I spent three days at this hotel that every woman over 60 I knew was talking about. Here's what I saw.

For six months, my readers had all been telling me about the same small hotel on the Atlantic coast. And about the same white bottle in every room: Serolys Super C, a serum made by a small French laboratory.

I took my car one Tuesday in March and drove down. Here's what I found.

Report by Claire Vasseur for SantéAuFéminin.fr

For six months, I had been receiving emails from readers, all talking about the same place. A small hotel on the Atlantic coast, fourteen rooms, blue shutters, and a white bottle in every bathroom. Women left with more than just a tan. They left transformed, they said. Not younger. Different.

 

I got in my car on a Tuesday in March and drove down.

 

Geneviève, the owner, was waiting for me on the terrace with a coffee. She's 65. She has the complexion of a 50-year-old woman. Not smooth, not taut, not frozen. Luminous. That's the word that comes up every time when talking about the women who come through here. Luminous.

 

I came as a journalist. Geneviève knew it. She still placed a bottle in my room, just like for all the others, and told me: "Make up your own mind."

What I saw on the terrace at breakfast on the first day

At breakfast, I was the youngest. 41 years old. Around me, six women between 58 and 71. I took the time to observe them, as one observes a subject for an article. And I saw what the readers were trying to describe to me in their emails.

 

It's not makeup. None of them wore any at that hour. Nor is it rest, because some had just arrived the day before. It's in the skin itself. A way of reflecting the morning light instead of being dulled by it. Cheeks that have color without redness. A facial contour that looks awake.

 

A 67-year-old lady, on her fourth stay, told me with a smile: "The first time I came, I didn't believe it. I had spent a fortune on serums before. I was jaded. And then three weeks after returning home, my grandson asked me if I had changed my hairstyle."

The real reason your serums stopped working, explained by a dermatologist

Geneviève put me in touch with the dermatologist who developed the formula four years ago. Her name is Hélène. She has her practice in the Paris region, and a small independent laboratory in the provinces where the serum is manufactured.

 

I asked her directly. Why would one serum, among so many others, make a difference for women over 60, when most products sold to them do nothing?

 

Her answer lasted an hour. I'll summarize it.

 

After menopause, facial skin loses up to 30% of its collagen in five years. But the real problem isn't collagen. It's the loss of the ability to reflect light. The skin becomes dull, grey, closed. Wrinkles are just a visible part of the phenomenon. The real reason why our face doesn't look like us anymore at 60 is this gradual extinction of natural radiance.

 

Most commercial serums are formulated for skin between 30 and 45 years old. The vitamin C they contain, L-ascorbic acid, is unstable. It oxidizes on contact with air, loses its potency in a few weeks, and often burns skin weakened by menopause.

 

Hélène and her team spent three years stabilizing another form of vitamin C, which they called Stay-C. Three characteristics distinguish it. It remains stable in the bottle. It doesn't burn, even on sensitive or reactive skin. And most importantly, it penetrates better into skin that has lost density after 50 years old.

 

"This last point is what makes the difference," Hélène told me. "Classic vitamin C remains on the surface of mature skin. Stay-C reaches the layers where it can truly act."

Why the lab chose a hotel rather than a test panel

When the lab perfected its formula, they could have sold it directly. But they did something different. They looked for a place to test it in real life. Not with paid panels, not in isolated booths. But with real women, on vacation, without pressure. Geneviève said yes. For two years, every customer left with feedback to provide.

 

The feedback was so consistent that the lab eventually released the formula under the name Serolys Super C. But Geneviève continues to place it in every room. Out of loyalty, and because her customers request it.

What's Happening to Your Skin, Week by Week

According to Hélène and feedback from Sophie, a pharmacist in Toulouse, who has been recommending it to her customers since she discovered it:

 

In the first few days, the skin is softer upon waking. Subtle but noticeable.

 

Between the second and third week, the complexion starts to change. The cheeks regain color. The face reflects light.

 

After six to eight weeks, those around you notice. Not "you look younger," but "there's something about you, you look well."

The guarantee that convinced me to write this article

The laboratory offers a 365-day money-back guarantee. On an empty bottle. If, within one year, the customer doesn't notice any difference, she sends back the empty bottle and gets a refund. No paperwork, no arguments.

 

No laboratory could financially sustain a one-year empty-bottle guarantee if the formula didn't work for the vast majority of users. It's this guarantee, as much as what I saw on Genevieve's terrace, that convinced me to write this report.

 

Available online only

 

Serolys Super C is manufactured in France, in the same small laboratory visited by Hélène four years ago. No supermarkets, no pharmacies. Only on the laboratory's website, direct to consumer.

 

For women who identify with what I've described, and who are tired of spending money on products that yield no results, the serum is available here:

Check the price and availability of Serolys Super C

€39 today. Zero risk for one year. 365-day guarantee, even if the bottle is empty.

The lab has confirmed that supplies are currently under strain. Orders are being fulfilled in the order they are received.

 

Claire Vasseur, for SantéAuFéminin.fr

Serolys Super C

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