Using
I’ve sprinkled a few treatments of SensEpil home laser hair removal over three months, and I’ve spent at least a pair of Giuseppes — or my monthly matcha green tea soy latte budget — buying SensEpil refill cartridges. SensEpil can feel as hot as the laser’s flash looks, SensEpil laser hair removal is as loud as my hair dryer, and I hardly get through SensEpil’ing all my limbs before Gone With The Wind is over and I have to stop shouting “Marry me, Rhett Butler” at my MacBook.
But the bottom line?
SensEpil works, and Rhett Butler is a fictional character who fathered a child with a madam whose brothel he funded.
I know, Scarlett was a fool to let him go…


Category: Beauty
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Comment
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14.Dec.2009
Hating
People who have witnessed me on the beach — arms and legs the color of sand, covered in a KD-monogrammed shirt dress and a Marlies Dekkers bikini — won’t be surprised:
Apparently I’ve got mutant skin.
I’ve only done 1.85 SensEpil laser hair removal sessions, and I’ve killed two SensEpil refill cartridges.
Even though a SensEpil refill cartridge costs $50, that’s still cheaper than laser hair removal at a medispa.
Or a matcha green tea soy latte at Urth Caffe…
Category: Beauty, Tech
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3 Comments
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11.Sep.2009
Using
Silk’n SensEpil’s PR just sent me their home laser hair removal system. Clinically proven, FDA-cleared, and a flat $500 instead of what I figure are four figures of medispa appoinments, Silk’n SensEpil’s choice. My first Silk’n SensEpil session took an hour, but I’d remove every hair off my body — excepting my brows, lashes, and bob — if I could.
With safety features that block you from using SensEpil if it’ll damage your skin, prevent you from hitting your eyes with the laser, and flash-pulse technology that’s closer to a medispa treatment, Silk’n SensEpil is a 911 and no!no! at-home laser removal’s a tin-can Camry…

Category: Beauty
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13 Comments
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17.Aug.2009