How beauty fans de-puffed their faces in 35 minutes with massage
Cheekbones and a jawline in as little as 35 minutes! Beauty fans’ faces are transformed with clever massage technique – and experts share a step-by-step guide so YOU can do it at home
- Beauty fans revealed how they transformed their faces in as little as 50 minutes
- Used massage techniques to sharpen the jawline and reduce puffiness
- Experts from Face Gym revealed how to achieve the look at home
Beauty fans have shared striking before-and-after photos revealing how they sharpened their jawlines and reduced puffiness without the use of surgery or fillers.
The secret to their chiselled looks is being kneaded, prodded and poked by skincare professionals at FaceGym, a ‘gym studio for the face’ with branches in the US and the UK.
Treatments focus around stimulating the 40 muscles that make up the ‘scaffolding’ of the face, using techniques including manipulating the inside of the cheek, massaging the jaw with a closed fist and wearing a mask charged with an electrical current.
The company was founded by businesswoman Inge Theron after she discovered the power of facial massage while detoxing from the injectibles and other invasive treatments she had become addicted during her years as a Financial Times beauty writer.
Beauty fans have shared striking before-and-after photos revealing how they sharpened their jawlines and reduced puffiness without the use of surgery or fillers. Pictured, sports and fitness instructor Marino Isolani shared his results after a 35-minute treatment at FaceGym
‘The practice of facial exercise has a long history but it’s often news to people that over 40 muscles make up the scaffolding of the face,’ she explained to FEMAIL.
‘Just like the muscles in the body, the more you move them, the more lifted, tightened and toned they become.
‘Facial Muscle Stimulation helps to keep the muscles firm and skin tight but it also stimulates the most important protein for keeping the face look young, collagen. It’s also proven to help with skin cell renewal, detox and fine line reduction.’
UK-based influencer and jewellery maker Sarah Elizabeth shared photos of her face looking noticeably more toned and defined after her 50-minute Cryo Medi Lift Workout.
The treatment involves massage, use of a mask that uses an electrical current to stimulate the muscles and a shot of Cryo Oxygen.
Writing on Instagram after one treatment, she explained that it helped alleviate water retention around her face and neck that she had mistakenly thought was fat.
‘Facial massage is incredible and after @sophieanneperry_ worked her magic a couple of weeks ago I feel so much better,’ she wrote. ‘I now do the exercises every day without fail and the water retention hasn’t come back. I just want to announce this to the universe.’
Meanwhile sports and fitness instructor Marino Isolani, who visited one of the company’s studios in New York, looked more chiseled after the 35-minute Signature Sculpt.
UK-based influencer and jewellery maker Sarah Elizabeth shared photos of her face looking noticeably more toned and defined after her 50-minute Cryo Medi Lift Workout
Fans were quick to share their praise for the transformation, with one writing: ‘Wow looks like he got a face lift, amazing.’
Another posted: ‘Jesus you just gave this man a jawline and cheekbones holy f**k.’
Inge explained many customers are surprised to discover the significant difference facial massage can have upon their skin.
She said: ‘People mistakenly think a good skin routine Is all about the skincare product, but what we teach our community is that is only half of it.
‘Your application method is pivotal to toning, lifting and firming and we have created the simplest, most affective routine you can easily incorporate into your morning and evening regime.’
Inge founded FaceGym in 2016, when the company opened its first branch in Selfridges.
This client saw results after just 10 minutes using a mask that uses electrical current to stimulate the facial muscles. Inge explained muscles can be ‘trained’ to respond to massage
The former PR executive has always ‘loved spas’ and used them as her escape while running her own company in her 20s.
In 2008 she quit to launch her own board game but became so burnt out she was ill for a year.
Realising corporate life wasn’t for her, Inge sold up and travelled to India. She was later offered a column at the Financial Times called Chronicles Of A Spa Junkie.
Over the next three years she tried out treatments around the world but found herself become addicted to injectibles.
Writing in the Daily Mail in 2019 she told how her face ‘collapsed’ at the age of 37.
‘The turning point was when I had a thread lift — the threads were put in too superficially and I was left puckered and swollen,’ she wrote.
‘I’ll never forget waking up and feeling like Frankenstein. The worst part was I’d done it to myself. I had no idea if I’d ever be ‘normal’ again.
‘I took three months out to recover at an ashram in Mexico, where the injectables were massaged out of my face, twice a day for an hour, using ancient Incan techniques.
‘I learned that you can tone and sculpt the muscles in your face, as much as in the rest of your body. And I realised I’d never looked better — younger than I had in years, and all completely natural.’
FaceGym was born in 2016 and now operates studios in the UK and US.