Costco Wholesale has for their
Members:
Shark CryoGlow LED Skin Clearing Face Mask w/ Charging Stand (FW332COPL) on sale for
$309.99.
Shipping is free.
Thanks to Community Member
bshakil for sharing this deal.
Details:
- Under-Eye Revive: Visibly tightens under-eyes in minutes with 3 temperature-controlled chill levels
- Better Aging: Clinically tested to reduce fine lines and firm skin using Red and Deep Infrared light to stimulate collagen
- Skin Clearing: Reduces acne, breakouts, and redness with proprietary Blue, Deep Infrared, and Red light combination
- Skin Sustain: Maintain results with short daily doses of Red, Deep Infrared, and Blue light after 8-week cycles
- FDA Cleared
- Includes: Clip-on Chill Pads, Remote, Storage Bag, Charging Stand, CryoGlow SleepiSilk Pillow Case
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Top Comments
On the product page, N=60. With such a small sample size, there's no telling if they ran multiple concurrent experiments and only selected the largest outlier of positive results...something to watch out for.
The nm of red LEDs for anti aging purposes is 650ish, I believe. I bought a used red led array from a traffic light (the kind with red LEDs not lens) that has a wavelength similar to that and have been blasting myself in the face with it. I still look old. Will update if anything changes.
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Anyway, looks like a starter costume for "i, robot", pre simp Will Smith not included.
If you are comparing this to an in office/in spa hydrafacial it will lose out but if you look at it in the same context of something like....are you dying your hair with a boxed dye at home versus a spa. You won't get hair salon results at home but it still works.
That said I did go back to the video and noticed she did something outside of the instructions including adding a serum (at least twice in the process) which has skin inflammatories like essential oils, alcohol, and botanicals...you apply the detox acid over that of course it's going to feel "spicy", it forces the acids to work harder to do their thing.
She claims the suction isn't necessary/potentially bad for your skin but that is a key part of a hydrafacial. You shouldn't be getting a hydrafacial at all if you think it's bad for your skin. Basically if you have rosacea this is bad for your skin but plenty of products exist that ppl with rosacea should't use.
She also claims it's not pulling anything out of your skin and it's just product in the chamber but another user video, with close ups, show pore clogging sebum removed from skin after the facial. I can also speak to this. My pores look like impurities gone.
Finally, she says she just doesn't like pore vacuums which is what this is...which is fine but then why even review it if you already don't like the basis of the product. It's like reviewing red light masks when you think they are all a gimmick and pronouncing them all bad. She didn't even need to do a review...she should have just said pore vacuums bad, next.
Also, unrelated, she's incredibly annoying.
Not the poster you quoted, but if the claim is anti-aging I'd put the onus of proof on the manufacturer. Not really a phrase I'd throw around without some profound backup data, personally.
On the product page, N=60. With such a small sample size, there's no telling if they ran multiple concurrent experiments and only selected the largest outlier of positive results...something to watch out for.
The nm of red LEDs for anti aging purposes is 650ish, I believe. I bought a used red led array from a traffic light (the kind with red LEDs not lens) that has a wavelength similar to that and have been blasting myself in the face with it. I still look old. Will update if anything changes.
Can I use this at the airport or on a flight? Is this TSA approved?
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Yes, $299.99 at local store by me. The sale expires on 6/28.
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