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Your social feed says “glass skin” is one serum away, but your face says otherwise. We took the most viral skincare trends—slugging, skin cycling, hypochlorous acid sprays, beef tallow, dupes, at‑home dermaplaning and microneedling—and compared them with what actually works in the treatment room and at home. With Lindsay, lead aesthetician at Couture Med Spa, plus Daimie and Claudia weighing the pro and consumer angles, we break down when a trend helps your barrier, when it wrecks it, and how to tell the difference before you click buy.
We get honest about slugging: a thin occlusive layer can rescue windburned or post‑procedure skin, but sealing tretinoin or acne-prone congestion under petrolatum is a recipe for irritation. Skin cycling? More of a rebrand of solid basics—pace your exfoliants, introduce retinoids gradually, and protect recovery nights—than a miracle method. We also spotlight a keeper: hypochlorous acid. As a gentle, immune‑inspired antimicrobial mist, it calms redness, supports healing, and saves sweaty gym skin without wrecking makeup.
On the no‑go list: beef tallow for faces and any at‑home needles or scalpels. Tallow’s heavy lipids and mismatched pH can congest and disrupt your barrier; DIY microneedling and dermaplaning invite microtears and sanitation risks best left to professionals. For “dupe” culture, we explain why matching ingredient lists doesn’t match results—delivery systems, processing, and final formulation drive effectiveness—and share how to build smart minimalist routines that still correct and protect. Whether you chase glow or prefer matte, we show you how to get healthy, consistent results without falling for black market injectables or TikTok shop traps.
If you’re ready to navigate trends with confidence, hit play. Then tell us: which skincare trend should we decode next? Subscribe, share with a friend who loves a good hack, and leave a review so more skincare lovers can find the show.
By Couture Med Spa5
1515 ratings
Send Couture Conversations a text
Your social feed says “glass skin” is one serum away, but your face says otherwise. We took the most viral skincare trends—slugging, skin cycling, hypochlorous acid sprays, beef tallow, dupes, at‑home dermaplaning and microneedling—and compared them with what actually works in the treatment room and at home. With Lindsay, lead aesthetician at Couture Med Spa, plus Daimie and Claudia weighing the pro and consumer angles, we break down when a trend helps your barrier, when it wrecks it, and how to tell the difference before you click buy.
We get honest about slugging: a thin occlusive layer can rescue windburned or post‑procedure skin, but sealing tretinoin or acne-prone congestion under petrolatum is a recipe for irritation. Skin cycling? More of a rebrand of solid basics—pace your exfoliants, introduce retinoids gradually, and protect recovery nights—than a miracle method. We also spotlight a keeper: hypochlorous acid. As a gentle, immune‑inspired antimicrobial mist, it calms redness, supports healing, and saves sweaty gym skin without wrecking makeup.
On the no‑go list: beef tallow for faces and any at‑home needles or scalpels. Tallow’s heavy lipids and mismatched pH can congest and disrupt your barrier; DIY microneedling and dermaplaning invite microtears and sanitation risks best left to professionals. For “dupe” culture, we explain why matching ingredient lists doesn’t match results—delivery systems, processing, and final formulation drive effectiveness—and share how to build smart minimalist routines that still correct and protect. Whether you chase glow or prefer matte, we show you how to get healthy, consistent results without falling for black market injectables or TikTok shop traps.
If you’re ready to navigate trends with confidence, hit play. Then tell us: which skincare trend should we decode next? Subscribe, share with a friend who loves a good hack, and leave a review so more skincare lovers can find the show.

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