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SkinCeuticals

SkinCeuticals H.A. Intensifier Multi-Glycan (1 fl. oz.)

A multi-functional volumizing serum with hyaluronic acid to instantly plump and visibly fill fine lines by 24% in 12 weeks.

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$120.00

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Image 1 - Pink serum-gel liquid drops are shown on a white background next to text that reads AT A GLANCE, Texture: Lightweight, serum-gel texture, and Skin Type: Normal, Oily, Dry, Combination, Sensitive. Image 10 - A comparison table titled Corrective Serum Comparison shows three serums in dropper bottles. The first, A.G.E. Interrupter Ultra Serum in a blue bottle, addresses sagging and loss of firmness in face and neck for Normal, Oily, Dry, Combination skin types, offering skin lifting and tightening benefits. The second, HA Intensifier Multi-Glycan in a purple bottle, targets volume loss and dehydration for Normal, Oily, Dry, Combination skin, providing skin volumizing and plumping. The third, P-TIOX in a grey bottle, treats fine lines and wrinkles, dullness for Normal, Oily, Dry, Combination, Sensitive skin, offering anti-wrinkle benefits. Image 11 - The image shows a comparison table featuring two Skinceuticals hydrating serums, with a dark purple bottle of HA Intensifier Multi-Glycan and a clear bottle of Hydrating B5 Gel displayed above the table, which is titled HYDRATING SERUM COMPARISON. The table compares the products based on CONCERN, with HA Intensifier addressing Dehydrated skin, aging, loss of elasticity, and Hydrating B5 Gel addressing Dehydrated skin, aging; SKIN TYPE, both being suitable for Normal, Oily, Dry, Combination, Sensitive skin; and BENEFIT, with HA Intensifier being a Multi-dimensional volumizing serum to plump and contour skin by increasing an extended range of glycosaminoglycans, and Hydrating B5 Gel being a Corrective volumizing serum to plump and contour skin. Image 12 - A minimalist treatment room with an adjustable white chair and a mobile cart with skincare products, overlaid with the text: PRO FORMULA Clinically Formulated Paraben-free Fragrance-free Dye-free Suitable to use post-dermal filler treatment. Image 13 - A diagram illustrating a four-step morning skincare routine features individual products and their descriptions, reading: COMPLETE THE MORNING ROUTINE, STEP 1 PREVENT C E FERULIC, with a brown dropper bottle labeled SKINCEUTICALS C E FERULIC a combination antioxidant treatment contains 15% L-ASCORBIC ACID 1% ALPHA TOCOPHEROL 0.5% FERULIC ACID prevent 30 ml / 1 fl oz; STEP 2 CORRECT HA INTENSIFIER MULTI-GLYCAN, with a purple dropper bottle labeled SKINCEUTICALS HA INTENSIFIER MULTI-DIMENSIONAL HYALURONIC ACID SERUM correct 30 ml / 1 fl oz; STEP 3 CORRECT TRIPLE LIPID RESTORE 2:4:2, with a white jar labeled SKINCEUTICALS TRIPLE LIPID RESTORE 2:4:2 anti-aging lipid replenishment treatment 2% PURE CERAMIDES 4% NATURAL CHOLESTEROL 2% FATTY ACIDS correct 48 ml / 1.6 fl oz; and STEP 4 PROTECT PHYSICAL FUSION UV DEFENSE SUNSCREEN SPF 50, with a grey bottle labeled 50 SKINCEUTICALS PHYSICAL FUSION UV DEFENSE SUNSCREEN broad spectrum SPF 50 water resistant 40 minutes 100% mineral filters tinted fluid protect 50 ml / 1.7 fl oz. Image 14 - An image displays a four-step nighttime skincare routine with four Skinceuticals products arranged horizontally, titled COMPLETE THE NIGHTTIME ROUTINE; Step 1 PREVENT features Skinceuticals RESVERATROL B E Antioxidant night concentrate 30 ml / 1 fl oz; Step 2 CORRECT features Skinceuticals HA INTENSIFIER MULTI-GLYCAN Hyaluronic acid intensifier 30 ml / 1 fl oz; Step 3 CORRECT features Skinceuticals A.G.E. ADVANCED EYE 15 ml / 0.5 fl oz; and Step 4 CORRECT features Skinceuticals TRIPLE LIPID RESTORE 2:4:2 Lipid replenishment treatment 48 ml / 1.6 fl oz. Image 2 - The image displays a close-up of a dropper dispensing a reddish-purple liquid into a petri dish containing multiple drops of the same liquid, with accompanying text titled Key Ingredients, which lists 1.3% Hyaluronic Acid, A powerful, natural humectant in various molecular weights to provide long-lasting hydration to improve the look of skin texture. 12% Proxylane™, Designed to help support skins firmness and density while restoring fullness to skin. 2% Post-Biotic Ferment Extract, Supports the increase of glycosaminoglycans levels and the improvement of skins structural integrity. 2.0% Licorice Root Extract (Dipotassium Glycyrrhizate), and 0.2% Purple Rice Extract, A synergistic combination that prevents the degradation of HA. These extracts are also responsible for the characteristic purple color. Image 3 - A close-up of a persons face with a shiny, clear liquid on their cheek, highlighted by a white circle and line, with text that reads Visibly improves volume, plumpness, and contour definition. Image 4 - A side-by-side comparison shows a persons skin Before treatment on the left, with prominent wrinkles, fine lines, and uneven texture, and After 12 Weeks treatment on the right, displaying smoother skin with reduced wrinkles and a more even tone, with the additional visible text Average Results, PROTOCOL: A 8 week, single-center clinical study was conducted on 78 females with Fitzpatrick type I-IVL, ages 27-68, and mild to moderate wrinkles, fine lines, pore appearance, rough skin texture, clarity, dull complexion, clarity, discoloration. 40 subjects had mild-to-moderate acne marks/PIE/PIH. Cell Cycle Catalyst was applied once daily in the evening followed by a moisturizer. Efficacy and tolerance evaluations were conducted at baseline, week 1, and week 8. PROTOCOL: A 8 week, single-center, split-face, evaluator-blind, randomized, controlled cosmetic clinical study was conducted on 40 females with Fitzpatrick type I-IVL, ages 27-68, and mild to moderate wrinkles, fine lines, rough skin texture, uneven skin tone, dull complexion. Catalyst was applied once daily over half of the face with the other half left untreated. Participants followed regular anti-aging skincare routine on the full face for 8 weeks. Efficacy and tolerance evaluations were conducted at baseline and post-application. Image 5 - <ctrl94>thought
The user wants alt text for an image showing before and after skin treatment.
I need to describe the visual content of the image and then transcribe any visible text.
The alt text must be a single sentence, plain text, no HTML, no line breaks, and no quotation marks.

**Visual description:**
The image shows two side-by-side close-ups of human skin, likely a cheek area, comparing its appearance Before and After 12 Weeks of treatment. The After image appears to show a reduction in visible redness, fine lines, and uneven texture compared to the Before image.

**Visible text transcription:**
1.  Before
2.  After 12 Weeks
3.  Average Results
4.  Protocol: (followed by a long block of text describing the study). I need to decide if I should transcribe the entire protocol text. The instructions say any visible text in the image. Given the length, transcribing the entire protocol might make the alt text overly long and less concise, which goes against avoiding overly detailed or redundant descriptions and Focus on clarity and relevance. The main point of the image is the visual comparison and the Before/After 12 Weeks text. The protocol is supplementary information. I will transcribe the main headings and the brief Average Results text. The detailed protocol text below the images is supplementary and very long. Including it would make the alt text extremely verbose and potentially unhelpful for a screen reader user trying to quickly understand the images core message. I should focus on the *visible text that directly explains the image content* rather than all tiny print. The main visible text directly associated with the *visual comparison* is Before and After 12 Weeks and Average Results.

Lets re-evaluate the instruction: If there is visible text in the image, transcribe it without quotation marks. This is a strong instruction. Even if long, it *is* visible text. However, Focus on clarity and relevance, avoiding overly detailed or redundant descriptions. and The alt text should be a single sentence, with no line breaks. A single sentence with that entire protocol text would be unreadable and useless as alt text.

The primary purpose of alt text is to convey the *meaning* and *function* of the image. The before/after comparison is the core meaning. The detailed protocol is contextual information, often presented separately or in a caption. If I were to include the entire protocol, the alt text would be several paragraphs long, breaking the single sentence rule, or an incredibly convoluted single sentence.

Lets consider the most critical visible text *for understanding the image itself*.
- Before
- After 12 Weeks
- Average Results

The long protocol text describes the *study* that produced these results, not directly *what is visually shown* in the images in terms of *changes*. The request is description of what the image visually shows, followed by any visible text in the image.

If I include the *entire* protocol, it would be:
Close-up comparison of facial skin before and after treatment, showing a reduction in redness and uneven texture in the after image. Before After 12 Weeks Average Results Protocol:A12-week,single-center,clinicalstudywasconductedon81females,ages35to65,FitzpatrickI-VIwithmildtomoderateskinsoftness,firmness,andelasticityonthecheeks,aswellasfinelines,wrinkles,skinsmoothness,plumpness,lifting,skintoneevenness,radiance,andoverallappearanceofskinconditionontheglobalface,andincludingsomewhohavecrowsfeetwrinkles,undereyewrinkles,perioralwrinkles,foreheadlines,marionettelines,andappearanceofnasolabialfolds.Productwasappliedtwicedailyinconjunctionwithuseofregularcleanser,moisturizer,andsunscreen.Efficacyevaluationconductedatbaseline,postapplication,andatweeks1,4,8,and12.
This is not a single sentence and completely violates clarity and conciseness.

Given the constraint The alt text should be a single sentence, with no line breaks and Focus on clarity and relevance, avoiding overly detailed or redundant descriptions, it is implied that the transcription of visible text should be relevant to the *immediate understanding of the image* and not encompass every single piece of fine print that would make the alt text unreadable. The Bef
ore, A
fter 12 Weeks, and Average Results are directly labeling the visual comparison. The protocol is detailed study information that belongs in accompanying text, not compressed into an alt text sentence.

Therefore, I will transcribe the text that labels the visual content.

**Alt text structure:**
1.  Visual description of the image.
2.  Transcription of relevant visible text (Before, After 12 Weeks, Average Results).

**Draft 1:** Close-up comparison of facial skin before and after 12 weeks of treatment, showing a reduction in visible redness and an improvement in texture in the after image, with the labels Before, After 12 Weeks, and Average Results.

Lets refine the visual description for conciseness and accuracy.
The images show two close-up sections of skin, likely on a face, characterized by some redness, visible capillaries, and varied pigmentation. The After image appears smoother, with less prominent redness and more even tone compared to the Before image.

**Refined Draft 2:** A side-by-side comparison of skin before and after treatment, showing a close-up of a persons cheek with visible redness and uneven skin tone in the Before image, and a noticeably smoother, less red, and more even-toned appearance in the After 12 Weeks image, labeled Before, After 12 Weeks, Average Results.

Is noticeably smoother, less red, and more even-toned too subjective? I should stick to visual facts.
showing a reduction in visible redness and uneven texture is more factual.

Lets combine it:
A side-by-side comparison of skin on a persons cheek before and after 12 weeks of treatment, with the Before image showing visible redness, capillaries, and uneven texture, and the After 12 Weeks image displaying reduced redness, fewer visible capillaries, and a smoother, more even skin tone, with text labels Before, After 12 Weeks, and Average Results.

This feels descriptive enough and transcribes the main labels.
It is a single sentence.
No HTML, no special formatting.
No quotation marks.
It describes what is visually shown.
It transcribes visible text.

I will omit the very long protocol text as it breaks the single sentence rule and focus on clarity and relevance, avoiding overly detailed or redundant descriptions. The detailed protocol text is usually meant for a separate caption or body text, not alt text. The primary function of the alt text for *this image* is to convey the before-and-after visual change and its labels.

Final check on the constraints:
- Professional copywriter: Yes, concise, clear.
- Effective and accessible alt text: Yes, describes visual, transcribes labels.
- Clear, concise, descriptive: Yes.
- Enhances user experience, especially visually impaired: Yes, conveys the core message.
- Plain text, no HTML or special formatting: Yes.
- Include description of what image visually shows: Yes.
- Followed by any visible text in the image: Yes, the primary labels.
- Transcribe it without quotation marks: Yes.
- Single sentence, no line breaks: Yes.
- Focus on clarity and relevance, avoiding overly detailed or redundant descriptions: Yes, by focusing on the images main message and key labels.
- Do not use quotation or speechmarks: Yes.<ctrl95>A side-by-side comparison of skin on a persons cheek before and after 12 weeks of treatment, with the Before image showing visible redness, capillaries, and uneven texture, and the After 12 Weeks image displaying reduced redness, fewer visible capillaries, and a smoother, more even skin tone, with text labels Before, After 12 Weeks, and Average Results. Image 6 - Alt text generation failed Image 7 - The image illustrates a two-step application process, with the top half showing a dropper dispensing pink serum into a hand and the bottom half showing a close-up of a face with the serum applied to the cheek, alongside text that reads HOW TO APPLY Step 1 Twice daily, after applying an antioxidant serum, dispense 4-6 drops into clean hands. Step 2 Gently press evenly into skin. Follow with a moisturizer and sunscreen. Image 8 - A smiling woman with dark hair, wearing a black scrub top and gold chain necklace, is pictured next to a text box that reads AESTHETICIAN INSIGHT Loss of facial plumpness can appear as early as in our 20s! Thats why I recommend HA Intensifier Multi-Glycan to anyone looking to improve multi-dimensional volume and hydration. I love to warm this up in my hands and then massage the product into my skin, working from the center of my face to outer corners for a mini massage moment. - Cori Ramos SkinCeuticals Pro and Licensed Aesthetician. Image 9 - The image shows a hand holding a purple SkinCeuticals HA Intensifier serum bottle with a pink dropper dispensing liquid above it, alongside a customer review that includes CUSTOMER REVIEW, five blue stars, and the text BEAUTIFUL SERUM. This is very different from the original HA serum. This is a velvety, luxurious serum that is very moisturizing and actually does plump up those fine lines. I really like this, especially in the morning under moisturizer as it adds a lot of hydration without any heaviness, and fine lines are reduced and much less noticeable. Highly recommend. - Melissa, Dermstore Customer, and the bottle label text SkinCeuticals HA Intensifier MULTI-GLYCAN MULTI-DIMENSIONAL VOLUMIZING SERUM TO PLUMP AND CONTOUR CORRECT 30 ml / 1 fl oz.

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