Woke up looking like I’d mainlined a bag of salt & vinegar chips. Puffy eyes, dull everything.
This wand is the reformulation of their older LED one – they added a whole lymphatic drainage head. So you’re not just zapping with light, you’re physically pushing fluid out. Genius combo for sluggish mornings.
It’s a $495 dual-headed wand from Dr. Dennis Gross. Claims to depuff and renew in 3 minutes. Sounded like a shortcut.
Lymphatic Head
The cool metal rollerballs feel like a mini facialist knuckling your jawline.
LED Head
Switches between red for wrinkles, blue for blemishes, amber for “renewal.”
The Catch
You need to use their specific conductive serum for the microcurrent to work. Of course.
Photo: JOVS Beauty / Unsplash
The required Hydro Infusion Serum is packed with humectants and peptides. It’s the conductor for the microcurrent, but it’s also doing heavy lifting on hydration.
- Acetyl Hexapeptide-8: Relaxes tension lines (the tech needs your face slack)
- Sodium Hyaluronate: Plumps like a water balloon
- Niacinamide: Calms the redness from all that pushing
- Aloe Vera: Soothes – you’ll need it if you go too hard.
Photo: Viva Lui / Unsplash
The serum is a slick, clear gel – absorbs in 60 seconds, no sticky residue. The rollerballs are shockingly cold. First use feels… weird. Like a tiny ice skate gliding over your cheekbones.
By week two, I stopped dreading my 5 AM face. The puffiness reduction is legit. Unexpected observation? It makes my skincare sink in faster. Like my skin is actually awake and drinking it.
Photo: LightWear SkinCare / Unsplash
My jawline is sharper in the AM. Under-eyes less pillow-y. But it’s not a facelift. Deep nasolabial folds? Barely budged. This is for surface-level fluid, not structural sagging.
Photo: Ionela Mat / Unsplash
It’s an expensive, effective shortcut for puffy skin. Doesn’t replace a massage, but it’s the next best thing when you’re running on caffeine and hope.