Most peptide advice starts from the wrong premise. It treats peptides for skin as a universal upgrade, as if adding any peptide serum automatically makes a regimen more advanced, more clinical, and more effective. That's not how formulation science works, and it's not how serious retail curation works either. For Swiss pharmacies, spas, clinics, and
The most popular advice on azelaic acid serum is also the least useful for professional buyers. It usually reduces the ingredient to a simple menu of strengths, then implies that a higher percentage automatically means better results. That framing fails in practice. An Azelaic Acid Serum isn't a miracle product, and it isn't a universal
A customer steps up to the pharmacy counter before work, points to the under-eye area, and asks for “something that works”. In a spa boutique, the same request sounds slightly different: “I need to look less tired by tomorrow.” In premium retail, it often becomes: “Which eye cream is worth the price?” That question puts
A customer is standing at the pharmacy counter, holding a facial retinol serum in one hand and a rich body cream in the other. The question is familiar. “I know retinol works on my face. What should I use for my neck, chest, arms, or legs?” In many Swiss retail settings, that’s where the conversation
At its heart, a pure hyaluronic acid serum is a beautifully simple, yet incredibly effective, skincare product. It’s a concentrated formula designed to do one thing exceptionally well: drench your skin in moisture. As a powerful humectant, it draws water into the skin, giving you that plump, hydrated, dewy look we all crave. The goal





