Our Story
A journey from desperation to revolutionary discovery
The Mirror That Changed Everything
I still remember that morning in 2017. Standing in my Paris apartment bathroom, I traced the deepening lines around my eyes with trembling fingers. At 34, I looked exhausted, aged beyond my years. The dark circles had become permanent residents, and the crow's feet seemed to multiply overnight.
As a marketing executive at a luxury fashion house, appearance mattered. My colleagues were getting Botox, fillers, even blepharoplasty surgeries that cost €8,000 and required weeks of recovery. I watched friend after friend emerge from clinics with frozen expressions, unable to fully smile, their eyes no longer crinkling with genuine laughter.
I had already spent €3,000 on eye creams that promised miracles but delivered disappointment. The surgeon's consultation was my breaking point – he casually mentioned potential complications: nerve damage, scarring, asymmetry. There had to be another way.
The NASA Discovery That Sparked Hope
My obsession with finding a solution led me down endless research rabbit holes. Then, late one night, I discovered something extraordinary: NASA had been using red light therapy to help astronauts maintain healthy cells in space. The science was fascinating – specific wavelengths of light could actually trigger cellular regeneration.
I dove deeper. Studies from the Journal of Cosmetic and Laser Therapy showed that 630nm red light increased collagen production by up to 31% in just 12 weeks¹. Another breakthrough study revealed that when combined with microcurrent therapy, the results were amplified – participants saw a 26% reduction in wrinkle depth².
This wasn't pseudo-science. This was peer-reviewed, clinically-proven technology that the beauty industry had largely ignored in favor of more expensive, invasive procedures.
From Prototype to Proof
I couldn't find a device that combined both technologies in an effective, comfortable design for the delicate eye area. So I decided to create one myself. I partnered with a biomedical engineer from École Polytechnique and spent 18 months developing prototypes.
The first versions were clunky, uncomfortable disasters. Version 7 literally fell apart during testing. But by version 12, we had something special: a lightweight, hands-free device that delivered clinical-grade red light and microcurrent therapy directly to the orbital area.
I became my own first test subject. Every morning for 10 minutes, I wore our prototype while having my coffee. After two weeks, my husband asked if I'd "done something different." After four weeks, my mother wanted to know my secret. After eight weeks, I barely recognized the woman in the mirror – she looked like me, but 5 years younger.