Nurse-led care
Every appointment is with a registered nurse — not a technician. Clinical training sits behind every treatment.
Victoria Point, QLD — serving the area since
Adrienne started out as a beauty therapist in Melbourne sixteen years ago, then moved to Brisbane and found the market here looked very different. She retrained as a nurse to move into injectables and aged care.
Working in aged care, she saw that wound policies were broad-brush and rarely tailored to the person in the bed. That pushed her into a skin clinic doing skin cancer removal, wound care and GP work, then into a hospital theatre as scrub scout for Mohs and plastics alongside plastic surgeons and dermatologists.
In that room, the same conversation kept coming up. Women recovering from face, breast and abdominal surgery asked what could be done about the scars — and about stretch marks they had quietly disliked for years. The answer, she found, was paramedical tattooing, and almost no one was offering it.
Adrienne trained in Melbourne, added areola restoration to her practice, and opened a private clinic at home where women can sit with a nurse who understands the journey and take their time.
Every appointment is with a registered nurse — not a technician. Clinical training sits behind every treatment.
Treatments happen in a quiet home studio. No waiting rooms, no rush, no audience.
Surgical scars, stretch marks, vitiligo and areola restoration each need a different approach. Plans are built per client.
Paramedical tattooing helps, but it isn't magic. You'll get a straight answer on what results to expect before you book.