.
It's a mobile setup because I'd rather do four good appointments in someone's living room than ten rushed ones in a salon chair. The kit is hygienic, I'm fully insured, and I take my time.
Lash work is technical. A wrong shield size or two extra minutes on the lifting solution and you've damaged the lash or made the curl too tight. There's no fixing it once it's done.
I did my training in Melbourne with a mentor who's been doing lash and beauty work for about ten years. The course covered shield mapping for different eye shapes, the chemistry of the solutions, allergy screening, and the small judgment calls that go into a good lift.
I do refresher training every year and follow current Australian standards on hygiene and disposables. That's not interesting copy, but it's the part that matters.
I'm not trying to make your lashes look different. I'm trying to make them look like the version of them you'd see if you slept properly for a week.