About Us
We didn't start Abyzion to sell skincare.
We started it because someone we love looked in the mirror one morning and didn't recognize herself.
She was 54. She'd lived well — no smoking, no heavy drinking, sunscreen most days, a clean diet she'd kept since her 30s. She exercised. She slept. She did, by every reasonable standard, "everything right."
And then menopause hit.
Not gradually. Not gently. It hit like a wall.
Within three or four months, the woman who used to hear "you look ten years younger" was staring at jowls she'd never seen before, a neck that seemed to have puddled at the bottom, and a jawline that no longer belonged to the face she'd carried her whole life.
She tried the creams. She tried the serums. She sat through a facelift consultation and was quoted $45,000. She looked into fillers and was terrified of ending up with pillow face — that swollen, frozen, expressionless look she'd seen on other women and silently promised herself she'd never become.
She wasn't vain. She just wanted to show up on her Monday morning Zoom call without wondering if her colleagues were staring at her neck instead of listening to her ideas.
She just wanted to take a photo with her grandkids at Thanksgiving and not want to delete it immediately.
She just wanted to look in the mirror and see herself again.
That's not vanity. That's dignity.
The problem wasn't her. The problem was what the beauty industry was offering her.
When we started researching what was actually available to women experiencing menopausal skin collapse — the real, structural sagging, not just "fine lines" — we found a market selling two things:
Surface solutions — moisturizers, basic peptide serums, hyaluronic acid sprays — that hydrate the top layer of skin for a few hours and do absolutely nothing about the collagen scaffolding that's collapsing underneath. These products are built for 30-year-olds preventing their first wrinkle. They are not built for a 55-year-old woman whose face has structurally changed in 90 days.
Invasive procedures — $45,000 facelifts, $800-per-session Botox appointments every three months forever, fillers that migrate and bloat. Solutions that require women to either drain their retirement savings or accept the risk of walking out of a clinic looking "done." And even then, Botox doesn't rebuild collagen — it paralyzes muscles. Fillers don't fix sagging — they mask it temporarily.
There was almost nothing in between.
Nothing that said: Here is a serious, clinically-tested, at-home ritual that addresses the structural problem — not just the surface symptom — at a price that doesn't make you choose between your face and your family's financial future.
That gap is why Abyzion exists.
We went to Seoul.
Not to Silicon Valley. Not to a French luxury house. Not to a lab in New Jersey trying to reverse-engineer last year's TikTok trend.
We went to South Korea — the country that invented BB cream, pioneered snail mucin, created the glass-skin standard, and treats skincare not as a cosmetic afterthought but as a clinical science. Korea doesn't follow Western beauty trends. The West follows Korea, usually five to ten years late.
What we found there was a technology that Western brands hadn't adopted yet — and that most American women had never heard of:
Dissolving silk peptide threads combined with a 30-peptide complex, Volufiline™, and ultra-low molecular weight hydrolyzed collagen, delivered through an airless medical-grade syringe system that preserves every active ingredient at full potency from the first draw to the last.
Not a moisturizer. Not a basic serum. A concentrated ampoule designed to support the skin's structural foundation — the same foundation that collapses when estrogen plummets during menopause.
The same silk peptide thread-lift concept that luxury Seoul clinics charge $3,000+ per session for — now engineered into a topical formula you apply at home in under two minutes.
That became the Korean Deep Collagen Silk Peptide Intensive Ampoule.
What we believe.
We believe no woman should have to choose between her retirement fund and her reflection. A facelift costs more than a year of college tuition. Botox is a $4,000-per-year subscription with no end date. These are not realistic options for most women — and the industry knows it. We believe clinical-grade skincare technology should be accessible at a price that doesn't create guilt.
We believe "aging gracefully" and "wanting to look like yourself" are not contradictions. Our customers aren't chasing 25. They're not trying to freeze time or erase every line on their face. They want to look in the mirror and recognize the woman looking back. They want to FaceTime their daughters without dreading the front camera. They want to sit through a Monday staff meeting without tugging at a scarf to hide their neck. That's not superficial — it's human.
We believe in structural repair, not surface decoration. Most anti-aging products are designed to temporarily plump the outer layer of skin. That's like painting over a cracked wall. The Korean Deep Collagen Silk Peptide Intensive Ampoule is designed to support the scaffolding underneath — the collagen matrix, the elasticity network, the volume that estrogen used to maintain. We don't sell hydration. We sell structural support.
We believe you deserve to know exactly what's in the bottle — and why it's packaged the way it is. The sealed rubber-stopper vial and needleless medical syringe aren't for aesthetics. They exist because a $40 ampoule full of 30 peptides and silk collagen threads deserves the same oxidation protection and contamination control as a clinical compound. We refuse to let your actives degrade halfway through the bottle just so we can use a cheaper, prettier cap.
We believe in transparency about what a topical product can and cannot do. The Korean Deep Collagen Silk Peptide Intensive Ampoule is not a facelift. It is not Botox. It cannot replace medical procedures for severe cases. What it can do — based on clinical testing and the experiences of thousands of women — is help the skin look visibly firmer, smoother, and more lifted over consistent use. We will never overstate our claims to close a sale. We'd rather under-promise and let your mirror tell you the truth in week four.
Who we're for.
We built Abyzion for the woman the beauty industry forgot.
Not the 28-year-old influencer with perfect skin doing a "Get Ready With Me" video. Not the celebrity with a personal dermatologist on speed dial. Not the woman who can casually write a $50,000 check for cosmetic surgery.
We built this for the 52-year-old who walked into a facelift consultation and walked out feeling like her only options were "spend your savings" or "accept it and hide."
For the woman who tried face tape for her Zoom calls and lived in terror that it would spring off mid-meeting.
For the woman who skips family photo opportunities because she can't stand what the camera shows her.
For the woman who whispered to herself — "I don't recognize myself anymore" — and then felt guilty for caring.
You are not vain. You are not shallow. You are a woman who wants to feel like herself again.
That's who Abyzion is for. That's why we exist. And that's why every product we bring to market is held to one standard: Would this actually help her — or would it just take her money and give her false hope?
If it doesn't pass that test, we don't sell it.
The Korean Deep Collagen Silk Peptide Intensive Ampoule is our first product. It won't be our last.
But we'd rather sell one product that genuinely works than build a catalog of 40 serums that sit in your bathroom gathering dust.
Try it for 30 days. If your mirror doesn't tell you something changed, we'll give you your money back.
No awkward questions. No restocking fees. No guilt.
Just a company that actually believes the woman on the other side of this screen deserves better than what she's been offered so far.
— The Abyzion Team
abyzion.com