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THE SCIENCE FROW IS OFFICIALLY IN — AND IT'S NEVER LOOKED THIS CHIC AS KATE MOSS GOES BACK TO SCHOOL AT THE LYMA LONDON LECTURE.
THE SCIENCE FROW IS OFFICIALLY IN — AND IT'S NEVER LOOKED THIS CHIC AS KATE MOSS GOES BACK TO SCHOOL AT THE LYMA LONDON LECTURE.

Web Release

time13-07-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Web Release

THE SCIENCE FROW IS OFFICIALLY IN — AND IT'S NEVER LOOKED THIS CHIC AS KATE MOSS GOES BACK TO SCHOOL AT THE LYMA LONDON LECTURE.

THE SCIENCE FROW IS OFFICIALLY IN — AND IT'S NEVER LOOKED THIS CHIC AS KATE MOSS GOES BACK TO SCHOOL AT THE LYMA LONDON LECTURE. Style icons, influencers, socialites, doctors and experts gathered yesterdat in London's Marylebone as LYMA's Laser PRO science lecture became the latest arena for the style set. Kate Moss, Sabrina Elba, Ashley Roberts, Amanda Cronin and Gaby Roslin joined founder Lucy Goff and Plastic Surgeon, Dr Graeme Glass. The LYMA science lecture has been curated to educate on the technology and science behind the LYMA Laser PRO. The celebrity-loved skincare device launched in the UK a year ago and in the US in April of this year and has exceeded all sales expectations since the stateside launch. Dr Graeme Glass PhD, FRCS (Plast) unveiled his published clinical study proving the LYMA Laser technology triggers an unprecedented cellular response. Loved by Martha Stewart, Paris Hilton, Miranda Kerr, Carey Mulligan, Kate Beckinsale and Rosie Huntington Whiteley LYMA Laser PRO uses the world's most advanced anti-ageing cold laser technology that has 'cracked the code' for superior collagen production and transforms everything from wrinkles, cellulite, redness, scarring and pigmentation to post-surgical recovery with zero pain and zero downtime. LYMA Laser and LYMA Laser PRO are available at The LYMA Laser PRO takes the unrivalled power of the original cult-favourite LYMA Laser and trebles it – 3x bigger, 3x faster. Plastic surgeons and dermatologists are already stating that the LYMA Laser PRO is the beauty launch of a generation for its ability to stop the aging clock, using high-powered and precise, low-level laser technology to stimulate collagen production leading to youthful, radiant, skin.

Entrepreneur UK's London 100: LYMA
Entrepreneur UK's London 100: LYMA

Entrepreneur

time13-06-2025

  • Business
  • Entrepreneur

Entrepreneur UK's London 100: LYMA

LYMA is redefining the wellness industry with its science-led approach to supplements, skincare, and technology Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own. You're reading Entrepreneur United Kingdom, an international franchise of Entrepreneur Media. Industry: Health and Wellness LYMA epitomises what it means to be a London-born disruptor. Founded by Lucy Goff in 2018, LYMA is redefining the wellness industry with its science-led approach to supplements, skincare, and technology. Following the birth of her first child, Lucy was hospitalised with septicemia for six weeks, enduring severe post-infectious complications. Despite trying multiple treatments, nothing restored her health - until she met Dr. Paul Clayton, a world-renowned expert in clinical pharmacology and nutrition. This meeting sparked the idea for LYMA: a brand that would challenge the wellness industry by offering scientifically backed solutions that deliver real, transformative results. LYMA set itself apart by prioritising scientific validation over marketing gimmicks. The brand's debut product, the LYMA Supplement, was a first-of-its-kind nutraceutical that incorporated patented, peer-reviewed ingredients at clinically backed doses—something previously unheard of in the supplement industry. Building on this momentum, LYMA expanded its portfolio with the LYMA Laser, the world's first clinic-grade at-home laser for skin rejuvenation. The launch further cemented the brand's reputation as a pioneer in next-generation beauty tech. By pioneering a new category of luxury wellness, LYMA is not only shaping the future of its industry but also reinforcing London's reputation as a global hub for innovation and entrepreneurship.

Martha Stewart, 83, reveals her secret behind her taut skin as she showcases her age-defying looks
Martha Stewart, 83, reveals her secret behind her taut skin as she showcases her age-defying looks

Daily Mail​

time13-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Daily Mail​

Martha Stewart, 83, reveals her secret behind her taut skin as she showcases her age-defying looks

Martha Stewart has revealed the secret behind her taut looks as she showcased her age-defying looks in a youthful Instagram post on Thursday. The TV personality, 83, who shot to fame in 1990 after launching her magazine Martha Stewart Living, looked incredible as she confessed laser treatments are behind her snatched features. Martha visited WellTech client, LYMA's brand HQ in London where she experienced a signature LYMA Lift facial and picked up her own Laser PRO device. Sharing a snap of herself with the device - a clinical-grade cold laser technology claiming to reduce the appearance of wrinkles - Martha looked sensational as she held the device under her chin. Worth £4,995, it is 'engineered to make skin look younger by triggering a genetic switch inside each cell' and Martha branded her facial, 'the best she has ever had.' From A-list scandals and red carpet mishaps to exclusive pictures and viral moments, subscribe to the DailyMail's new Showbiz newsletter to stay in the loop. Alongside her snap, she penned: 'Last thing we did in London was visit @lucygoffy @lymalife for a facial and red light laser treatment performed by Scottish aesthetician Yvonne Martin, wow if all I can say!!!!!' Martha's MUA Daisy Toye has previously dubbed LYMA 'the best at-home laser in the game,' adding that both she and Martha 'love' the latest device. Laser light is uniquely constructed which allows the device to retain more energy as it penetrates the skin. Martha's post comes after she weighed in on the RecipeTin Eats plagiarism scandal after Brooke Bellamy was accused of copying the recipes of fellow Australian cook Nagi Maehashi. The celebrity chef said during her live event at Sydney 's ICC on Wednesday night that it was difficult to prove a recipe had been copied. 'I have so many recipes and it's hard to develop a recipe without having a repertoire behind it,' she told the audience. 'I don't think too many recipes are owned by anybody, they are handed down, used and changed.' However, Martha claimed that it can be considered plagiarism if a recipe is 'copied word for word'. 'If you print somebody else's recipe word for word in your own cookbook then it might be plagiarism but I think it's very hard to prove who actually came up with that recipe,' she said. 'So unless they are word for word, you can't say they're yours.' It comes after a second author accused social media cooking sensation Brooke of stealing recipes for her bestselling cookbook Bake With Brooki. Hours after RecipeTin Eats founder Nagi raised allegations of copyright infringement last month, Sally McKenney, the US author and blogger behind Sally's Baking Addiction, made similar claims. Brooke, who owns the popular Brooki Bakehouse in Brisbane, denied the accusations, saying she had been making and selling her recipes before Nagi's were published. The allegations relate to Nagi's caramel slice and baklava recipe, along with Sally's Best Vanilla Cake recipe. Sally posted her claims on social media, saying she was first alerted to the similarity months ago. She said her recipe was first published in 2019. 'One of my recipes was also plagiarised in this book and also appears on the author's YouTube channel,' she said. 'Original recipe creators who put in the work to develop and test recipes deserve credit - especially in a bestselling cookbook.' Bake With Brooki is a bestselling cookbook published by Penguin in October last year and retails for $49.99. Brooke quickly became a global sensation after sharing videos on TikTok, which receive millions of views each day. She is best known for her cookies and has opened pop-up stores in Abu Dhabi and Dubai. Both Penguin and Brooke deny the allegations.

What can a £5,000 at-home laser do?
What can a £5,000 at-home laser do?

Times

time13-06-2025

  • Health
  • Times

What can a £5,000 at-home laser do?

With the beauty-gadget industry growing at four times the rate of the overall skincare category, with sales projected to hit $92.55 billion by 2028, it seems to be becoming the favoured option for people who want the results of a visit to the aesthetician, but prefer less invasive approaches. • This article contains affiliate links that can earn us revenue As a result the British wellness brand LYMA is doing better than ever. Founded in 2018, its initial offering was the LYMA supplement, a gold-coloured capsule containing active ingredients formulated to be bioavailable and therefore fully absorbed by the body. Despite coming at a price — around £199 for a month's supply — the pills frequently sold out and were nicknamed the 'supermodel supplement' to those in the wellness world. Unsurprisingly, LYMA loyalists were thrilled when LYMA dropped its first at-home clinic-grade laser in 2020, the launch helped LYMA receive a 40 per cent increase in turnover to £32.5 million, with US sales accounting for 70 per cent of their total revenues. Now the range includes both the original LYMA laser as well as the LYMA Laser Pro which launched in March 2024. Both use technology called low-level laser therapy (LLLT) first developed in the 1960s which was previously used to treat medical injuries such as healing tendons and rebuilding cartilage. The founder of LYMA, Lucy Goff, decided to harness this existing technology and re-engineer it for the cosmetic market, creating a portable, cordless device that could be used at home without the supervision of a doctor or a prescription*. Goff consulted geneticists, longevity scientists and surgeons and spent five years developing the laser. In contrast to some other cosmetic procedures which have to deliver micro-injury to the skin and inflict damage in order to create collagen, the LYMA lasers utilise powerful, zero-damage cold laser technology. The original iteration is a smaller, handbag-sized device that features a patented 8cm² treatment lens, primarily designed for the face. The LYMA Laser Pro can also be used on the neck and body, and has cut down the initial treatment time of 15 minutes per day to just three minutes per area of concern (such as cheeks, forehead and eye areas), or a full face in as little as 9 minutes, thanks to its larger 30cm² lens. Dr Graeme Glass, a craniofacial, aesthetic and plastic surgeon and now the director of aesthetics at LYMA, helped develop the laser and has written several medical papers on its technology. With many women losing fat through the rise of Ozempic and other weight loss alternatives, Glass recommends the LYMA laser. 'Losing weight can be associated with the loss of subcutaneous fat which can give the appearance of laxity as the face and neck structures hang on relatively loose ligaments,' he says. 'The skin loses its lustre because of loss of water content in the dermis, lack of synthesis of the protective fatty acids that condition the skin, and lack of vitamins and minerals essential for healthy skin function.' Just like the rest of our body, our skin needs energy function, which usually comes in the form of ATP (adenosine triphosphate) to help the skin stay hydrated, produce collagen and elastic, as well as promote cell renewal. Without enough ATP, the skin becomes dull and will start to sag or age at a faster rate, Glass explains. To counteract this, the LYMA laser uses the technique of low level laser therapy using near-infrared light. According to LYMA's website: 'this light triggers a natural process in your cells called photobiomodulation, which helps your skin produce ATP more efficiently. It's like charging up the skin's internal battery, so it has the energy it needs to repair and regenerate itself.' LYMA claims that over time the ATP produced through using the laser will help boost collagen and elastin production — both key for the appearance of firmer, smoother skin. The brand promises an improvement in as little as 30 days with daily use and recommends following with twice weekly sessions as maintenance. LYMA's own clinical trials involving 10 subjects showed 64.3 per cent improvement in pigmentation, a 53.8 percent improvement in wrinkles, a 42 per cent improvement in rosacea symptoms, and a 56 per cent decline in acne and blemishes.** At around £1,999 and around £4,995 respectively, the LYMA lasers are undoubtedly an expensive piece of kit, but that hasn't kept customers away. LYMA sold 47 per cent more stock than predicted in the first 24 hours of its US launch and counts a whole host of celebrities, including Sienna Miller and Gwyneth Paltrow, as loyal users. Likewise, the launch of LYMA skincare, a duo of anti-ageing serum and creams, had a waitlist of around 30,000 expectant customers. But it's the Laser Pro which is helping the brand put a stake in the ground of the $211 billion global professional beauty services market — and a pretty big stake at that. * LYMA's policy outlines if you have a recurring or previously diagnosed health condition that concerns you, or are taking prescription medication, upon purchase of our products you agree to seek medical advice from your GP before taking our products and/or making dietary and lifestyle changes. **Based on an independent clinical trial measured by Cutometer dual MPA 580 — a device used to measure skin elasticity and firmness by assessing the skin's ability to deform and return to its original shape, plus LYMA's own studies which can be found here.

Dermatologist approved anti-ageing gadget loved by Kiera Knightley that 'shrinks wrinkles'
Dermatologist approved anti-ageing gadget loved by Kiera Knightley that 'shrinks wrinkles'

Wales Online

time08-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Wales Online

Dermatologist approved anti-ageing gadget loved by Kiera Knightley that 'shrinks wrinkles'

Dermatologist approved anti-ageing gadget loved by Kiera Knightley that 'shrinks wrinkles' The LYMA Laser is a clinical-grade cold laser device that is loved by celebrities and beauty gurus alike - and Natalie Portman's makeup artist, Romy Soleimani is a big fan Kiera Knightley's makeup artist is a huge fan as are a whole host of A-Listers, including Natalie Portman, Kate Beckinsale and Cynthia Erivo. (Image: undefined via Getty Images ) A renowned celebrity makeup artist, known for working with stars like Natalie Portman and Keira Knightley, always carries a key product on her work trips. The LYMA Laser is heralded for combating signs of ageing such as wrinkles, uneven skin tone, sagginess, and dullness. Romy Soleimani, the makeup artist to actors, reveals: "I take it on every single job with me because it's so easy to travel with." This clinical-grade cold laser gadget has won the hearts of numerous A-listers, including Sienna Miller, Kate Beckinsale, Cynthia Erivo, and Dita Von Teese. Targeting the face, neck, and specific areas that might need attention, like the knees, the LYMA Laser boasts a lens designed for best performance in these regions. Comfortable and simple to use, it comes with a price tag of £1,999. READ MORE: 'Brilliant' Clarkson's Farm book narrated by Jeremy Clarkson is free in Father's Day deal READ MORE: Dunelm shoppers praise 'calm and cosy' weighted blanket that 'feels like being hugged' The device works by stimulating the body's own regenerative processes, reactivating cells associated with producing collagen and elastin, while also boosting cells' detoxification and hydration functions. This advanced cell activity leads to enhanced skin renewal, giving users tighter, brighter, more youthful skin, reports the Mirror. Additionally, LYMA offers a premium model, the Pro version, at £4,995. However, there are other products in the market offering similar benefits, such as the LED Face Mask Series 2 by CurrentBody, leading its category at £399. Embracing red light therapy, this LED mask stimulates increases in collagen production, aiming to deliver more youthful skin. It claims to slash wrinkle appearance by 30% and elevate skin plumpness by 57%. LYMA Laser £1,999 LYMA Buy here Product Description The LYMA Laser is a revolutionary clinical-grade cold laser, engineered to make skin look younger by triggering a genetic switch inside each cell. Skin is dramatically transformed; wrinkles are radically improved; elasticity is restored; sagging is reversed, and pigmentation is faded. BeautyPro's portable-friendly beauty devices, including its LED Wand Device priced at £79, are designed to enhance skin appearance with red light therapy for a smoother and firmer look. Lucy Goff, the founder of LYMA, remarked on the evolution of their Laser technology: "The original version of the LYMA Laser's technology was a gigantic floor-standing machine. Over 120 iterations, we got it down to a portable, painless - and yet incredibly powerful - little device. It's light, and easy to use when at home or on the move, because travel is integral to so many lives." She further noted the device's travel-friendliness: "That's why it's also safe for hand luggage. It truly is the only device you need, and it fits perfectly into whatever routine you already have, whether at home on the sofa or while travelling." With 150 customer reviews, LYMA's Laser has received positive feedback. A five-star review from a shopper highlighted their experience: "Though I haven't finished the full three months, I am seeing positive results on my 71-year-old skin. Nice smooth texture, lessening of fine lines, and maybe some reductions in my deep wrinkles. I have trouble doing it every day, but I do it 5-6 times a week." Celebrity Dita Von Teese pictured using the LYMA device whilst travelling (Image: LYMA ) The same customer expressed satisfaction with the relaxing nature of the treatment: "Must say, I do find the treatment very relaxing, and it is something I look forward to doing. I am planning to splurge on the Pro version - cutting the treatment time will help me be more consistent. Thanks for a great product and very responsive customer service." A second user expressed their uncertainty: "I'm having mixed feelings about this product I do like the laser but for what my reason for it I not sure if it is helping [and] it is a commitment." Another individual was clearly satisfied, saying: "I love it. I am in control of my skin." Meanwhile, a fourth shared their professional stance: "We dermatologists are not big fans of at-home devices. In general we think that clinic based treatments will give faster and dramatic outcomes. I bought this device anyway to treat myself for Christmas. I already had good skin but I was starting to notice sagging skin and signs of ageing." This dermatologist continued to describe their own experience after two months of use: "After two months o fuse (which could have been more consistent but Christmas and holidays happened) I am surprised by the results... my jawline is prominent, skin is more even-toned, overall I feel more confident (certain changes even I can't pinpoint). I am so pleased I took the risk and bought it. Definitely be recommending to my right set of patients." Article continues below A fifth person concluded their review on a positive note: "Takes commitment, but I am two weeks in and people are already commenting on the luminosity of my skin." The Lyma Laser is available from their website.

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