InkClear Wavelength™ Tattoo Removal Wavelength Guide - DIGITAL DOWNLOAD VERSION
InkClear Wavelength™ Tattoo Removal Wavelength Guide
Product SKU: AM-LSVA-ICM-001-DD
Choose the right wavelength. Match the ink color. Treat safely.
The InkClear Wavelength™ Tattoo Removal Wavelength Guide is a professional laser safety visual aid designed for tattoo removal providers, med spa professionals, laser technicians, clinical trainers, and aesthetic practices that want a fast, practical reference for wavelength selection and treatment safety.
This guide simplifies the science behind tattoo removal by connecting laser wavelength, ink color, penetration depth, skin type, treatment endpoints, and safety considerations into one easy-to-understand visual chart.
What This Guide Covers
This visual aid includes common tattoo removal wavelengths such as:
1064 nm Nd:YAG
Often used for black, dark blue, and deeper tattoo pigment. Commonly considered the safest all-around wavelength, especially for darker skin types.
532 nm Frequency-Doubled Nd:YAG / KTP-Type Use
Used for red, orange, and some warm-toned pigments. Requires more caution due to higher epidermal melanin absorption.
755 nm Alexandrite / Pico Options
Used for green, blue, and some black pigments. Helpful for resistant colors but requires proper patient assessment and conservative settings.
694 nm Ruby
Historically used for green and blue tattoo ink. Strongly absorbed by pigment but requires caution, especially in pigment-rich skin.
730–785 nm Pico Specialty Range
Used as supplemental wavelengths for resistant green, blue, purple, and mixed-color tattoos depending on the platform.
Designed to Help Providers Understand
- Which wavelength matches specific tattoo ink colors
- Why 1064 nm is commonly preferred for darker ink and deeper penetration
- Why 532 nm requires extra caution on darker skin types
- How wavelength affects depth and pigment interaction
- Common treatment endpoints such as frosting, mild erythema, and edema
- What reactions may indicate overtreatment or complication risk
- Why cooling, test spots, fluence control, pulse duration, and clinical judgment matter
Common Endpoints Included
The guide helps providers recognize expected treatment responses, including:
- Frosting or tissue whitening
- Mild erythema
- Mild edema
- Audible snap or tissue response
It also highlights non-desired endpoints such as bleeding, charring, blistering from overtreatment, and aggressive tissue injury.
Best For
- Tattoo removal providers
- Med spas offering nano or pico laser tattoo removal
- Laser training programs
- Aesthetic clinics
- Laser safety education
- Treatment room reference
- Staff onboarding
- Patient education support
- Providers learning wavelength and chromophore selection
Why This Guide Is Different
This is not a generic tattoo removal chart.
The InkClear Wavelength™ Guide is part of the AGONCILLO METHOD™ Laser Safety Visual Aid Series, designed to help providers understand the science behind laser treatments.
The focus is simple:
Know your target.
Choose the correct wavelength.
Control the heat.
Protect the skin.
Treat to the endpoint, not to aggression.
Recommended Use
Use this guide as a quick visual reference during:
- Laser tattoo removal training
- Treatment planning
- Provider education
- Staff safety review
- Tattoo removal consultations
- Treatment room setup
- Nano and pico laser education
Key Takeaways
1064 nm = Best all-around workhorse for black, dark blue, and deeper pigment.
532 nm = Useful for warm colors such as red and orange, but use with caution.
755 / 694 nm = Helpful for green and blue targets, depending on skin type and platform.
Cooling still matters = Protects the epidermis and improves patient comfort.
More reaction is not always better = Treat to the correct endpoint, not to tissue damage.
Product Details
Product Name: InkClear Wavelength™ Tattoo Removal Wavelength Guide
SKU: AM-LSVA-ICM-001-DD
Series: AGONCILLO METHOD™ Laser Safety Visual Aid Series
Category: Laser Safety Visual Aid / Tattoo Removal Education
Use: Educational reference for laser tattoo removal wavelength selection and safety
Disclaimer
This guide is for educational and training purposes only. It is not a substitute for formal clinical training, manufacturer instructions, medical supervision, professional judgment, or applicable laser safety standards. Providers are responsible for operating within their scope of practice and following all relevant state, federal, and facility safety requirements.
Master The Science, Own The Treatment™
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