Retinaldehyde — oh wait. Wrong product.
Let's talk about what's actually going on inside this ampoule.
Silk Sericin + Fibroin — The Phase-Transition Lift
This is not retinol. This is not a peptide blend. This is a bio-compatible silk protein system — the same biological material ancient Korean and Japanese physicians used as surgical suture to close wounds for 3,000 years.
And one discovery changes everything: on contact with the warmth of human skin, silk proteins don't just absorb. They transform.
THE PHASE TRANSITION
The visible golden threads in the ampoule are micro-threads of silk fibroin and sericin — suspended in a concentrated silk water base. The moment they touch your skin:
- 1 The threads dissolve as body heat breaks the liquid carrier
- 2 The silk peptides cross-link, forming a breathable, biocompatible tightening film
- 3 This film creates an immediate mechanical tension — pulling sagging tissue upward
- 4 Meanwhile, the 120-Da collagen slips below the surface and begins the long-term rebuild
WHY SILK WORKS DIFFERENTLY
Silk is composed of two proteins:
Fibroin (70–75%): The structural center. Incredible tensile strength, biocompatibility, and tissue regeneration properties — documented in peer-reviewed medical literature.
Sericin (25–30%): The adhesive "glue." Highly hydrophilic. Perfectly mimics the amino acid profile of human skin's Natural Moisturizing Factor. In-vitro studies show it stimulates Type I collagen synthesis and suppresses oxidative stress.
For decades, the Western textile industry threw sericin away as industrial waste. Asian dermatological research rediscovered what Korean physicians already knew — it was the most skin-compatible protein on earth.
Immediate Action
Silk mesh forms a biocompatible tightening film on contact — visible lifting and firming within minutes.
Long-Term Rebuild
120-Da collagen peptides pass the skin barrier to reach fibroblasts where structural collagen synthesis begins.
*Bio-silk tightening based on silk fibroin phase-transition properties documented in biomaterial research. Cosmetic product; individual results may vary.




