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[Edit 19 June 2015: It’s been eight months since my first collaboration sale launched with Memebox on 17 October 2014. In the time since, more people have discovered LJH products, Memebox has gone US-only, and I’ve explored a lot of other shopping options and products. As my recent skincare routine post shows, two of the items from my sale–the LJH Essence and SN Plant Stem Cell Cream–remain key fixtures in my routine, despite the constant stream of new products attempting to claim a spot. Memebox just re-introduced the Plant Stem Cell cream to their shop today, meaning that all of these items are once again available to customers in the US. WOO! In light of that, I decided to revive and republish this post in case you didn’t see it the first time around–these are truly skincare products worth checking out.]

True story: Memebox sort of wants to be friends with me. Yup, they saw me running around talking about my love for LJH products and they contacted me to ask if I’d want to bring some of my favorite LJH products and others that I think deserve lots of love to US Memeshop customers at a discount. Umm YESSS!!!??!

About Memebox

Memebox Global is a company that sends boxes of Korean skincare and makeup products to customers around the world. It began shipping to international customers in January 2014. Memebox began (and continues) in South Korea, but a separate global Memebox company that ships to customers outside of Korea is headquartered in San Francisco, CA. The products in my Haul of Fame sale are actually shipped from California to US customers only. If you live in the US and order something, your package should arrive very quickly.

Memebox is pronounced “mee-mee-box.” I like to think of myself as a small child yelling “meeeeee” when I wanted something because that’s how I feel about Memeboxes. Memebox has nothing to do with internet memes such as cats discussing their need for cheeseburgers, but rather with a Korean doll called Mimi.

Behind my Haul of Fame

Welcome to my sale. Wooooo!

A bit about the collaboration and curation process:

I was given free reign and told to draw up a list of anything in the US Memeshop I thought was amazing and worthy of being in the sale. The US Memeshop is a new addition to the Memeverse. Its warehouse is located in California and all products ship to US addresses only via USPS Priority Mail–which means lightening fast delivery of products sourced from Korea. I’ve ordered from the shop a few times and it always amazes me that I can actually get my favorite stuff at Amazon Prime speeds AND I get to use my Memepoints and Memebox discount to shop–unreal! Of course, not every item on my list was stocked enough to handle a mega sale like this, so I worked with the Memebox staff to narrow the list to the very best of the best for which there’s enough stock.

I agonized over my choices and spent a few days translating ingredient lists and editing my selections. The core of it is based on items already in my own collection, supplemented by products with ingredient lists that contain very few or no acne or sensitive skin irritants–and lots of skin saving active ingredients.

The list of products has a theme: all grown up with oily and troubled skin. Sob. My skin, after having been delightfully calm during the dreaded teenage years, went absolutely crazy in my late 20s. I hear lots of women dealing with the same problems: needing to control skin issues while also hoping to combat the signs of aging.

Many products that I encountered in Western skincare took an almost punitive approach to dealing with oil and acne: suggesting that if one scrubs and dries enough, skin salvation might be had. When I discovered Korean skincare, I had a wardrobe of clothes bleached around the collars due to harsh products, but skin that was increasingly troubled–both by acne but also by dryness that revealed my fine lines.

It was only when I discovered Korean skincare by way of Kpop that I understood a very different approach: toners that moisturized, massive lists of healing active ingredients like snail mucin, and a longer and more thoughtful list of products in a regular routine. I’m delighted to be able to partner with Memebox to offer some of the best of the best for sale in the US-exclusive Memeshop so more people can discover what kbeauty can do for their skin.

Before settling on the list, Memebox sent me the products I had selected to make sure that I loved everything. I must say, wow, my taste is flawless lolololol. I’m going to show off these products, share their full ingredient lists (in English), highlight the active ingredients that make them special, and alert you to any acne or sensitive skin triggers. I’ll follow that up by showing what these products do for skin using my fun new microscope YAY SCIENCE! At the very end, after you’ve been through Biology 101 again, you’ll be rewarded with a giveaway–woo! (Or your can just use the table of contents a few lines down to jump ahead to the thing that interests you.)

I want to give a BIG thank you to linlinhime for making a magnificent Korean-English ingredient translation list. This spring I wondered out loud about whether we could all someday collaborate on a translation list and a few days later she magically produced the most comprehensive lexicon I’ve ever found, and it speeds up my ingredient translation work immeasurably. Brava! Consider the ingredient translations in this review a first draft since I’m not a Korean speaker–they’re provided for…informational entertainment only. lol

Jump ahead:

LJH Tea Tree 70 Mist Toner review

LJH Tea Tree 90 Essence review

SN Plant Stem Cell Cream review

LJH Tea Tree 80 Cream review

Dewytree Deep Detox Black Mask review

Why an Asian skincare routine? The Skeptical Person’s Guide

Current Memebox and Memeshop Deals

US Giveaway: Win My Skincare HGs

International (non-US) Giveaway: Win LJH Tea Tree Products

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LJH Tea Tree 70 Mist Toner 100ml

Buy it [Memebox | eBay | Amazon | TesterKorea]

Ingredients: melaleuca alternifolia (tea tree) extract (70%), water, niacinamide, sorbitol, butylene glycol, witch hazel extract, aloe barbadensis leaf extract, nutgall extract, cucumis sativus (cucumber) fruit extract, enantia chlorantha bark extract, oleanolic acid, citrus aurantifolia (lime) fruit extract, vitis vinifera (grape) fruit extract, citrus aurantium dulcis (orange) fruit extract, pyrus malus (apple) fruit extract, lemon fruit extract, 1,2-hexanediol, illicium verum (anise) fruit extract, scutellaria baicalensis root extract, disodium EDTA.

COSDNA possible acne and irritant analysis. Butylene glycol is the sole possible irritant, but it only ranks 1 out of 5 in terms of risk.

This LJH toner is a brand new addition to my collection and to the LJH line, actually. I’ve been dying to buy it because it’s the recommended first step in the tea tree line. My feeling is that if I like the essence, the toner is a logical must-buy since they’re made to go together.

Among the most exciting ingredients in the toner is niacinamide, which works to lighten post-inflammatory hyperpigmentation. That means that while the tea tree essence is magically doing whatever it does to calm skin from the inside out, the niacinamide is fading any old marks. This sort of thing takes some time to work, so I’ll update you on my skin’s progress in a few weeks. The skin conditioning agents include extracts made from cucumber, limes, grapes, tree bark, and papaya while nutgall extract helps to cut oil production.

One of my favorite things about LJH products is that so many of the items in the ingredient lists are extracts from natural sources. LJH seems to consistently craft products with a minimal number of irritants and a lot of plant-derived active ingredient extracts–likely because LJH (Leejiham) started and remains a chain of dermatology centers in Korea (headquartered in Gangnam, obviously). In the course of looking up ingredients at one point I found that LJH even engages in in-house scholarly research related to the development of new products like the Probiotics sleeping pack and p.antarctica 77 cream. It really seems like a company by and for skincare nerds. Suh-weeeet.

The toner, like all Korean toners I’ve encountered, is moisturizing, but this one less than others. It clearly has more than just hyaluronic acid going on–my skin soaks this up and then waits expectantly for the next step, thirsty for essence. That’s really ideal for skin as oily and troubled as mine: my skin needs water-based moisture in order to convince it to chill out on the oil production, but in order to get that water into my skin, it needs some help: a toner.

Who needs this most: current fans of LJH looking to try the recommended first step in the tea tree routine

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LJH Tea Tree 90 Essence 50ml

Buy It [eBay | Amazon | KoreaDepart | TesterKorea]

Ingredients: tea tree extract 90%, biosaccharide gum-1, methyl gluceth-20, centella asiatica extract, sea buckthorn extract (hippophae rhamnoides), tremella fuciformis (mushroom) extract, buddleja davidii extract (butterfly bush), thymus vulgaris (thyme) extract, trehalose, sodium hyaluronate, citrus grandis (grapefruit) seed extract, bambusa textilis stem extract, pinus palustris leaf extract, cellulose gum, caprylyl glycol, 1,2-hexanediol.

COSDNA possible acne and irritant analysis. Zilch. Zero. None. I recommend ignoring the English ingredient list sticker on the box, by the way: the ingredient list above is directly from the Korean product label.

Why is this essence earning raves from beauty fans, spurring buying sprees from Korean sites before it was stocked in the US Memeshop? Ingredients and results.

First off, this is one of the rarest birds in the beauty world: a product with no known acne or sensitive skin triggers identified by COSDNA, the ingredient analysis site favored by beauty fans who want unbiased ingredient analytics. The essence includes active ingredients that calm skin like centella asiatica and pack skin with water-based moisture like trehalose and sodium hyaluronate, and it’s highly unlikely that this essence will introduce anything to add to your skin troubles. The anecdotal results are clear: beauty fans with vastly different skin types can use this and benefit from it.

I reviewed the LJH tea tree essence many months ago, a rare standalone product review on this blog.

I was nervous about the essence at first because I don’t want to walk around smelling like tea tree oil, but this is completely smell-less, quick to absorb, and not oily at all. When I put this on my skin at first it flushes up a bit [note: my skin no longer does this–possibly due to a low pH cleansing routine that’s better for my skin?], especially in places where I have red scars or blemishes. The amazing thing is that the redness goes away and my skin somehow becomes less red when I wear this. Not only that, my skin is brighter and more luminous than with other products I’ve tried. Yet the thing that makes this a standout product for me is its ability to help combat my acne. I don’t know about other people with “trouble,” but one of the signs that something good is happening in my skin is when I run my hands over my face while cleansing and everything feels calm—no pain from impending pimples, no bumps under the surface of the skin. My surface acne is lessening, and all the signs are showing that my skin is heading in a very good direction.

About a month after that review I ran out of essence, started using acids and retinoids each day–and realized that this essence somehow has a greater ability to calm my very troubled skin than even prescription antibiotics and peeling agents. Some of that difference may be due to the strong peely stuff causing purging, but my suspicions about LJH were confirmed when I managed to snag another bottle and used it in conjunction with my prescribed medication: this stuff has an amazing ability to calm skin from the inside out while adding moisture and glow usually robbed at least temporarily by strong acid and prescription treatments.

Despite there still being over two months to go in 2014 I’m going to call this race early: LJH Tea Tree Essence is my product of the year, the discovery from Korea that every person with blemished skin needs to try in the coming year.

Who needs this most: peeps struggling with troubled, painful, blemished, or dull skin

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SN Plant Stem Cell Cream 50ml [now sold with the same formula in a 90ml jar]

Buy It [Memebox | TesterKorea]

Ingredients: water, butylene glycol, glycerin, taxus cuspidata meristem cell culture conditioned media, cyclopentasilxane, dipropylene glycol, portulaca oleracea extract, cyclohexasiloxane, 1,2-hexanediol, betaine, biosaccharide gum-1, trehalose, polyglyceryl-3 methylglucose distearate, sodium acrylate/sodium acryloyldimethyl taurate copolymer, pentaerythrityl tetraethylhexanoate, ammonium acryloyldimethyltaurate/vp copolymer, polyisobutene, arginine, carbomer, tocopheryl acetate, dipotassium glycyrrizate, caprylyl/capryl glucoside, methyl dihydrojasmonate, disodium EDTA, linalool, asiaticoside, lemon oil, lavandula angustifolia (lavender) oil, asiatic acid, madecassic acid, rosemary leaf oil, lime oil, eucalyptus leaf oil.

COSDNA possible acne and irritation ingredient analysis. Butylene glycol rates 1 out of 5 in terms of possibly causing acne and carbomer rates 1 out of 5 in terms of possibly causing irritation.

I first discovered this cream in the From Nature Memebox and later bought the 90ml jumbo size container of this cream. Well, not this cream. Sort of this cream. Pretty much this cream. Let me explain:

A company called SN (Science Nature) makes a 50ml Plant Stem Cell Cream and a 90ml Yeoshin cream. They’re often referred to as the same product. They sort of are. The main differences are that the 50ml cream is clear, smells more clearly of the fragrance, and has a few ingredients’ order switched with the jumbo version. The 90ml cream is cream-ivory color and contains a few more ingredient including two olive-derived ingredients that give it a slightly olive oil undertone along with five additional plant extracts. Having tested both creams I can say that they’re both essentially the same in performance. The differences are so slight that by trying to find some something noticeably different between the versions I may end up falling prey to a psychological fallacy.

What’s important is that this cream (both version) is a lifesaver for my super oily, troubled skin. It somehow both hydrates and controls oil. Some companies in Korea market creams based on the number of hours of moisture they offer or level of moisture. I’d call this a Level 2 or 24-hour cream, the lightest cream that offers moisture, made for oily skin.

I like skincare simply because my skin requires a ton of help, but makeup is my real passion. What does this cream mean in terms of makeup performance? Well, first off, oil control. My skin has a magical gift for pumping out oil and this essence/cream routine somehow gets my skin to chill without clogging my pores. How do I know that the products aren’t causing breakouts? I’ve been using these products for months. Months of testing through hormones and immune collapses show that these products are the real deal.

This cream also helps my skin achieve a hydrated, smooth canvas for makeup application. If you’re dealing with really really troubled skin like me, there’s a good chance you’re also using acids and prescription medication, which can be immensely drying. One of my favorite things about this cream is that it is light enough to be customizable in that I can mix in drops of active ingredient-laden ampoules and oils depending on what my skin needs that day. Most days I just mix a single drop of Soy Bio+ Fermented Soy Lumpoule into my cream before applying it to give my skin a bit of extra moisture and glow. On days when the weather makes my skin endlessly oily, I can use the cream solo. I expect that this winter I’ll be calling on the LJH Vita-Propolis Ampoule to beat dryness from central heating and winds whipping across my elevated subway platform. This cream is light enough to leave some room for me to respond to what my skin needs.

Who needs this most: skincare fans who are struggling to find a cream that controls oil while providing moisture

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LJH Tea Tree 80 Cream 50ml

Buy It [Memebox | eBay | TesterKorea | KoreaDepart]

Ingredients: tea tree extract 80%, glycerin, cyclopentasilxane, betaine, 1,2 hexanediol, cyclohexasiloxane, glyceryl stearate, shea butter, caprylic/capric triglyceride, potassium PCA, cetyl ethylhexanoate, cetearyl glucoside, cetearyl alcohol, dimethicone, opuntia humifusa (eastern prickly pear) extract, centella asiatica extract, sea buckthorn extract, witch hazel extract, thyme flower/leaf extract, buddleja davidii extract, lavender oil, tea tree leaf oil, stearic acid, sodium polyacrylate, C18-21 alkane, trideceth-6, panthenol, potassium hydroxide, xanthan gum, disodium EDTA, phenoxyethanol, potassium sorbate.

COSDNA possible acne and irritation ingredient analysis. Cetearyl Alcohol rates 2 out of 5 in terms of possibly causing acne and irritation; Stearic Acid rates 2 out of 5 in terms of possibly causing acne; and Dimethicone rates 1 out of 5 in terms of possibly causing acne.

The LJH Tea Tree Cream is a different beast than the SN Plant Stem Cell Cream, really. It’s called a 96-hour cream, which means that it could hold moisture in your skin for 96 hours–if you didn’t wash your face, that is. These mentions of hours are really useful insofar as they signal how heavy and packed with moisture a cream is. This cream isn’t heavy, exactly, but it’s loaded with ingredients like shea butter that give it a richness that you won’t find in the SN cream.

The LJH cream also contains Panthenol, which is a slip agent, meaning the cream will glide across your face. The Dewytree 7cut cream from Free from Oil and Trouble 2 similarly contained this ingredient as do lots of other new, cutting edge creams these days. This means that you really only need to use a tiny bit to moisturize your whole face unless your skin is cracking dry.

I find that this cream is useful for when I get a bit too ambitious with the acids and retinod and end up with sore, dry, angry skin. I add just a bit–literally a pea-sized dab–and apologize to my poor skin.

I don’t use this cream on a day-to-day basis because it’s not really meant for skin as hydrated in terms of water and oil as mine. It also doesn’t have the level of oil control that the SN cream has. But if you have dry skin or you’ve been too tough on your skin, this is silky and extremely effective without being suffocatingly rich.

Who needs this most: skincare fans dealing with the double-whammy of blemishes and dryness

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Dewytree Deep Detox Black Mask 30g

Buy It [eBay | Amazon | TesterKorea]

Ingredients: water, glycerin, butylene glycol, alcohol, dimethicone, panthenol, sodium hyaluronate, hydrolyzed collagen, trehalose, betaine, carbomer, acrylates/C 10-30 alkyl acrylate crosspolymer, volcanic ash (30ppm), charcoal powder (15ppm), potassium hydroxide, carica papaya (papaya) fruit extract, jaglans regia (walnut) shell extract, citrus paradisi (grapefruit) fruit extract, centella asiatica extract, phenoxyethanol, PEG-40 hydrogenated castor oil, trisodium EDTA, fragrance.

COSDNA possible acne and irritation ingredient analysis. Butylene glycol and dimethicone rate 1 out of 5 as possible acne triggers and carbomer rates 1 out of 5 as a possible irritant. A note about alcohol in sheet masks: we see this ingredient a lot and skincare fans often wonder what it’s doing in their sheet masks. In part, it can actually be useful for encouraging skin to absorb other active ingredients. I try not to use a lot of products with alcohol in them (lots of skincare products contain fatty alcohols, which moisturize, but that’s really a different class of alcohol), but as long as the smell isn’t overpowering and my skin isn’t already angry or sore, I’m fine.

This mask, midnight black in color, comes folded in its packaging and dripping with thick, clear essence. The mask fabric is cloth-like, so it unfolds easily and without possibility of tearing. The fit isn’t perfect for my giant face, but it hits most parts. Aside from the color, an interesting feature is the eye flaps that remain connected to the mask–presumably in case you’d like to flip them over your eyes and give them a mask treatment, too. I’m always too busy to cover my eyes, so that was wasted on me. The flaps just sort of chilled while I did some writing.

I noticed while wearing this that the sheet remained absolutely soaked with essence even toward the end of the 25 minutes I wore it. I’m starting to realize that while hydrogel masks have a reputation for being “premium” they dry out a whole lot faster than paper or cloth masks. This Dewytree mask’s fabric reminded me of the nice, thick Enesti masks in the Aloe Superbox–warm, snuggly, and delivering loads of essence for a very long time. If you have troubled skin but want a cozy, moisture-rich mask for winter, this is a great choice.

In terms of detoxifying power how does this mask rate? I really have no idea how to rate that after one use. “Detox” is a term that I’m not sure belongs in surface skincare–and what does it really mean? Flushing stuff out of your cells? In that case, drink water? I’m actually interested in reading more to find out if studies show that water-based hydration helps active ingredients reach cells faster. We know that inside of our bodies hydrated cells remove waste more efficiently, but does the same thing work on the surface? Hmm…

Who needs this most: Memefans wanting a distinctive mask that also delivers snuggliness and moisture

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Why an Asian skincare routine? The Skeptical Person’s Guide

Every six weeks or so I see a new high-profile article on “The 9/12/7-Step Asian/Korean Beauty Routine.”

What I don’t see a lot is hard evidence backing up why multi-step skincare involving Korean products is worth the expense and effort. Many of the top comments on these articles directed at Western consumers are some version of “this is insane, this is too much, my skin got better when I cut down on [Western] products.”

I hear you, but here’s the thing: Korean skincare can be pretty simple. The main idea is to start with the lightest, thinnest product and layer the next heavier product over it. From the products I selected for this sale the routine would be:

Moisturizing toner: LJH Tea Tree 70 Mist Toner Essence: LJH Tea Tree 90 Essence Moisturizer: either SN Plant Stem Cell Cream or LJH Tea Tree 80 Cream From time to time: Dewytree mask

At the core, I think that a basic kbeauty routine involves a moisturizing toner, an active ingredient-dense essence, and a moisturizer of some sort. But is that enough and does it actually work?

To answer that question I turned to the microscope attachment I recently picked up for my phone’s camera (you can find the one I bought here; I use mine with a GorillaPod to stabilize it and get much clearer photos). I decided to test how the whole routine and each of the four daily-use products I picked for the sale impact skin. To be sure that I am showing the results after the products sink into skin and not just a bunch of surface water I waited 20 minutes between each step.

Here’s my skin on my right hand before I started applying products (at 200x magnification). This is my dominant hand, so the skin on the back of it here is most often exposed to the elements and banged around. What you’re seeing in this photo is a whole lot of dry, flaking skin way up close. The living skin looks pretty flat and the only shine is coming from the translucent flakes of dead skin. Yikes.

Here’s my skin after I applied the LJH Tea Tree 70 Mist Toner. Now most of the flakes have chilled. My skin still looks flat and there’s no shine, but it’s starting to puff up a little.

Here’s my hand skin after applying the LJH Tea Tree 90 Essence. My skin is starting to shine a bit, become more translucent, and the bits between the lines are puffing up as they fill with water-based moisture due to the trehalose and sodium hyaluronate.

Here’s my skin after applying the SN Plant Stem Cell Cream mixed with LJH Propolis Ampoule. My skin is loaded with moisture, the lines are less pronounced, and everything is kind of glossy now–the opposite of the dull, flat look from before.

Here’s a microscope photo from a part of my hand on which I used the LJH Tea Tree Cream. In this case, my skin is puffier-looking, which seems to be related to the greater amount of moisture delivered by the LJH cream. Interestingly, the part of my hand treated with the LJH cream was noticeably softer, so I wonder if softness is related to…well, having a bunch of these moisture balloons all over one’s skin!

I’m not the sort of doctor that can look at microscope images and know what’s going on beyond obvious stuff like this, but I think it’s fun to see just how much one’s skin can change thanks to a few good products.

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If you’re hoping to score my skincare picks you can actually take advantage of some current coupon codes to make the deals even sweeter.

Current Memebox Deals, Discounts, and Promotions

Use code LOVEYOURSKIN to take 15% off your order

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US Giveaway: Win My Skincare Haul of Fame

Memebox and fan-b have teamed up to give all five items in my Haul of Fame to one super lucky Memefan that lives in the US. Check out the rules below and use the Rafflecopter widget to enter.

US Memeshop Giveaway Rules

Rules: This giveaway is open to residents of the United States only. Entrants must be 18 years of age or older, or must have the express permission of a parent or legal guardian to enter and receive the prize. Entries will be verified. There will be a total of one prize and one winner: one winner of the five full-size products in the Fanserviced-b x Memebox Haul of Fame sale: (1) LJH Tea Tree 70 Toner, (1) LJH Tea Tree 90 Essence, (1) SN Plant Stem Cell Cream, (1) LJH Tea Tree 80 Cream, and (1) Dewytree Black Detox Mask. In the event that a prize item(s) is not available, Memebox reserves the right to substitute it with another item. The winner’s prize will be shipped directly from Memebox to the winner. Fanserviced and fanserviced-b are not responsible for lost, damaged, or stolen prizes. The winner is responsible for verifying the freshness and suitability of all prize items before using them; fanserviced and fanserviced-b are not responsible for the effect of any products received as part of a giveaway on skin or general health. I will notify the winner within 24 hours of the contest close. The prize winner will have 36 hours to contact me at fanserviced@fanserviced.com with their mailing address. If the winner does not contact me within 36 hours, the winning entry is void and I will draw another winner.

a Rafflecopter giveaway

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Global Giveaway: Win My Skin Saviors (plus some special surprises) Since I know that my readers live all over the world and would love to try some of these awesome products I’m giving away three things from my Haul of Fame stash that I was sent by Memebox for this review and didn’t need to open since I already use them all the time: the LJH Tea Tree 90 Essence, LJH Tea Tree 80 Cream, and SN Yeoshin Cream (the 90ml version, not the 50ml kind offered in the sale). My package for international fans will also include a sachet sample of LJH’s p.antarctica 77 cream and a sachet sample of LJH’s Probiotics sleeping cream along with some other little things I’ve picked up in my travels to NYC kbeauty shops recently that I think the winner should try.

International HG Skincare Haul Giveaway Rules

Rules: This giveaway is open only to people who live outside of the United States. Entrants must be 18 years of age or older (or the age of majority in their own country), or must have the express permission of a parent or legal guardian to enter and receive the prize. Entries will be verified. There will be a total of one prize and one winner: one winner of three full-size products in the Fanserviced-b x Memebox Haul of Fame sale: (1) LJH Tea Tree 90 Essence, (1) SN Plant Stem Cell Cream, and (1) LJH Tea Tree 80 Cream along with several small samples. The winner’s prize will be shipped directly from fanserviced to the winner. Fanserviced and fanserviced-b are not responsible for lost, damaged, or stolen prizes. The winner is responsible for verifying the freshness and suitability of all prize items before using them; fanserviced and fanserviced-b are not responsible for the effect of any products received as part of a giveaway on skin or general health. I will notify the winner within 24 hours of the contest close. The prize winner will have 36 hours to contact me at fanserviced@fanserviced.com with their mailing address. If the winner does not contact me within 36 hours, the winning entry is void and I will draw another winner.

a Rafflecopter giveaway

Many thanks to Memebox for collaborating with me on this very special project and for working so hard to make sure that my favorite products could be in the shop for the sale (at crazily amazing prices, I must add!). Special thanks to Lauren at Memebox for dealing with all of my crazy requests and questions. And thank you thank you thank you to you for stopping by my humble hutch! Disclosure: This post contains affiliate links. Clicking those links before you shop means that fan-b receives a small commission, which helps to support the blog. Please see my full disclosure for more information.