My mother, in her late fifties, has experienced what many women in that decade describe: a gradual but unmistakable shift in skin architecture. Lines that were once dynamic became static. The subtle volumetric fullness of younger skin — what clinicians associate with subcutaneous fat and collagen density — had diminished steadily over time. She had used consistently well-reviewed products for years. Hydration improved. Structure did not.
Injectable treatments were not off the table, but she wanted to exhaust topical options with genuine clinical backing first. I began researching on her behalf — specifically, what Korean dermatologists recommend for volume loss and structural line correction in skin over fifty.
That search led me to Dr. Choi Won-jun, a Korean dermatologist who runs a YouTube channel called 3분동안. No sponsored content — just clinical ingredient analysis in plain language. He highlighted two products he calls "Botox in a bottle" when used together. I ordered both for my mom. We've been tracking what happens.
The two products
Why this combination works for mature skin
The Sungboon Editor ampoule is built around two ingredients that are particularly relevant for skin in its 40s and 50s. The first is EGF — Epidermal Growth Factor — a Nobel Prize-winning molecule that directly stimulates skin cell renewal and collagen production. As we age, our skin's natural EGF levels decline, slowing the cellular repair processes that keep skin looking full and firm. Topical EGF helps restore that signaling.
The second is Volufiline — a plant-based volumizing ingredient that works by stimulating lipid accumulation in the subcutaneous layer of skin. In plain terms: it restores the volume that skin gradually loses through perimenopause and beyond. This is the ingredient Dr. Choi was referring to when he used the word "Botox" — not because it freezes muscle, but because it addresses volume loss at the source.
The results — and why it's taking longer for her
The first week was subtle. Her skin felt softer and more comfortable — she mentioned the dryness that usually hits by midday wasn't as pronounced. By day 5 she was noticing her skin held moisture longer. No visible change yet, which is expected.
By the end of week two, there was something. Her skin looked less dull — more alive. The deepest lines weren't dramatically different, but they looked less etched. The bigger change was texture and glow, not structure yet. That's actually correct: for mature skin, the barrier and hydration results come first, and the deeper collagen and volume work takes longer to surface.
My father noticed without being informed. He described her face as looking "different — more rested." This is the observation pattern that typically indicates Volufiline activity: a visible change that people can perceive but struggle to identify precisely, because subcutaneous volume restoration doesn't map to a single visible feature. She has maintained the protocol for three weeks and intends to continue. The science says the real results — collagen remodeling, volume restoration — show up at 8–12 weeks. We're not there yet.
Honest assessment
For mature skin specifically, two weeks is a preliminary signal. Cellular turnover slows considerably after forty — the same EGF receptors are present, but their response rate is reduced. The ingredients are working; the timeline to full expression simply extends. EGF clinical studies run for 3 months. Collagen remodeling takes 8–12 weeks to show its full results. My mom is on week three. The early signals are encouraging but we're waiting for the deeper change.
What the evidence supports at this stage: the early indicators are consistent with the clinical mechanisms of both EGF and Volufiline, and the improvement is perceptible to an uninformed observer. At $61 for the combined protocol, a complete three-month trial costs significantly less than a single injectable session — with the additional distinction that these formulations are improving skin architecture rather than providing temporary cosmetic masking.
She is committed to the full twelve-week protocol. This article will be updated with documented results at week six and week twelve.
Her AM routine is unchanged. The PM combination is the only addition. Both products are on Amazon and linked in the GlazeSeoul routine builder for skin in its 40s–60s.