terça-feira, 16 de fevereiro de 2016

Pure Ceramides – Re-Branded Natural Ceramides Skin Cream

Pure Ceramides Review

Pure Ceramides is a recently-released anti-aging skin cream that uses Matrixyl 3000 peptide formula to heal your skin. Here’s our Pure Ceramides review.

What is Pure Ceramides?

Pure Ceramides is an anti-aging skin cream that was previously marketed as Natural Ceramides. The skin cream promises to use the power of Matrixyl 3000 and Syn-ake Peptide to cure the effects of aging on your skin.

By applying Pure Ceramides to your skin daily, you can brighten your skin tone, smooth wrinkles, and boost collagen production – or at least, there are the promises made by the manufacturer of Pure Ceramides.

Like many anti-aging skin creams on the market, Pure Ceramides is available through a trial offer that isn’t nearly as good as it claims to be. Even when ordering through the “free” trial offer, Pure Ceramides will cost you $94.72 for each small bottle (yes, even the “trial” bottle costs $94.72).

What makes Pure Ceramides worth such a high price tag? Let’s find out.

How Does Pure Ceramides Work?

Pure Ceramides claims to work by blending together a handful of different formulas, including Matrixyl 3000.

Matrixyl 3000 is a trendy anti-aging skin cream formula that was just recently released onto the market. The formula is not related to the more popular formula called Matrixyl, which has been more extensively tested. Matrixyl 3000 has demonstrated some decent anti-aging results in preliminary testing, although the tests thus far have been very small in scale (the first test involved just 40 participants).

Fortunately, Pure Ceramides uses more than just Matrixyl 3000. It also uses a formula called Syn-ake Peptide. This peptide promises to help your skin retain its moisture, although it doesn’t appear to have undergone any type of clinical testing outside of the official manufacturer.

Other ingredients included in the formula are a “who’s who” of anti-aging beauty formulas, including Argireline, Hydresia, Ceramide Complex CLRTM K, and DermalRxl HydroSeal. All of these formulas basically promise the same thing: improve the moisture retention of your skin and boost hydration in order to treat wrinkles.

Sometimes, jamming a bunch of ingredients together will work. In other cases, the ingredients might counteract one another. Although some of the ingredients in Pure Ceramides have been studied and passed through clinical trials, the Pure Ceramides as a whole has undergone no such testing – so it’s unclear whether or not it will actually help achieve those skin care benefits.

Pure Ceramides Ingredients

Pure Ceramides lists only some of its ingredients. It doesn’t list the concentration of these ingredients or the specific ingredients within those ingredients. Thus, it’s difficult to say what, exactly, you’re putting into your skin when you apply Pure Ceramides.

Nevertheless, here is the list of ingredients provided by the manufacturer:

— Matrixyl 3000
— Syn-ake Peptide
— Hydresia SF2
— Argireline np
— Ceramide Complex CLRTM K
— DermalRxl HydroSeal

Pure Ceramides Pricing

Pure Ceramides has a deliberately confusing pricing policy that has left many customers extremely angry online.

That pricing policy promises to send you a jar of skin cream for free. However, to receive that jar of skin cream, you’ll need to pay for shipping, which costs $4.95. You may think, “Well, that’s reasonable because I’m getting a jar of skin cream for free.”

The truth is: after entering your credit card, it’s automatically pre-authorized for a charge of $94.72 for the full jar of skin cream. That charge automatically goes through just 18 days after you order.

In other words, the free trial bottle costs you about $100 by the time the trial period is over ($94.72 + $4.95).

Making things worse for your credit card debt is that you’re charged an additional $94.72 + $4.95 shipping every 31 days after until you cancel. That’s right: the company assumed you liked their $100 skin cream so much that you wanted to receive an additional order of the cream every month for the rest of your life.

Customer reviews online seem to indicate that getting a refund is difficult, time-consuming, and expensive. Some people claim they’ve had trouble canceling their autoship subscription. They called to cancel the subscription, only to receive an additional order of the product a few days later.

But perhaps the worst part of this trial is that none of this information is listed anywhere on the product packaging, the ordering page, or the main sales page for Pure Ceramides. Instead, the bottom of the page simply lists the following:

“By providing your card info today, you’ll have eighteen days to evaluate the product if you like the product, do nothing and you will be charged for the bottle in hand. “

It never lists the price you pay for the bottle in hand. You have to go to the terms and conditions section to get the full price.

In any case, the manufacturer of Pure Ceramides is clearly trying to lure people into the free trial program and then secretly authorizing hundreds of charges on their credit cards.

Put simply, good anti-aging skin cream manufacturers don’t implement pricing policies like this.

Who Makes Pure Ceramides?

Pure Ceramides is exclusively sold online through a website called SimplyHHealthySolutions.com. That second “H” isn’t a typo. That’s the real website name.

The manufacturer is extremely vague about where the skin cream is manufactured and where the company is based. Its mailing address is listed as:

PO Box 41542
St Petersburg, FL 33743

You can contact the company at 844-812-0404 or by email at support@getpureceramides.com.

That address and contact information listed above has been linked to a wide range of scammy products sold online, including Nutra Skin, ReviveRX, Revival Beauty, and Natural Ceramides.

Ultimately, Pure Ceramides is one more anti-aging skin cream that’s highly overpriced and has minimal scientific evidence reinforcing its benefits. We have no idea how Pure Ceramides works, and its scam-like pricing policy may leave you with hundreds of dollars in credit card debt for products you never explicitly ordered. Good skin cream manufacturers don’t do this, so you should probably avoid Pure Ceramides.



from phytoceramides reviews http://ift.tt/1U5gZh7 via anti aging wiki
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