
Eight years. Hundreds of heads. One studio in Midvale, Utah.
Huber Najera
Huber started in scalp micropigmentation when most clinics still treated it as a side service. Eight years later, it's all he does — and that single-minded focus shows in every hairline he draws.
"The difference between SMP that looks real and SMP that looks like ink is almost entirely about restraint," he says. "Smaller dots. Lighter passes. Building density slowly. Most artists are in a hurry. I'm not."
That patience is why correction work makes up a growing share of his caseload. Clients drive in from across the Mountain West to get SMP fixed that was rushed somewhere else.
Midvale Studio
Warm wood. Soft amber light. A leather chair you actually want to sit in for three hours.
The Midvale studio is designed around the client experience — not the workflow of a medical office. No fluorescent lights, no white coats, no rushing. One client at a time, so the room is always yours.
You'll be there a while. The point is for you to want to be.
Training
Huber periodically trains other artists in advanced technique — not because he wants the competition, but because the field doesn't get better unless someone teaches what good actually looks like.
The mentees who pass through his studio leave with the same standard he holds himself to: never rush, never compromise on hairline shape, never stop watching the skin.
Send photos and a few details through the quote form — he replies personally, usually within a business day.