The Luma Sculpt™ — 6-in-1 Microcurrent Facial Device
Somewhere in your thirties, the face starts to slip. The jawline blurs. There's a morning puffiness that didn't used to be there. Your cheeks sit a little lower than they did in old photos. It isn't in your head — the muscles that hold your face up lose tone with age, exactly like the rest of the body.
The women who keep that lifted, sculpted look usually aren't lucky. They're booking microcurrent facials at $150–$200 a visit. The Luma Sculpt puts that same technology in your hand — for five quiet minutes a day.
Is this you?
- You've noticed a softer jawline or the start of jowls — and you're not ready for needles or filler
- You wake up puffy and "tired-looking" even after a good night's sleep
- You've done the gua sha and the rollers, and you want results you can actually see
- You loved the glow after a professional facial — just not the price tag or the calendar
Six tools in one quiet wand
Most at-home devices do one thing. The Luma Sculpt layers six clinical modes so your whole routine lives in a single tool:
- Microcurrent — gently re-engages the muscles that lift the face
- Red light — supports firmness and a smoother, lit-from-within glow
- EMS — a deeper sculpting workout for the jaw and cheekbones
- Warmth — opens the look of pores so serums absorb instead of sitting on top
- Cooling — calms, de-puffs and tightens the appearance of skin
- Sonic glide — relaxes facial tension and drives product deeper
Your five-minute ritual
- Prep — press a serum or conductive gel into clean skin
- Glide — sweep upward and outward along jaw, cheeks and brow
- Glow — seal with moisturizer; the lifted look builds with consistency
When you'll see it
Most people notice a depuffed, more awake face after the very first session. Firmer-looking contours build over four to six weeks of regular use — four or five times a week, five minutes at a time.
Questions, answered
Does it hurt?
Not at all. You'll feel gentle warmth, a faint tingle, or a soft vibration depending on the mode. No needles, no downtime.
How is this different from a $20 face roller?
Rollers mostly move fluid around. Microcurrent and EMS actually work the facial muscles, and red light works on the skin itself — the same categories of technology used in professional lifting facials.
How often should I use it?
Five minutes, four to five times a week. Consistency beats intensity — a little every couple of days outperforms one long session.
Is it safe for my skin?
Yes, for most people. If you are pregnant or have a pacemaker, epilepsy, or active facial implants, check with your doctor first, as with any microcurrent device.