Welcome to Ask a Beauty Editor, our new column in which Sarah Jacoby, SELF’s senior health and beauty editor, goes on the hunt to find the science-backed answers to all of your skin-care questions.
In an effort to cut costs, women are using DIY injectables to plump their pout at home. Online, TikTokers have touted their self-injections of hyaluronic acid, a commonly used filler, to the dismay of ...
Dermal fillers have been steadily climbing in recent years, and with that finally comes this reality: There's zero reason for stigma at the derm's office. At Well+Good, we love a good beauty hack and ...
Beauty shouldn’t hurt this much. People are buying cosmetic chemicals online and injecting them into their faces — and some are even giving step-by-step YouTube tutorials on how to do the same. The ...
Thinking about getting dermal fillers? From anti-wrinkle injections to lip plumping and jawline sculpting, dermal fillers have boomed in popularity over the past 5 years. These nonsurgical, seemingly ...
Dermal fillers are injected into the face to help reduce wrinkles. Filler injections are not FDA-approved for use in the temples because of the risks, but some doctors may perform them. Share on ...
“Trout pout” is a term used to describe a common effect of too much dermal filler: when, because of overzealous injections, one’s lips are so inflated they begin to curl outwards. The other frequently ...
Injectable dermal products have become some of the most sought-after cosmetic treatments. But behind every injection lies a complex combination of materials that determines how these products behave ...
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is warning people against using a certain type of at-home lip fillers due to the risk for serious side effects and potentially irreversible complications.
At Well+Good, we love a good beauty hack and a holy-grail dupe. But one of our favorite things is taking a closer look—at labels, at our habits, at the stigmas that sometimes still prevail in the ...