It’s predictable which piece of news got the beauty press hyperventilating at the Lancôme dinner at Sofitel Manila, which was capped off by a platter of French dessert samplers and a miniature Eiffel tower made of chocolate declaring the couture collaboration, Elbaz’s first with the beauty giant.
But what may be bigger news to Lancôme fans is the reformulated Genifique, now with a prefix—“Advanced”—to its name. Advanced Genifique, according to Lancôme, has 40 percent more active ingredients than its previous formulation.
Since Genifique launched in 2009, it has sold some eight million units worldwide. That’s a lot of bottles for a beauty serum that costs several thousands of pesos per. (A 20-ml bottle of Advanced Genifique retails at P3,250; the 30-ml at P4,850; and the 75-ml at P7,755.)
Latest research
Believers, however, seem to think Genifique is worth the hefty price tag. Advanced Genifique is the result of Lancôme’s 14 years of in-depth studies of genes and proteins, and the
biological mechanism of aging. The latest research, it says, gave Lancôme scientists better comprehension of the roles of genes and proteins in targeting six essential skin functions, including unbalanced skin barrier, anti-oxidation, hydration.
Lancôme claims Genifique can achieve “clinically measurable” results of youthful skin, and can both be seen (fine lines, coarse wrinkles, radiance, clarity and evenness) and felt (texture, resiliency, tonicity, firmness and sagginess).
Genifique has already received 130 international awards, and it has nine patents effective until 2025, proof of the product’s efficacy, said Rowel Vijandre, L’Oreal Phils.’ managing director. Lancôme is a subsidiary of the L’Oreal Group.
Advanced Genifique was tested on 4,000 women across varied ethnicities.
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