22/12/2025
Notice how the paper underneath stays completely untouched?
That’s because it’s white.
Medical-grade laser technology is designed to interact with pigment — not with light or non-pigmented surfaces.
In this video, the dark hair absorbs the laser energy, while the white paper remains completely unaffected. This is not coincidence. It’s precision.
What you’re seeing here is Alexandrite 755 nm — a wavelength specifically used for lighter skin types (Fitzpatrick I–III).
For darker skin types, a different wavelength is required — Nd:YAG, which safely bypasses surface pigment and targets the follicle deeper in the skin.
This video teaches three essential things:
1️⃣ Precision matters
Laser energy must target pigment accurately — not scatter unpredictably.
2️⃣ Not every client is a suitable candidate for every laser
Skin type, hair colour, and medical history determine which wavelength is safe and effective.
3️⃣ Technology choice matters
If Alexandrite is not suitable, we also use Nd:YAG — because safety always comes first.
At the end, ask yourself this:
Does this look a little scary?
It should — because this level of power requires proper training, correct assessment, and professional responsibility.
Laser qualifications and regulations differ significantly between countries.
Training standards in the UK are not the same as in Croatia — which is exactly why who performs your treatment matters just as much as the machine itself.
✨ Real results come from the right technology, used on the right candidate, by the right professional.
📩 Send us a DM to book a consultation
🔗 Or reserve your appointment via the link in our bio