Augustinus Bader The Rich Cream New Formula Review and Dupes popsugar.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from popsugar.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
The Promise
Four vials, four weeks, twice a day. Commit to Sisley’s precisely measured complexion reboot system and you’ll come out the other side with skin that’s smoother, softer, bouncier, more radiant, and radically less tired looking. (Convinced?) The brand credits its botanical-rich blend boasting gingko biloba leaf, Persian acacia, mariposa blanca rhizome, and peony extracts, along with vitamin E acetate and a “Longevity Sugar Complex” with improving and protecting the mitochondria function of the cells, ultimately helping skin behave more like its younger self.
The formula has the consistency of serum but also offers light moisturization. You’re meant to use it with a rather streamlined routine for the four weeks: give up all other active ingredients (i.e., retinol, vitamin C) and simply remove your makeup, cleanse, tone, and apply eye cream prior to bathing your face and neck with La Cure. Easy enough, right?
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I have been a beauty editor for over 35 years. In that time, I ve trialled rivers of product, done 378 road tests to date involving everything from equine therapy (pouring my heart out to a horse in the hinterland of Queensland), the Brazilian wax (the bush is back by the way), and a failed colonic irrigation (letâs not go there).
With each new cult product, celebrity haircut or viral trend, I have learned what not to believe when it comes to beauty hype. As the go-to person for friends, family and often perfect strangers for make-up, skin and bodycare advice, I m also very aware of the misinformation out there. So, let s bust some common myths.