terça-feira, 26 de janeiro de 2016

Celleral – Anti-Aging Serum & Eye Cream Gel

Celleral Skin Serum Review

Celleral is a recently-released anti-aging serum that uses ingredients like Gatuline to heal your skin at the cellular level. Here’s our Celleral review.

What is Celleral?

Celleral is a skin cream that just hit the internet. Claiming to use clinically proven ingredients and a proprietary blend of formulas, Celleral promises to boost collagen production and help your body make newer, healthier skin cells.

Celleral goes by a few different names. It’s sold under the name Celleral Skin on some advertisements, while other advertisements list it as Celleral Intensive Anti-Aging Serum.

Whatever it’s called, it’s all the same formula.

The serum is relatively expensive for a one month supply: it’s priced at around $100 for a small bottle. The manufacturer, however, makes it difficult to learn that price without signing up for a “free trial” first. During that trial, your credit card is pre-authorized with hundreds of dollars of charges.

So is Celleral Anti-Aging Serum worth the awkward pricing policies? Or is it just another overpriced skin serum that makes enormous promises without providing any evidence to back them up?

How Does Celleral Work?

Many anti-aging skin creams sold online provide no information about their methods of action. Celleral, fortunately, takes a different approach and gives us at least a little bit of information about how it works.

The skin cream claims to work as the cellular level using a blend with Gatuline and Glucare, both of which are registered trademark formulas made by third-party companies. Here’s a brief overview of how each ingredient works:

— Gatuline In-Tense: Concentrated firming and wrinkle-smoothing formula that increases the density and firmness of your skin while “reducing skin roughness”.

— GluCare S and GluCare S 2%: Revitalizes the skin’s own active defense system, reducing the sensitivity of your skin and enhancing its natural repair processes.

Unfortunately, we don’t know any further information about the ingredients inside Celleral. Both of these formulas could be made up of only synthetic ingredients and chemicals, as far as we know. Or, they could be filled with natural botanicals. Celleral never explains its ingredients in any way.

There’s also a third formula included in the skin cream, called TRYLAGEN PCB, which promises to boost collagen levels even further.

Celleral Youth Eye Gel

Celleral claims you can maximize the effectiveness of the skin cream by pairing the cream with its Youth Eye Gel.

That Youth Eye Gel claims to use three formulas to reduce the signs of aging around your eyes. By applying the serum daily, you can give yourself “smoother, brighter and firmer looking eyes” – at least, that’s the idea.

The three formulas used in the Celleral Youth Eye Gel include DuPont Glypure, REGU-AGE, and SYN-COLL.

Glypure is a legitimate formula manufactured by chemical giant DuPont. The formula mostly contains glycolic acid (70%).

Scientific Evidence for Celleral

Celleral doesn’t appear to have undergone any clinical testing or scientific studies over the years. some of its respective formulas have been subject to studies, but the overall formula does not list any information about any types of clinical trials that have taken place.

So when the manufacturer claims that the formula can diminish your wrinkles and provide a significant impact on your skin, please note that these are just claims: the formula has not gone through any testing to back up these promises.

Celleral Pricing

Celleral is priced at a few different rates, depending on how you buy it. The most expensive way to buy the cream is through the “free” trial, which is ironic. You can also buy the cream outside of the trial in individual bottles:

Regular Pricing

— 1 Bottle: $59.95 + $7.49 S+H
— 2 Bottles: $99.95 + Free shipping
— 3 Bottles: $149.95 + Free shipping

The last two packages, the 2 bottle and 3 bottle packages, come with 1 or 2 bottles of Cellumis Advanced Eye Gel, respectively.

Each bottle of Celleral contains 1 ounce (30mL) of skin cream, which promises to be good for a one month supply.

Free Trial

— Pay $1.95 to $6.95 today for the trial and receive a full-sized Celleral product in the mail

— 14 days later, you’re automatically charged the full price for Celleral, which is $89.95

— Every 30 days thereafter, you’ll be charged $94.99 and receive a full-sized jar of Celleral in the mail

— You will continue receiving monthly shipments at a price of $94.99 until you specifically call the company to cancel.

— To cancel your autoship subscription, you’ll need to call (877) 252-3239 from Monday to Friday between 9am to 5pm MST.

Refunds are available but the refund policy is so ridiculous that most people will find that it’s not worth it: you can only receive a refund on unopened products in their original packaging. You need to pay for your own shipping to return it and all refunds are charged a $19.95 restocking fee per product. You also need to return the products within 30 days or else your refund isn’t valid.

One of the problems with the Celleral trial (aside from the fact that it’s significantly more expensive than any other ordering method) is that none of this information is clear or upfront: it’s hidden deep within the terms and conditions. This makes it difficult for the average customer to figure out exactly how much they’re spending on Celleral.

Who Makes Celleral?

Interestingly enough, the terms and conditions section for Celleral continuously refers to the skin cream as “Purific Skin Age Defying Serum”. That skin cream is marketed as a separate product but features an identical ordering form and pricing policy to Celleral. So it appears that the manufacturer simply changed the name of Purific to Celleral and tried to re-market it to avoid some of the bad Purific reviews that had been popping up online.

In any case, the manufacturer lists its mailing address as the following:

PO Box 4800
Scottsdale, AZ 85261-4800

Unsurprisingly, Googling that address doesn’t reveal any large company headquarters. Instead, it reveals a US Post Office location. Basically, the company appears to have rented out a post office box and listed it as their company headquarters.

That’s a problem: since we don’t know the company’s actual location, we have no idea where the skin cream is manufactured or where the ingredients are sourced. Typically, when a manufacturer doesn’t list this information, it’s because the skin cream is produced in a developing country – like China or India.

You can contact the company by email at support@celleral.com or by phone at 877-252-3239.

Ultimately, the company information for Celleral’s manufacturer gives us little reason to believe that the skin cream is a legitimate skin care product. The minimal testing and ingredient information is also a problem. If you’re spending over $100 on a skin cream, then you can certainly do better than a small jar of Celleral.



from phytoceramides reviews http://ift.tt/1OWWEVq via anti aging wiki
from Tumblr http://ift.tt/1ShNHKL

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