Her latest freckles are getting angrier.
Australian cosmetic tattoo artist Daisy Foxglove goes viral on TikTok for painting a customer’s face with fake freckles, with one critic claiming the dots will “age like a hobo stamp.”
in video posted from Brisbane on Monday, Foxglove invites viewers to look at as she performs “a full face of freckle tattoos” on a red-haired woman.
“That is the canvas I needed to work on,” she told the video, showing off her cheerful client. “My client has such beautiful skin, but as you’ll be able to see, her features are made for freckles.”
“She has a few natural freckles here and there, and I used them as a place to begin to map these gorgeous, high-coverage freckles,” she continued.
“I all the time show my clients the mapping before we begin to be sure we’re completely happy, and I make the mapping as interactive as possible,” Foxglove explained, showing a woman with brilliant red dots on her cheek and infrequently on her chin and brow.
“My clients can all the time select where they need to position their freckles,” she added.
The foxglove finally got its final “freshly done” look.
The tiny red dots were still outstanding and her irritated cheeks were a light pink, however the artist assured viewers that the colour of the freckles would “calm down by about 50% and in fact the skin is not going to be red when healed.”
The Post contacted Foxglove for comment.
Foxglove’s TikTok garnered 696,700 views and over 200 comments, many expressing shock that somebody would pay for semi-everlasting freckles.
“Omg… Years of being called a freckle fart by Kmart and now people get tattoos?! What sort of world is that this?!!” one user wondered.
“Not me here hate my freckles then this person tattoos them on my face,” one person wrote.
“I cannot imagine what I hated growing up is now a trend,” said one other.
One overtly added: “I attempt to avoid getting freckles every yr and people do that? lol.”
“I naturally have freckles throughout my body and I hate them,” one other deadly serious.
Meanwhile, one other tattoo artist recently revealed that she lets her 9-yr-old daughter practice on herself.
And yet one more described the client’s red flags that may prevent him from breaking the needle.