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SAMPAR ParisNocturnal Rescue Mask - 50ml

R449

Retail: R790
Excludes shipping

R449

R790
Customers rate OneDayOnly 4.5/5 on Google
About

Rescue your skin! Nocturnal Rescue Mask tightens pores, diminishes the appearance of blackheads and eliminates marks and cutaneous redness. This blue-ribbon remedy also repairs and soothes blemished skin. In the morning, the skin is mattified, purified (79,4%*), and soft (82,4% *). This anti-imperfection care is especially suited for oily and combination skins.

* Satisfaction test performed with 35 volunteers, after 1 week of use.

Product Features
  • 50ml
  • Anti-blemish nocturnal mask – combination and oily skin
  • 93% natural formula
  • Paraben-free

How to Use

Apply in the evening on perfectly cleansed skin. Gently massage the product from the middle of the face to the outside until fully absorbed. Rinse upon waking.

Ingredients

  • Lentil extract slows down sebum production in order to liberate and tighten clogged pores and mattify the skin.
  • Vitamin F reinforces the skin’s protective barrier function and allows increased healing.
  • Horse chestnut extract tightens pores and reduces redness.
  • Soy protein, rich in essential nutrients, boosts the skin’s metabolism precisely when it is most receptive.
  • Urban Advance Complex, a powerful alliance of 3 active ingredients (shea butter serum, mint endorphin and probiotic sugar), acts as an anti-oxidant shield, neutralizing any cutaneous imbalances linked to pollution, strengthens the skin’s natural defenses and shocks the skin back to life on a cellular level.
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We're big believers in retail therapy

The stats we're presenting here are based purely on our staff, who make up a tiny percentage of the general population, but they tell us that 100% of our staff that ordered something online exhibited signs of excitement when that thing was delivered.

We know the saying "Money can't buy happiness", but you don't often see someone crying on a jetski - and not just because all that water splashing around would make it hard to identify the tears in the first place.

Although we do have to ask: if our savings are this good, shouldn't we be calling it discount therapy instead?