Abeille Royale
Advanced Youth Watery Oil
By the visual artist Tomáš Libertíny
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3 samples offered to discover Guerlain’s expertise in skincare, makeup and fragrance
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Need help?
Contact us by e-mail
Complimentary shipping on all orders
3 samples offered to discover Guerlain’s expertise in skincare, makeup and fragrance
From the first drops, skin repairs itself
X9 FASTER¹
¹Instrumental test, 20 volunteers, 2 applications per day, after 3 days.
¹Self-scoring results, 31 women, 2 applications per day, after 1 month.
¹Self-scoring results, 31 women, 2 applications per day, after 1 month.
¹Self-scoring results, 31 women, 2 applications per day, after 1 month.
Made up of 95% naturally-derived ingredients¹, the Advanced Youth Watery Oil’s formula combines an exceptional blend of bee products: pure Black Bee honey from Ouessant Island (Brittany, France), rich Corsican honey (France), the legendary honey from the Island of Ikaria (Greece), rare honey from the Äland archipelago (Finland) and an exclusive French royal jelly, all from exclusive protected channels, using beekeeping methods that are kind to bees and the environment.
¹Calculation based on the international ISO standard 16128, including water. The remaining 5% contribute to optimizing the formula's integrity over time and its sensorial texture.
Step 1: shake the bottle to ensure the correct amount of microbeads.
Step 2: take 2 or 3 drops. Warm the product between your palms.
Step 3: using the palms of your hands, smooth it into the skin, starting in the middle of the face and moving outwards.
Since 2007, Guerlain is committed to preserving biodiversity, innovating sustainably, acting for the climate and creating a positive social impact. Above all, we seek to protect one of Nature’s most precious wonders: bees.
DiscoverTomáš Libertíny was born in Slovakia in 1979. He lives and works in Rotterdam as an artist and designer. His work ranges from engineering to industrial design through painting and sculpture. His practice combines the technical expertise of industrial design with the poetry inherent in art, with a view to creating objects that question the interactions between nature, humans and technology. His approach is perfectly illustrated by his series on and with bees through which he introduces the concept of “slow prototyping,” such as his seminal Honeycomb Vase in 2006. Reproducing the natural construction process for the hive, the designer provides the insects with different moulds that will lead to the creation of beeswax structures. Thanks to his in-depth knowledge of their natural environment, the artist constructs a light structure on which living bees swarm and regurgitate food, bringing his works to life. For the creation of Nefertiti’s bust, Tomáš Libertíny built the framework of his wax sculpture and then two years and 60,000 bees were required for it to take on its final shape. The artist plays the role of designer, giving free rein to the bees, which have all the time in the world to do their creative work.