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Got botox… Beauty woman with ‘Nike’ eyebrows, “I’m not kidding”

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22-year-old Tik Tok who received Botox treatment to prevent wrinkles
As a side effect, the eyebrows become shaped like the Nike ‘Swoosh’ logo

An American woman became a hot topic after receiving botox treatment and her eyebrows resembled the shape of the ‘Nike’ logo as a side effect.

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According to the New York Post on the 25th (local time), a 22-year-old woman nicknamed ‘Queen Blackwell’, a short-form video platform TikTok influencer living in the United States, suffered side effects from Botox treatment. raised

In the video he uploaded, his eyebrows were shaped like the logo of global sports brand Nike upside down.

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At the same time, he said, “I got botox on my forehead, and something strange happened” and “the eyebrows became the Nike ‘Swoosh’ logo.”

This logo, which often comes to mind when thinking of Nike, is known to have been designed by Carolyn Davidson, a graduate student majoring in graphic design at Portland State University in the United States in 1971, and features a dynamic feeling that seems to jump out at any moment and a soft streamlined pattern.

Blackwell’s ‘Nike eyebrows’ usually don’t stand out unless he puts strength on his forehead, but when he does, it becomes the Nike logo.

He even screamed and laughed at his eyebrows in the bathroom.

Netizens commented, “His eyebrows look like square roots (√)”, “Please someone tell me this is a joke”, “His eyebrows look like a dancer”, and “Botox needs to be dissolved”.

He is a TikTok influencer with 1.5 million followers.

Botox, which was mainly used by the middle-aged for cosmetic purposes to improve skin wrinkles due to aging, is recently being used for the purpose of ‘preventing wrinkles’, mainly in the US in their 20s and 30s.

On the 15th, the Wall Street Journal (WSJ) cited a survey by the American Society of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgeons (AAFPRS) and reported that 27% of patients who underwent Botox treatment in the United States last year were under the age of 35. This is an increase of 6 percentage points compared to 21% in 2015.

Source: Donga

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