PEACH & LILY Glass Skin Refining Serum

Glassy, poreless skin is achieved when skin is hydrated and free of inflammation and damage. Get there with Peach & Lily’s Glass Skin Refining Serum, a revolutionary cocktail of Peach Extract, Niacinamide, Mountain Yam, Madecassoside, Peptides, and Hyaluronic Acid that calms, brightens and firms

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SKU: 18971035 Category: Tag:

Go makeup and filter-free with this “super juice” serum, which delivers everything you need for picture-perfect skin. Expertly blended with potent earth-born and high-tech beautifying ingredients, you’ll uncover skin that is poreless, translucent, and luminous like a pane of glass. Silky, weightless, and instantly-absorbing, Peach & Lily’s Glass Skin Refining Serum helps hydrate, calm, brighten and firm, delivering more dramatic results with continued use

RECOMMENDED FOR:

  • Dullness and uneven skin tone
  • Rough skin texture
  • Wrinkles, fine lines, sagging
  • Dehydrated skin (Alicia’s Tip: dehydrated skin lacks moisture. Oily skin types can have dehydrated skin, too)
  • Redness, inflammation

WHAT’S IN IT FOR YOU: The Serum’s superstar ingredients, delivered deep into skin via a revolutionary delivery system:

  • Peach Extract: full of vitamins, minerals, and essential fatty acids to help keep skin resilient
  • Niacinamide: helps quell inflammation, brighten and provide antioxidative benefits
  • Asian Mountain Yam Extract: dramatically helps to reduce flakiness
  • Madecassoide: derived from Centella Asiatica Extract, it helps curb inflammation and stimulate collagen production
  • Hyaluronic Acid Complex: proprietary blend of short-chain, medium-chain and long-chain hyaluronic acid molecules that moisturizes every layer of skin, leaving it hydrated, plumped and radiant
  • Peptide Complex: proprietary blend of peptides that signals collagen production, helping fill fine lines and deeply-etched wrinkles, while firming skin for a smoother, glassier appearance

THE MIND BEHIND: Peach & Lily’s founder, Alicia Yoon, is a celebrated esthetician and a leading skincare expert. Inspired by Asia’s “glass skin” beauty paradigm, she set out to create a product that wasn’t about surface-level results, but instead transformed skin from within. With the goal of delivering a poreless, refined and radiant complexion (that that can’t be faked with laser treatments or a quick fix), Alicia worked with cutting edge labs in Korea to develop a truly game-changing serum. Meant to reveal skin that is happy and healthy from the inside out, The Glass Skin Refining Serum will give your visage a new lease on life. Discover the magic of having skin that’s so well cared for that it looks like pristine glass.

THE PEACH & LILY PROMISE: Caring for your skin can be overwhelming. Tired of the skincare guessing game as you try to figure out what will work for you? You want products that deliver dramatic results, but you’re worried they will be too harsh or make you break out. You want delightful textures but want to avoid chemicals and harmful ingredients. Peach & Lily is all too familiar with trial and error, trade-offs, and compromises when it comes to skincare.

The innovative beauty brand created the Peach & Lily skincare collection to deliver everything you want without worry or guesswork. Pushing the limits of innovation by combining breakthrough research and proven skincare traditions, you’ll enjoy dramatic results, delivered in a radically safe and delightful way. Peach & Lily formulas feature powerful, clinically-proven ingredients, thoughtfully crafted to be gentle and safe. In short, you get big results with a beautiful experience, and no compromises. You can have it all!

WHAT’S NOT IN IT: Only good, clean fun here. NO Animal Fats/Oils/Musks, Benzalkonium Chloride, Benzophenone, Bisphenol A (BPA), Butoxyethanol, BHA, BHT, Chemical Sunscreens, Coal Tar Dyes, Cones, Detergent, Disodium EDTA, Polysorbates, MEA/DEA/TEA, Formaldehyde, Hydroquinone, Methyl Cellosolve, Methylisothiazolinone, Methylchloroisothiazolinone, Mercury, Mercury Compounds, Mineral Oil, Oxybenzone, Parabens, Paraffin Oil, Petrolatum, Phthalates, PEGs, Polysorbates, Resorcinol, Siloxanes, Sulfates, Synthetic Fragrance, Thimerosal, Toluene, Triclosan, and Triclocarban. And never ever any animal-testing.

Additional information

Ingredients

Water (Aqua), Propanediol, Butylene Glycol, Niacinamide, 1,2-Hexanediol, Prunus Persica (Peach) Fruit Extract, Dioscorea Japonica Root Extract, Sodium Hyaluronate, Adenosine, Hydrolyzed Sodium Hyaluronate, Madecassoside, Hydrolyzed Hyaluronic Acid, Sodium Acetylated Hyaluronate, Acetyl Octapeptide-3, Ethylhexylglycerin, Hydrolyzed Corn Starch, Sodium Carbomer, Beta-Glucan, Saccharide Isomerate, Phytic Acid, Sucrose, Asiaticoside, Caprylyl Glycol.

Glass is an amorphous (non-crystalline) solid. Because it is often transparent and chemically inert, glass has found widespread practical, technological, and decorative use in window panes, tableware, and optics. Some common objects made of glass like "a glass" of water, "glasses", and "magnifying glass", are named after the material.

Glass is most often formed by rapid cooling (quenching) of the molten form. Some glasses such as volcanic glass are naturally occurring, and obsidian has been used to make arrowheads and knives since the Stone Age. Archaeological evidence suggests glassmaking dates back to at least 3600 BC in Mesopotamia, Egypt, or Syria. The earliest known glass objects were beads, perhaps created accidentally during metalworking or the production of faience, which is a form of pottery using lead glazes.

Due to its ease of formability into any shape, glass has been traditionally used for vessels, such as bowls, vases, bottles, jars and drinking glasses. Soda–lime glass, containing around 70% silica, accounts for around 90% of modern manufactured glass. Glass can be coloured by adding metal salts or painted and printed with vitreous enamels, leading to its use in stained glass windows and other glass art objects.

The refractive, reflective and transmission properties of glass make glass suitable for manufacturing optical lenses, prisms, and optoelectronics materials. Extruded glass fibres have applications as optical fibres in communications networks, thermal insulating material when matted as glass wool to trap air, or in glass-fibre reinforced plastic (fibreglass).

Refining (also perhaps called by the mathematical term affining) is the process of purification of a (1) substance or a (2) form. The term is usually used of a natural resource that is almost in a usable form, but which is more useful in its pure form. For instance, most types of natural petroleum will burn straight from the ground, but it will burn poorly and quickly clog an engine with residues and by-products. The term is broad, and may include more drastic transformations, such as the reduction of ore to metal (for which see Refining (metallurgy)).

The refining of liquids is often accomplished by distillation or fractionation; this process is useful, for example, for isolating different fractions of petroleum. Gases can be refined in this way as well, by being cooled and/or compressed until they liquefy. Gases and liquids can also be refined by extraction with a selective solvent that dissolves away either the substance of interest, or the unwanted impurities.

Many solids can be refined by growing crystals in a solution of the impure material; the regular structure of the crystal tends to favor the desired material and exclude other kinds of particles.

Chemical reactions are often used to remove impurities of particular types.

The use of silicon and other semiconductors in electronics depends on precise control of impurities. The zone melting process developed by William Gardner Pfann was used to produce pure germanium, and subsequently float-zone silicon became available when Henry Theuerer of Bell Labs adapted Pfann's method to silicon.

Types of materials that are usually refined:

  • metals (see Refining (metallurgy)
  • petroleum (see Oil refinery)
  • silicon
  • sugar (see Sugar refinery)
  • flour (see Gristmill)
  • table salt
  • vegetable oil (see Food oil refinement for food use and Vegetable oil refining for biofuel use)
  • air
  • glass

Skin is the layer of usually soft, flexible outer tissue covering the body of a vertebrate animal, with three main functions: protection, regulation, and sensation.

Other animal coverings, such as the arthropod exoskeleton, have different developmental origin, structure and chemical composition. The adjective cutaneous means "of the skin" (from Latin cutis 'skin'). In mammals, the skin is an organ of the integumentary system made up of multiple layers of ectodermal tissue and guards the underlying muscles, bones, ligaments, and internal organs. Skin of a different nature exists in amphibians, reptiles, and birds. Skin (including cutaneous and subcutaneous tissues) plays crucial roles in formation, structure, and function of extraskeletal apparatus such as horns of bovids (e.g., cattle) and rhinos, cervids' antlers, giraffids' ossicones, armadillos' osteoderm, and os penis/os clitoris.

All mammals have some hair on their skin, even marine mammals like whales, dolphins, and porpoises that appear to be hairless. The skin interfaces with the environment and is the first line of defense from external factors. For example, the skin plays a key role in protecting the body against pathogens and excessive water loss. Its other functions are insulation, temperature regulation, sensation, and the production of vitamin D folates. Severely damaged skin may heal by forming scar tissue. This is sometimes discoloured and depigmented. The thickness of skin also varies from location to location on an organism. In humans, for example, the skin located under the eyes and around the eyelids is the thinnest skin on the body at 0.5 mm thick and is one of the first areas to show signs of aging such as "crows feet" and wrinkles. The skin on the palms and the soles of the feet is the thickest skin on the body at 4 mm thick. The speed and quality of wound healing in skin is promoted by estrogen.

Fur is dense hair. Primarily, fur augments the insulation the skin provides but can also serve as a secondary sexual characteristic or as camouflage. On some animals, the skin is very hard and thick and can be processed to create leather. Reptiles and most fish have hard protective scales on their skin for protection, and birds have hard feathers, all made of tough beta-keratins. Amphibian skin is not a strong barrier, especially regarding the passage of chemicals via skin, and is often subject to osmosis and diffusive forces. For example, a frog sitting in an anesthetic solution would be sedated quickly as the chemical diffuses through its skin. Amphibian skin plays key roles in everyday survival and their ability to exploit a wide range of habitats and ecological conditions.

On 11 January 2024, biologists reported the discovery of the oldest known skin, fossilized about 289 million years ago, and possibly the skin from an ancient reptile.

Average Rating

4.88

08
( 8 Reviews )
5 Star
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8 Reviews For This Product

  1. 08

    by Anna

    This serum is so good! My skin is smoother and glowing. I like it so much I repurchased it despite always wanting to try new products. It’s been added to my permanent routine. My skin gets clogged easily and I’m on the other side of 35 so I definitely need to keep up on my skincare. This does not clog my pores and I feel like it helps keep my skin youthful looking.

  2. 08

    by Joss

    It honestly leaves my skin feeling super soft and I think the products smell amazing ! I have combination oily skin and it’s not too much for me.

  3. 08

    by Trina

    I just began using this brand and this product less than a week ago and already noticed a substantial difference in my skin!

  4. 08

    by Alex

    One bottle lasts me a little over 6 months (that’s using it once a day, every morning) so the value is there. I turned 32 last year and I had just started noticing my pores, started using this and they shrunk back down so I will never be without this. It also feels refreshing to apply every morning. Love that it has niacinimide and peptides and it has never broken me out—it’s also a product that works good for my combo skin in all the seasons. Ulta frequently includes it in sales!

  5. 08

    by Jenny

    This is the first serum I’ve ever used and first Peach & Lily product also. Was a little skeptical because of the price but I honestly noticed a difference in my skin within days. My pours instantly shrunk and the redness on my skin went away. 10/10 recommend to a friend.

  6. 08

    by Seli

    Don’t understand the reviews, this is a awesome serum. My 56 year old skin is glowing!! Highly recommend!

  7. 08

    by Ville

    Leaves you feeling nourished and glowy! My 4 th product from this brand and I can’t get enough

  8. 08

    by Lizzie

    Love this so much! I use one pump a night and it’s lasted me probably close to a year. It helps w redness and small acne spots coming in!! Definitely helps with the redness and inflammation. Def give it a try but stay consistent with it for many month to start seeing it work.

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