Glow Up and Get Real
Welcome to **Glow Up and Get Real**—the podcast where beauty, business, and honesty collide. I’m Amy Ingle, business owner, advanced injector, and national trainer. Each week, we’ll break down injectable techniques, med spa trends, client concerns, safety tips, and the latest in advanced aesthetics and business strategy. Whether you’re an industry pro or beauty enthusiast, get ready to glow up and get real with us!
Sweetface Injector: https://linktr.ee/sweetfaceinjector
Glow Up and Get Real
Wake Up Flawless: Exploring Cosmetic Tattoos
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In this episode, Amy Ingle interviews Kendra Buley, a permanent makeup artist and business owner, who shares her journey into the beauty industry, the challenges of transitioning from an artist to a business owner, and the importance of client relationships. Kendra discusses her marketing strategies, common misconceptions about permanent makeup, and the significance of aftercare. She also highlights transformative client experiences and offers valuable tips for those considering permanent makeup services.
Kendra’s Instagram: Pmubykendra_afterglow
Linktree
https://linktr.ee/sweetfaceinjector
https://linktr.ee/Sweetspotmedispa
Takeaways
Kendra emphasizes the importance of client relationships and integrity in her work.
She transitioned from a full-time job to owning her own beauty business.
Understanding tax implications is crucial for new business owners.
Facebook ads have proven effective for her marketing strategy.
Permanent makeup is tailored to individual features, not a one-size-fits-all solution.
Kendra prioritizes client comfort and involvement during the procedure.
Choosing the right artist is essential for achieving desired results.
Aftercare is critical to the longevity of permanent makeup results.
Kendra has experienced transformative moments with her clients, boosting their confidence.
She plans to give back to the community with affordable services for seniors.
Titles
The Art and Business of Permanent Makeup
Kendra's Journey: From Artist to Entrepreneur
Sound bites
"I want them to feel seen and heard."
"You changed my life."
"I want to do a senior day once a month."
Chapters
00:00 Introduction to Permanent Makeup
02:59 Kendra's Journey into Beauty Business
06:23 Transitioning from Artist to Business Owner
07:46 Navigating Business Challenges
10:10 Marketing Strategies for Success
12:36 Understanding Permanent Makeup Misconceptions
14:02 Popular Services in Permanent Makeup
17:26 Client Comfort and Safety
20:39 Choosing the Right Artist
23:35 Aftercare Mistakes to Avoid
26:32 Transformative Client Experiences
27:32 Debunking Myths about Permanent Makeup
29:01 Favorite Services and Their Impact
30:24 Future Plans for Afterglow by Kendra
31:45 Final Tips and Contact Information
Amy Ingle (00:00)
Welcome to glow up and get real. I'm the sweet face injector and today if you've ever been curious about permanent makeup like brow work, lip blush or eyeliner but had questions like will it look natural? Does it heal? Does the healing actually work? Or did I choose the right artist? This episode is for you. Kendra's built a business around helping clients feel confident in their skin with results that are customized, safe, designed to fit your
face, not a one size fits all. We're getting into what permanent cosmetics really are, what to expect before, during, after an appointment, and the behind the scenes reality of turning a skilled craft into a thriving brand. Let's jump in. Kendra, welcome to the show.
Kendra (00:46)
Hello, thank you so much for having me. I'm honored.
Amy Ingle (00:49)
Yeah, I am so glad that you're on. Tell me a little bit about yourself and how you got in the business of beauty.
Kendra (00:56)
Okay, so I was born in Florida. I am now residing in New Jersey. My mother owned salons. So I grew up in the beauty industry and also the customer service industry. I've been like a career server and I've worked in really high volume salons like Studio RK over in Fort Myers. It's like a beehive. And I've just always loved the aspect of knowing that someone is walking out.
feeling better than when they walked in. And it's just like really a beautiful transformation every time. So I appreciate that. And I am so blessed and so honored to be able to provide these services to these women and also do that with integrity, knowing that I'm not just here to line my pockets, but I also really truly in my heart want the best for my clients. And I want them to feel seen and heard and beautiful when they leave me.
always been a hustler. I've always worked two and three jobs. So I know that right now I'm at a also at a dentist office and I'm sitting there and I'm working 65 and 70 hour work weeks and I'm just like, how can I put this hustle and this ambition that I have into something that will one day be hopefully passed down or you know, just how how can I support my family and make this my own? And I had this epiphany and it was like,
look into permanent makeup. And a girlfriend of mine that I worked with actually was like, no, I think you have to be an esthetician. So I said, okay. And then a couple months later, I had this download and it was like, do your own research. So after doing my own research in the state of New Jersey, I learned you do not have to be an esthetician. You do however, have to go through a series of rings of fire and all of the certifications and the education. So.
I found a class that aligned with my Passover break, which was 10 days long. And I put down the deposit and fell in love with it and just been going ever since. And this was April of 24.
Amy Ingle (02:56)
Okay, well that leads me to the next question. So what's the story behind Afterglow by Kendra?
Kendra (03:02)
So I feel like I have a very sparkly and joyful personality. And I don't even know how the name came to me, but I just know that when I thought of it, I was like, it originally was Afterglow Beauty Bar because it was originally myself and one other girl. And then it fades, you know, she faded out and it was left with just myself. So I said, Afterglow by Kendra.
That's how I came up with the name.
Amy Ingle (03:29)
Okay, then what made you decide to open your own business instead of just staying independent or working for someone else?
Kendra (03:35)
So I knew that with the schedule that I currently have, I am working 35 to 37 hours full-time at a dental practice as a receptionist and scheduling coordinator. And I knew that I cannot afford to lose my benefits right now, right? This is my big girl job with my big girl benefits that I had to be able to learn and build around what
I needed and I knew that the only way to do this was to open up something that was going to be my own. So I'm in a suite where I have 24 seven access and I am able to filter clients in according to early mornings, later nights. I have some afternoon appointments and of course weekends. But at the end of the day, I want this to be number one. So I am treating it as number one. And if I have to go in later.
or leave earlier, I am doing that because this is what I see myself doing from here on out.
Amy Ingle (04:37)
Yeah, I've been there. I know exactly what you're talking about. just have to make the time, regardless if it's day, night, lunchtime, evening. That's how you start a business. So what was the hardest part of going from just artist to business owner?
Kendra (04:46)
Yes.
So I started as both, right? I immediately dove right in from getting certified, passing the test to immediately opening up my own suite with no clients, with no potential clients, just faith, blind faith and knowing I've seen the experience in my life. You get in what...
you get out what you put in. So I just knew like, I'm gonna give it my all. I'm gonna do the things. I'm gonna reach out. I found myself mentors
artists, the business owner, I dove in as both immediately after I finished my certification and I passed the test in New Jersey, I immediately, you know, secured my spot in a suite. And I went into it with complete blind faith. And no clients. And just knowing that if I'm to put the work in, I'm going to reach out and put my ego to the side, I'm going to
Reach out to the people that I respect in this industry. I'm gonna ask them for guidance. I'm gonna put the work in. I guess if I were just an artist, there would be a lot less client interaction and there would be a lot less building those relationships because I would just be working in a place where I show up, I have a schedule, I tattoo the faces.
I send them on their way, but for me, I'm everything. I am reception, I am inventory, I am artist, I am follow-up, I am the screener, I am the one that's doing everything. So it is a lot of work, it's a lot of energy, maintaining these relationships, building these relationships, showing up, but I wouldn't have it any other way.
Amy Ingle (06:36)
Mm-hmm. So what do you wish you knew before you started after glow? What do you wish what what what something that you wish now looking back?
Kendra (06:40)
So.
So I wish I would have known more about the tax aspect. I've had, right. So when we originally started the, we changed the name of the LLC. So originally the LLC was one thing. I changed it to after globe by Kendra. So I did that at a state level, but not a federal level. And the federal level, it's just been months and months of trying to get this changed as far as the
Amy Ingle (06:53)
Okay.
Kendra (07:13)
federal taxes go, I was told you do not have to file zero if you had zero income. But intuition told me this year, file a zero anyway. So because I filed zero this year, it prompted them to look at last year. I filed nothing. I was hit with, I don't know, I think it was like a $3,000 fine or a $4,000 fine. And it was sick to my stomach. But Mrs. Winters, she yelled.
Amy Ingle (07:38)
Mm-hmm.
Kendra (07:38)
me tremendously. They were able to write that fine off. And then as far as the state taxes go, just, you know, I was told to create the portal and do the things so I can run a report and I can see what sales tax I have been collecting. I log in, I pay it, but I filed nothing. So just you know, I feel like every single aspect of this business, it has been do it wrong first.
Amy Ingle (08:04)
Mm-hmm.
Kendra (08:04)
And it's just
like a lesson. It's like, no mistakes get repeated twice, but I do keep learning even a year and a half in.
Amy Ingle (08:11)
Mm-hmm,
right. Yeah, I learned so much by default. I totally get it. There's been things I did that I'm like, wow, I never knew that I had to do it this way when you're really supposed to do it the other way. And I got in a little tax issue too where I wasn't paying a certain ⁓ date that I was supposed to pay because it had changed. Because as you make more money, as you bring in more bottom line,
the taxes change, the rules change. And so that's something that's not in our community to where we can just go to and say, tell me about this. Tell me what I need to know. And I think that's really important that we have that. Because that would have helped you start your business. That would have helped me start my business. That's something that's lacking. So I have been looking into maybe starting something in my training program for that. So if I do, I'll let you know. Because there's
Kendra (08:52)
Yes, absolutely.
Yes, get an accountant.
Amy Ingle (09:02)
Account, not an accountant, couldn't, no, no,
but I can ask an accountant, right? So use your resources. Well then, what does your marketing look like then today? Word of mouth, Instagram, referrals, do you do groupons, partnerships?
Kendra (09:07)
Yeah.
So I have not done Groupon's yet, that's next on my list. As of right now, I run ads on Facebook. So for me, I feel like the majority of my clientele are women over 50, women over 55. Their default is Facebook. You're not gonna find a 55-year-old on TikTok. And so I'm advertising on Facebook. I have a whole business suite, which I have learned to use. It was very overwhelming at first.
And then I also, I offer incentives as far as like referral incentives. I offer discounts for your touch-up session if you go on and leave an honest review about your first appointment. So yeah, just word of mouth and Facebook. I also have printed out pamphlets and flyers. I am dabbling in all of these places locally as far as like massage therapy and pedicures, just other places in the beauty industry.
where I go in and I'll get a service and I'll say, hey, do you mind if I leave these here? And no one has told me no. And every time I feel even sick to my stomach to ask, but like, what's the worst they can say? No, and I haven't heard that yet. So a little bit of everything.
Amy Ingle (10:25)
Okay.
What have you found that has been working for you?
Kendra (10:28)
The Facebook ads have definitely been working and then also posting to Facebook groups, like organically, first of all, showing up in the Facebook groups. So New Jersey is very different from Florida where you have just like your counties and your cities. But in New Jersey, there are so many townships in one county. So I'm a part of like
I don't know, 25 to 50 different town pages in the surrounding towns. And I get on and I engage, not business related, but then I post my services. that is where it all started. That's where I found some of my first clients and with every face that I touched.
It was able to give me one more before and after picture and allow one more person to trust me to come in and get their service done. And it's just kind of snowballed.
Amy Ingle (11:24)
Mm-hmm. Well, when people hear permanent makeup, what do they usually get that is misunderstood?
Kendra (11:32)
So I feel like so many people think that permanent makeup is like a cookie cutter, one size fits all. I feel like 95 % of the people that reach out to me are like, I see your work and I don't want those dark eyebrows. I have blonde hair and I want them thin. it's like, I understand that. But if we look at the canvas that you're looking at, she came in with dark features. She already came in with.
thicker brows and she came in with dark brows so I can't give her something blonde that wouldn't look normal. But it's just like permanent makeup is 100 % customizable to your bone structure to your preference. I prefer to stay on the lighter side because you can always go darker you cannot go lighter and at the end of the day I would rather bring you in for a third session on the house to make sure you have the results that you're wanting than take
too dark too fast. And I always tell my clients, your work is not done until the second session. So trust the process, communicate your wants. And then I always make sure that the client understands that it's 50 % what I do and then 50 % what you do as well as the client.
Amy Ingle (12:47)
Mm-hmm.
Mm-hmm. I agree with that completely. So what are the most popular services you do? What areas? Okay.
Kendra (12:53)
Definitely eyebrows. So eyebrows
are the most popular service that I do. I also I love to do the lash line enhancement. I think it's so beautiful. It's so easy. And it's just like so elegant and timeless and classy. So but eyebrows are the most popular.
Amy Ingle (13:10)
Okay. Do you do winged eyeliner? Okay.
Kendra (13:15)
I do not, so I don't do
winged eyeliner. I like to keep it very reserved. You can leave my suite if I gave you a winged eyeliner and say this is the greatest thing. I love it so much, but in six months or seven months or a year.
Things change, gravity takes over as we age and I just don't want to put my name on something, although there is never a guarantee because the skin is 100 % unpredictable. The chances of you ending up not so happy with your healed results, stuff like that, being newer in the industry, I just prefer not to dabble in that quite yet.
Amy Ingle (13:55)
Yeah, natural is in. Natural is in. And I do like the fact that you're thinking about the client in later years. You're thinking, OK, when the skin starts to relax and get a little loose, laxity is involved, that's great that you're thinking ahead so that when that client does get to that age that they don't have permanent makeup that they hate. Yeah, I mean, that makes sense.
Kendra (13:57)
Yeah, natural isn't.
Absolutely.
Right. Right.
Amy Ingle (14:20)
That's good. So what trends are you seeing right now in brows, lips, lip liners? What are the trends?
Kendra (14:26)
So
for the most part, most of my girlies want light, they want natural, and that is what I prefer. So we look at the skin like a sponge, and it only has so much room for so much pigment. And as you're going deeper and deeper into the layers of the skin is when you start to see the blue and the gray start happening and the brows tend to ash out and...
then I have clients that'll reach out who I have not seen and they'll say, hi, I need a touch-up. I haven't had in three years. And I'll say, perfect, me a picture. Let's see if we can work over what you have. And it looks like they already have a Sharpie. So I will ask them, like, what would your goal be for this touch-up? And it's usually like, well, I don't wanna have to fill them in.
But what the client wants versus what is a realistic expectation are sometimes two very different things. And not all money is good money. ⁓
Amy Ingle (15:26)
Mm-hmm. Mm-hmm.
Yeah. Have you ever had to do a reversal?
Kendra (15:29)
No, but I have been certified through Lyft, Taryn Darling's products. so you can do emergency removal up to 72 hours after work, where you don't even use the needle to implant that solution in the skin anymore. You just, you know, take off the crust or the scab that has formed over the past few days with some warm water.
and you slap it on there and I've seen really beautiful results shared on social media and on platforms that I'm a part of, but I have not had to do that.
Amy Ingle (16:00)
well good, that means you're doing good work. Would you take somebody else's work within 24 to 48 hours and somebody is like not happy you would do that? Okay, all right. So okay, well when you have clients come in, I know I see it all the time, they're nervous. They're nervous because they don't know what to expect, they're nervous because they are afraid they're gonna be in pain.
Kendra (16:02)
Yeah.
Absolutely.
Absolutely.
yeah.
Yes.
Amy Ingle (16:24)
and they're just nervous about the result in the end. So how do you help them feel safe and confident?
Kendra (16:27)
Okay.
So for me, I remember like, I think it was my second pair of brows I ever did on my own. At that time I had like a flat massage bed. She was an older lady and I'm joking like you're paying for brows and you're getting abs too. Like here, let me help you up. I had to keep sitting her up because I realized that the face shifts especially the more elastic your skin is. So I continuously.
had to set her up and I just then incorporated like I don't need to do a grand reveal for my client, especially the ones who are nervous. So I will tell them, let's get you mapped out. I'm gonna lay you back. We're gonna break the skin. I'm gonna apply numbing. I'm gonna do one pass in the mapping and the shape that we created. I'm gonna show you what it's looking like because
I can't take it away once we're four passes in, but if you see something in that first pass that you're like, I might want it, you know, not as high here or whatever, I'm including them in the process and I'm showing them and we have yet to have to change anything for anyone. And I feel like they really appreciate that because I know that when I got my microbladed probably seven years ago,
And it was by an amazing, amazing artist that was working at the salon that I was working at. I remember, I think I was with her for two and a half hours. Even though I knew she was so good, I was just like, what are these gonna look like? Like, what is taking so long? What are they gonna look like? And her grand reveal was excellent, but I just like to be able to ease the nerves.
Amy Ingle (18:13)
Mm-hmm. Yeah. Yeah, it's funny. I'm looking thinking back ⁓ I had my brows done with Kelly who's in my spa and she's an amazing artist as well and my sister loved them so she wanted brows but She was so nervous even though she saw my result. She knew I was happy She knew Kelly was my employee. It just didn't it just didn't matter. She was still nervous So ⁓ I think you know what you said just go slow and include them in the process. I think that's
That's wonderful. That's a great idea. I love that. So when you talk to someone that's looking to choose a permanent cosmetic tattoo artist, so say they come in for a consult with you, but they're not quite sure who they're going to pick. They want to kind of taste a couple of salons and spas and see who's the best through their conversations. What do you tell them when they're trying to choose an artist? What to look for?
Kendra (19:08)
So for me, number one, like if somebody wants something that I can't give them, I have people who I will refer to. But two, like healed results are very important. That being said, I haven't been doing this so long to have so many healed results. So in that aspect, I will tell them if you choose me as your artist and you think that I'm a good fit.
I, and it's not as dark as you want, or if you feel like you need a third session, like that's on me, because I feel like I am still experiencing the different skin types and how different skins take inks with different cartridges and different, know, pendulum versus whipping versus scooting. So healed results are very important. I would not go to any artist who says,
pick a color off these swatches because that's also not how it works at all. It's not like going to the nail salon. You have to make sure your artist understands undertones and Fitzpatrick types and then pigment and how the pigment is responding with the skin. And that being said, everybody is different. Someone with very thin skin and sun damaged skin and dry skin.
Amy Ingle (20:06)
yeah.
Kendra (20:28)
gonna suck that pigment up like a sponge versus someone younger with collagen, you know, you might have to saturate more. So you don't want to be asked to go to the shelf and pick a color. You want an artist that's going to really listen to your desires as far as shaping. I had a woman come in and she said, I've been shopping around for an artist for two years. I went to someone in New York, she met me out. I told her,
Amy Ingle (20:38)
Thank
Kendra (20:54)
you know, that's not really the picture that I showed you. And she said, well, I'm the artist and I know best. So that would actually be a suitable answer if we're talking about pigments. But when we're talking about shape, of course you can't, you know, bring me a picture of Kim Kardashian and you're 65 years old and you want Kim Kardashian eyebrows. You don't have the same bone structure, but you want an artist that's gonna listen to you, that's going to make you feel seen and heard and.
respect what it is that you want and also guide you if someone asks for Someone were to come to me and say they want like really dark eyebrows Again long term. I'm thinking long term not gonna give you really dark eyebrows I would explain to them permanent makeup is not a replacement for makeup It's going to give you a shadow and on days where you do a full face of makeup or if you prefer a darker bolder look
I've given you the outline, go in with a pencil or go in with powder and it takes the thought out of it. It's giving you the results that you want and it's minimizing the effort that you're going to be putting in every morning. So.
Amy Ingle (22:00)
Mm-hmm.
Mm-hmm. So what would you say, what aftercare mistakes you see most often? You know, can teach and teach and teach. You can hand them some post-care instructions, but you know, you can lead a horse to water, but you can't make him drink. But I always say, so what aftercare mistakes do you see the most often?
Kendra (22:17)
is showing.
So I don't I feel like most of my clients because I am so thorough. I send them before and after care before they even decide to schedule the appointment. I tell them please review this. I want to make sure that you are willing to commit to any temporary lifestyle adjustments that you're going to need to make to get the most bang for your buck. You don't want to come in here and drop a couple hundred dollars and then go home.
and go tan in the tanning bed and go in the sauna and then come back and say like, happened to my brows? Well, you didn't listen. And you have to commit because again, it's what I do, but it's also what the client does. So I send that to them beforehand. Usually, mean, always at the appointment, I will then discuss aftercare again. There are certain questions that I ask to make sure they followed specific beforecare. You want to minimize.
you know, coffee, want to make sure you're not on any blood thinners. There's certain medications that you cannot be on. Some clients require medical clearance. We talk about thyroid conditions and diabetes, how that can affect your healed results. But I did have one client who, she came in and she came in for her second appointment, her perfecting session. And I noticed that her healed results were very blotchy. And then she,
set, you know, I'm panicking because I'm like a little bit newer at this point, still new, but newer. And she said, I've been scrubbing my face with basically a sugar scrub. And I'm like, thing. Yeah, not good, not good. So yeah, that was, that is, it's not so much.
Amy Ingle (23:53)
Hmm. Wow. Not good. Not good.
That's how you get
infections.
Kendra (24:05)
absolutely. I mean, I know she waited. She said that she didn't start doing that until two weeks after. So like she continued that was part of her skincare was scrubbing her face. But I also give a longevity of your permanent makeup sheet with like all of the swaps that you can make and things that you should be avoiding and things that can, you know, help your permanent makeup fade quicker. And I guess that part was missed and that's okay.
I'll put it on me. apologize. I did not reiterate these things in person. Don't put your sugar scrub on your eyebrows ever again.
Amy Ingle (24:40)
Never, never, never,
What's a client's transformation that you still remember that really got you emotionally?
Kendra (24:48)
Okay, so my very first client it was actually a co-worker's mother and I did her for free This was the first client I ever did in my suite. She came in she had nothing. She had no hair. She had no eyebrows and I will not forget she sent me a text I don't know if it was a couple days later and she just said I have to tell you you changed my life Like this is something like her daughter was telling me
that she had been struggling with and so self-conscious and like won't leave the house without pencil. And then I learned there are other clients who are have $500 worth of products and none of them give them the desired look that they want. And they won't leave the house without doing their eyebrows and their husbands are like, let's go. What are you doing? So that is definitely one that sticks out to me just that you changed my life and it was a pleasure.
Amy Ingle (25:41)
What's the most common myth you would want to debunk about permanent makeup?
Kendra (25:46)
So this is kind of like a double-sided sword, right? So permanent makeup is permanent makeup because at the end of the day, is pigment and planted into the skin. And when implanted at the proper depth with the proper inks that are designed to fade and designed for the face, it can fade significantly without your touch-ups, right?
If you go to an artist who's implanting too deep, you are not gonna fade. You're gonna turn blue and ashy, then you're gonna say, need a touch up. And at that point, you're just, you're too saturated. So permanent makeup is permanent. However, there are instances where that's why some artists will say semi-permanent makeup and they'll spin that to communities who are not.
to get tattoos and that is how they justify it. So permanent makeup is permanent, although it can be semi-permanent, specifically like very oily skin, orange peel skin.
you are probably gonna have nothing left, but there is never a guarantee as to how long it's going to last. And it's called permanent makeup for a reason, because you're using a blade or a needle and you are implanting pigment into the skin that's AKA tattoo, AKA permanent. Although it could fade.
Amy Ingle (27:05)
Mm-hmm. Yeah. Right.
What's your favorite service to perform? And why?
Kendra (27:11)
I
love the eyebrows, but I really also love the lash line. The lash line enhancement is really easy. There's nothing to mess up. You stay in the lashes and it creates that very elegant, soft, natural, timeless look. But I feel like eyebrows, they are the center of your face. Eyebrows can make it or break it.
for you and I had recently a lady who came in and her eyebrows grew just very straight across and down and I saw how she penciled them in so we had a discussion, right? The goal is usually to stay along the brow bone and to stay in the natural hairline. However, that is not always possible otherwise why would she come to me? She's already doing them straight. So we had a discussion and I sent her on her way after she was able to commit with some single use razors.
and told her this is gonna be a lifetime of maintenance. However, it's very easy, pull, trim, done. And we were able to lift her and she has beautiful brows now. But just the transformations that the eyebrows are giving these women who are either losing hair because of medications and medical conditions or overplucking or just thyroid conditions and.
and to be able to give them that confidence back and like lower maintenance mornings and less stress mornings is a gift.
Amy Ingle (28:33)
Mm-hmm. Well, what's next for Afterglow by Kendra in the next 12 months? What's your game plan? 2026
Kendra (28:38)
Yeah. So
I actually was working a third job and Christmas Day will be my last day at a restaurant. So I'm able to dedicate that, I don't know, 15 to 22 extra hours a week. The goal for Afterglow by Kendra is in the first two months of the year, I really just want to set down some concrete systems.
I've been dabbling and trying like playing with what works as far as algorithms and advertising, but I want to set those systems. I want to touch a hundred new faces in the year of 2026. And then I also would love to do like a senior day. I had an older woman in my chair who came for a model call, which I run every so often. It's $300 for your first two appointments, but you have to be okay with.
for and after pictures and videos. So I wanna do a senior day once a month where I offer affordable eyebrows to those who would otherwise not be able to afford them. And I can't wait to do that because I just like to give back.
Amy Ingle (29:44)
Yeah,
that's great. So what's your sweetest tip of the day?
Kendra (29:50)
My sweetest tip of the day, I will say do everything that you do with integrity and pure intentions and then watch the blessings come raining in.
Amy Ingle (30:00)
Well, how can the listeners get a hold of you if they have questions or they want to check out your place?
Kendra (30:05)
Yes, absolutely.
So I have a Facebook, facebook.com slash afterglow by Kendra. My Instagram handle is PMU by Kendra underscore afterglow. And then you can always reach me by email afterglowbykendra at gmail.
Amy Ingle (30:22)
All right, I'll put those links in and thank you so much for coming on.