Continue the work between visits, with products chosen to a particular face.
The skin renews itself in cycles, and what touches it daily matters more, over time, than any single treatment. Medical-grade skincare carries active ingredients at concentrations meant to reach the layers that count, and to do real work there. Where a counter cream rests at the surface, a clinical retinoid or a growth factor actually arrives.
What separates this kind of care from over-the-counter is also the pairing. A clinician chooses what your skin needs, in what order, in what amount, and adjusts as your skin answers. The result is care that compounds, day by day, alongside the in-clinic work.

The work of the in-clinic visit ends. The work of medical-grade skincare continues, daily, between visits. We treat the routine you build at home as part of the treatment we give in the room, because it is.
What you put on your skin every morning and night does more, over a year, than any single appointment can. Medical-grade skincare is how we make the in-clinic work last.
The medical-grade skincare shelf is large. We do not recommend the whole of it. A small number of well-chosen products, used consistently, does more than a long routine that is hard to keep up with.
We tell you what your skin actually needs at this season of your life. Then we leave the rest at the shop.
The hand here is not the one placing a needle or guiding a laser. It is the hand selecting what your skin will be asked to use every day. That selection matters more than it seems, because the wrong active in the wrong concentration causes more harm than no active at all.
We choose carefully, in person, for the skin in front of us. It is the kind of choice that does its best work in a room, not at a counter.
Medical-grade skincare is not a course of treatment that ends. It is a habit you maintain, with small adjustments as your skin changes through the seasons and the years.
We check in. We add what helps. We remove what no longer serves. The routine grows quieter, not larger, as your skin tells us what it actually needs.
Medical-grade skincare suits anyone who wants the in-clinic work to last, and who is willing to give a small daily routine the consistency it asks for. It is well suited to those with specific concerns, fine lines, tone, texture, dullness, post-treatment recovery, that the right actives can quietly address over time.
It is for those who prefer fewer, better products to a shelf of them, and who would rather be told what to use, plainly, than guess at a counter.
Medical-grade skincare does its best work continuing the care between visits, quietly and daily. For lifting, for filling what has hollowed, or for correcting in weeks what years have written, there are kinder tools for that work, and we would be glad to walk you through them at the consultation.
It also rewards consistency above all. Real skin change is the work of months, not days, and a routine used three times a week will not give what a routine used every morning will. If a daily habit is not yet something you can hold, that is reason enough to begin smaller, and we will help you choose what to start with.
Most can be paused or substituted during pregnancy and breastfeeding. Retinoids and hydroquinone, in particular, are set aside. Tell us at consultation and we will build a routine that respects this season of life, with options that remain safe.
We carry a small, curated set, selected for results rather than label. Brands rotate as the field advances and as we find better formulations. We will recommend what is right for your skin at consultation, rather than prescribing the whole shelf.
For the result to last, more or less yes. Skin renews itself in cycles, and a routine that has improved it works because it continues to. Stopping returns the skin, gradually, to where it would have been. That is not a failure of the product. It is the nature of skin.
Real skin change is slow. Most actives, retinoids in particular, ask the skin to adjust before they reward it: a few weeks of mild dryness or flaking is normal. The visible improvement, brighter tone and smoother texture, builds over eight to twelve weeks of consistent use, and deepens beyond that. Judge a routine by the season, not the morning.
Two main differences. The actives are typically at higher concentrations, and the pairings are chosen by a clinician for your skin specifically. A retinoid from a clinical line reaches the layers that count; a similar-sounding product from a counter often does not. The result is care that actually changes the skin, rather than care that merely feels like it might.