This Facial Gives Filler-Like Results—Without A Needle
Fresh from tending to the complexions of 25 A-listers for the Academy Awards in LA, celebrity facialist Georgia Louise invited me to her Upper East Side atelier last week to try her latest wrinkle-erasing facial treatment—Sculplla—a Korean treatment debuting in the US exclusively at Louise's. Basically a sheet mask on steroids, she used it on five of her red carpet-bound clients for the Oscars (though I couldn't get her to divulge whom).
Fresh from tending to the complexions of 25 A-listers for the Academy Awards in LA, celebrity facialist Georgia Louise invited me to her Upper East Side atelier last week to try her latest wrinkle-erasing facial treatment—Sculplla—a Korean treatment debuting in the US exclusively at Louise's. Basically a sheet mask on steroids, she used it on five of her red carpet-bound clients for the Oscars (though I couldn't get her to divulge whom).
Sculplla drives an ingredient called Poly L Lactic Acid (which is the exact same stuff you'll find in the filler Sculptra at your derm's office) as well as a blend of anti-aging favorites like caffeine and niacinamide into the top layer of your skin to plump wrinkles. There's no downtime, except avoiding water and sweat for 12 hours, and the results are cumulative, says Louise, who counts Jennifer Aniston, Emma Stone, Jennifer Lawrence, and Linda Evangelista among her clients. According to the company that makes Sculplla, one treatment can last for six weeks and a series of three treatments done a week apart can last for five months. "This is the first time I've seen a product that can really soften lines straight away," she told me. Indeed, I accepted the invitation.
To start, Louise used a lightweight lactic acid peel to exfoliate my skin and clear the way for the mask's ingredients to penetrate. Next, she spread the first step of Sculplla, the serum, across my skin and then applied the dry sheet mask on top, carefully molding it to the contours of my face. The sheet is made with encapsulated hydrogen, that activates when it touches the serum, to help drive the filler ingredient into the skin. It has also been shown to lend some skin brightening benefits, to boot. After 10 minutes, the mask dissolves and dries like a film. "It turns into a sticky tape, so you when you remove it makes your skin really smooth and unclogs pores," she tells me. "It's a double whammy effect." It's not unlike an enormous, glamorous nose strip.