Like every other industry, 3D printing has made its way into the beauty business; not only does it have the potential to preserve life for much longer than ever before, but it could keep us looking great well into our later years. At least, that’s what companies like Biologique Recherche claim. Much like Radara’s 3D printed skin patches, Biologique Recherche’s “Second Skin” treatment utilizes hyaluronic acid to hydrate and plump the skin, purportedly removing wrinkles and fine lines in the process.
Second Skin uses a process called electrospinning, which is a 3D printing-like technique that creates solid fibers out of liquid solution. A technician feeds pure hyaluronic acid, a naturally occurring compound in the skin, into an electrospinner, which converts it to nanofibers that are then printed out in strips. Those strips, customized to the shape of the client’s face, are then applied to the face, where they actually dissolve right into the skin. It literally is a “second skin”; hyaluronic acid, along with collagen, elastin and proteoglycans, forms the substance of the dermis. The substance, which holds 1,000 times its weight in water, is a critical component in moisture retention – and, as every anti-aging product will remind us, moisturizing is key for a youthful complexion.“When topically applied, Hyaluronic Acid forms a continuous elastic film over the skin,” explains skin care expert Vicki Morav. “This film is permeable to cutaneous exchanges, retaining moisture and thereby contributing to maintaining good levels in the stratum corneum irrespective of ambient air humidity. This active ingredient also plays a crucial role in the cellular migration, bonding stimulation and proliferation processes involved in wound regeneration, reconstruction or healing. Hyaluronic acid significantly improves the skin’s healing process as it activates re-epithelialization, regulates cell proliferation and migration and reduces the roughness of the newly formed epidermis.”
“I did an actual double take when I saw myself in the mirror: the outline of my jaw looked sharp and crisp, not at all like its usual soft and increasingly shapeless shelf,” Bauso remarks. “I couldn’t tell much difference in the rest of my face, but I really had a hard time looking away from my jaw.”
The technique isn’t cheap – a facial at the Peninsula Spa, for instance, will run you between $310 and $325. If it were permanent, I might consider it worth it, but regular treatments are scarcely affordable for anyone but the super-rich. Still, it’s a really interesting technology, and it’s noninvasive. If you can afford it, and want to shave a few years off your face for a special occasion, it might be worth a try. Are you interested in a treatment? Let’s discuss it over in the 3D Printed Skin Treatments forum at 3DPB.com.