@embebess: #xuhuong #viral #setxinh #đồhè

Em Be Bé
Em Be Bé
Open In TikTok:
Region: VN
Friday 10 July 2026 09:13:09 GMT
35374
136
3
18

Music

Download

Comments

piangel95
Nắng Hạ :
Chân váy có ko ạ
2026-07-11 18:57:18
0
minhhanh006
Bạc Hà 🥰🥰 :
Mẫu này có hàng k
2026-07-11 08:10:03
0
To see more videos from user @embebess, please go to the Tikwm homepage.

Other Videos

You know when someone suddenly looks different? Not in an obvious way where you can tell they had something done. They just look fresher, healthier, more rested, and you can’t quite put your finger on why. Most of the time, it’s not one treatment. It’s choosing the right treatment for the right concern. If your concern is pigmentation, redness, acne marks, uneven skin tone or texture, I’d usually lean towards SLP + ND:YAG laser. It’s designed to improve overall skin quality while stimulating collagen, making the skin look healthier and more even over time. If your face tends to look puffy, especially after travelling, eating salty foods or first thing in the morning, lymphatic drainage is the better choice. It helps reduce excess fluid retention through the lymphatic system. It won’t burn fat or speed up your metabolism, but it can make the face look less swollen and more defined. If you’re starting to notice mild skin laxity, like a softer jawline or skin that doesn’t feel as firm as it used to, CFU (Centreless Focused Ultrasound) is designed to stimulate collagen deeper within the tissue, leading to gradual tightening over the following months. The easiest way to think about it is: * SLP + ND:YAG for skin quality. * Lymphatic drainage for puffiness. * CFU for firmness and tightening. One thing I always say is that two people can look like they’re “aging” for completely different reasons. One person might have pigmentation, another might have fluid retention, another might have volume loss, and someone else might have skin laxity. That’s why choosing the right treatment starts with understanding what’s actually causing the concern, not just treating what you see. And finally, the machine matters, but the professional using it matters just as much. A proper assessment, choosing the right treatment at the right time, using the correct settings, and knowing when not to treat are what make the biggest difference in both safety and results.
You know when someone suddenly looks different? Not in an obvious way where you can tell they had something done. They just look fresher, healthier, more rested, and you can’t quite put your finger on why. Most of the time, it’s not one treatment. It’s choosing the right treatment for the right concern. If your concern is pigmentation, redness, acne marks, uneven skin tone or texture, I’d usually lean towards SLP + ND:YAG laser. It’s designed to improve overall skin quality while stimulating collagen, making the skin look healthier and more even over time. If your face tends to look puffy, especially after travelling, eating salty foods or first thing in the morning, lymphatic drainage is the better choice. It helps reduce excess fluid retention through the lymphatic system. It won’t burn fat or speed up your metabolism, but it can make the face look less swollen and more defined. If you’re starting to notice mild skin laxity, like a softer jawline or skin that doesn’t feel as firm as it used to, CFU (Centreless Focused Ultrasound) is designed to stimulate collagen deeper within the tissue, leading to gradual tightening over the following months. The easiest way to think about it is: * SLP + ND:YAG for skin quality. * Lymphatic drainage for puffiness. * CFU for firmness and tightening. One thing I always say is that two people can look like they’re “aging” for completely different reasons. One person might have pigmentation, another might have fluid retention, another might have volume loss, and someone else might have skin laxity. That’s why choosing the right treatment starts with understanding what’s actually causing the concern, not just treating what you see. And finally, the machine matters, but the professional using it matters just as much. A proper assessment, choosing the right treatment at the right time, using the correct settings, and knowing when not to treat are what make the biggest difference in both safety and results.

About