FOUNDER
PRISCILA IWAMA
For nearly two decades, Priscila Iwama has dedicated her professional journey to advancing restorative and cosmetic dermopigmentation through an approach centered on skin integrity, biological understanding, visual harmony, and natural healed results.
As founder of Iwama Clinics in Boca Raton, Florida, her work gradually evolved beyond traditional cosmetic tattooing into a restorative methodology shaped by years of clinical observation, pigment behavior analysis, tissue healing, advanced technology, and individualized patient care.
Over the years, Priscila developed and refined her own protocols, techniques, and professional standards through continuous hands-on experience and ongoing study of skin science, pigment evolution, healing patterns, laser-related skin response, and long-term skin behavior.
Her visual philosophy is also influenced by principles often observed in impressionist art, where softness, tonal variation, depth, and subtle transitions contribute to a more natural visual harmony over time. Within the Iwama approach, however, artistic sensitivity is always guided by biological response, tissue behavior, and long-term skin integrity.
Originally developed and refined in Brazil, Priscila’s methodology later became part of her international expansion into the United States, where her work began attracting patients referred by physicians, plastic surgeons, dermatologists, and professionals connected to aesthetic and reconstructive medicine from across the country and abroad.
Her clinical perspective has also led to collaborations, lectures, and professional discussions involving physicians, plastic surgeons, dermatologists, and international specialists connected to skin restoration and reconstructive medicine.
Priscila’s work has focused on helping bridge dermopigmentation with surgical, reconstructive, and aesthetic medicine — particularly in supporting visual restoration that feels naturally integrated after the skin has healed.
Today, the Iwama Vision continues to expand through clinical practice, volunteer initiatives for breast cancer survivors, physician collaboration, professional education, and the continued refinement of methodologies designed to support natural, biologically respectful, and visually harmonious outcomes over time.
For Priscila, restoration is far beyond appearance — it is about helping people feel naturally connected to themselves again.


THE
IWAMA SENSITIVE
TECHNIQUE
The Iwama Sensitive Technique is a restorative methodology developed to create results that visually integrate with the surrounding skin while respecting biological integrity, biological response, and the individuality of each treated area.
At the core of the technique is the understanding that different tissues and healing patterns require distinct approaches, tools, implantation depths, and restorative strategies — allowing procedures to be performed with little to almost no bleeding, minimal skin trauma, and a more comfortable recovery overall.
The technique is supported by customized protocols, advanced device control, pigment adaptation principles, and long-term clinical observation informed by skin science, tissue behavior, and technology.
Part of the visual refinement behind the Iwama Sensitive Technique is also influenced by the visual language of impressionist art — particularly the way tonal variation, softness, texture, and light interact to create natural visual harmony.
These artistic observations helped shape an approach designed to preserve natural variation, softness, and visual harmony over time
INDUSTRY EDUCATOR & HUMANITARIAN
Beyond clinical practice, a significant part of Priscila Iwama’s work has been dedicated to education, restorative advocacy, and the continued elevation of standards within restorative and cosmetic dermopigmentation.
Over the years, Priscila has trained and mentored professionals from different states and countries through methodologies centered around skin integrity, biological understanding, clinical observation, and long-term restorative care — an approach that moves well beyond procedural instruction and into the deeper responsibility carried within restorative work.
As restorative dermopigmentation continues gaining recognition within plastic surgery, dermatology, scar care, and aesthetic medicine, Priscila’s methodology has increasingly become part of broader professional conversations involving physicians, specialists, and restorative professionals across different countries.
Since 2015, restorative volunteer care for breast cancer survivors has remained an integral part of the culture at Iwama Clinics — a commitment rooted in the belief that restoration must always be approached with humanity, discretion, and profound respect for every patient’s journey. Every artist trained within the Iwama methodology carries this same responsibility.
Today, the Iwama approach continues expanding through clinical practice, professional mentorship, physician collaboration, and the ongoing development of methodologies designed to support more natural, biologically respectful, and emotionally thoughtful restorative outcomes.

PROFESSIONAL
CERTIFICATIONS & CREDENTIALS
SPCP
Society of Permanent Cosmetic Professional. First Brazilian Member of SPCP.
AAM
American Micropigmentation
Academy. First Brazilian Member of AAM







