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Peptides have clinical studies, documented mechanisms and a tolerability profile that no other anti-ageing active matches — no adaptation period, no photosensitivity, compatible with everything. And yet they're the active most people ignore because marketing sells them badly: technical names like Argireline or Matrixyl without explaining what they do.
What Peptides Are and How They Work
Peptides are protein fragments — short chains of amino acids (2 to 50) that act as biological signals. Skin recognises them as messages and responds accordingly. Depending on the sequence, they can:
- Stimulate synthesis of collagen types I, III and IV in dermal fibroblasts
- Relax muscular contraction (neurotransmitter peptides — topical botox effect)
- Stimulate elastin and fibronectin production
- Transport actives like copper into cells (carrier peptides)
Peptides With the Most Evidence
- Matrixyl (palmitoyl pentapeptide-4) — increases collagen I and III synthesis; measurable wrinkle reduction in 4–8 weeks
- Argireline (acetyl hexapeptide-3) — inhibits muscular neurotransmitter release; reduces expression lines in the periocular area in 4 weeks
- Leuphasyl (pentapeptide-18) — synergistic action with Argireline
- Copper peptides (GHK-Cu) — collagen stimulation + wound healing + antioxidant
The Anti-Ageing Serum combines Matrixyl with multi-molecular-weight HA — collagen stimulation and deep hydration in a formulation with no usage restrictions.
Anti-Ageing Serum with Peptides →Peptides vs. Retinol: When to Choose Each
They're not substitutes — they're complementary. Retinol/bakuchiol renews cells; peptides stimulate collagen synthesis. The most effective routine combines both. If you can only choose one: sensitive skin, pregnancy, or young skin without established damage → peptides. Skin with visible photodamage or hyperpigmentation → bakuchiol first.
The Collagen Booster Serum maximises collagen synthesis — the night-time complement to the Peptide Anti-Ageing Serum.
Collagen Booster Serum →