Facial

  • EntertainmentElle

    Is Your Blood the Key to Better Skin?

    Everything you need to know about blood skincare.

    2 min read
  • NewsGail Johnson

    I tried an ultrasound facial to get rid of my wrinkles

    Ultrasound is an oscillating sound pressure wave with a frequency the human ear can’t hear. Mira-Skin uses soft ultrasound to purportedly add vitamins and nutrients into the skin, stimulating renewal and hydration. “The gentle air vibrations of ultrasound temporarily expand and open transport ways, which boosts the delivery of anti-aging ingredients into the deepest layers of the skin where they are more effective.

  • NewsBobbi Brown

    This Really Works: Microcurrent Facials

    (Photo: Getty Images)

  • NewsSara Bliss

    Celeb Facialist Georgia Louise: You’ve Got to Work for Beautiful Skin

    Facialist Georgia Louise takes a “more is more” approach to skin care. “If you want to have beautiful skin, you’ve got to work at it,” Louise says. “If a client comes here and expects a 1-2-3-step program, I send them home, because that’s not my thing.”   For Louise, who treats a gorgeous list of clients including Jennifer Aniston, Behati Prinsloo, Emma Stone, and Linda Evangelista, more is more when it comes to beauty.

  • NewsAlexandra Perron

    This Really Works: The Kiehl’s Spa HydraFacial

    Give your skin some TLC with the Kiehl’s HydraFacial Treatment.  Do you ever feel like your skin has reached a breaking point? The HydraFacial MD device comes equipped with multiple Vortex Vaccum tips, which sounds super space age, and it kind of is.

  • NewsSimone Olivero

    Imagine if Botox lasted for 5 years

    The FDA recently approved Bellafill. The injectable collagen filler uses microspheres that the company claims will, “immediately add volume to the skin to lift wrinkles.” What makes this different from other fillers, like Botox, is that the effects can last up to five years. Five years!

  • NewsSimone Olivero

    Would you try a Hannibal Lecter facial?

    “Tingling,” says Rosy Cordero, a beauty writer at Mimi who recently tried out the procedure. “In the beginning, she turned it up to where I could feel some tingling on my face,” she explains. Kehoe describes the experience as, “going to the gym for your skin.” By removing the traditional massage aspect of the facial, skin isn’t over stimulated and instead the gentle pulsing of the galvanic current helps the vitamin mineral solution penetrate through the skin.

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