Choosing Your Color
Your Cleolight™ mask has 7 wavelengths, and each session you use one color at a time. Tap above the right eye area to cycle through and land on whichever color targets your concern for that day.
Here's a quick reference for each color and what it's best for:
| Color | Best For | |-------|----------| | Red | Anti-aging, fine lines, wrinkles, collagen & elastin production | | Blue | Acne, breakouts, bacteria reduction | | Green | Hyperpigmentation, dark spots, oily skin, uneven tone | | Yellow | Redness, rosacea, skin texture, cell renewal | | Purple | Combination of red + blue — acne and anti-aging at once | | Cyan | Inflammation, swollen capillaries, soothing sensitive skin | | White | Deep tissue repair, overall rejuvenation, nutrient absorption |
Building a Routine Around Multiple Concerns
Most people have more than one concern. Here's how to approach it:
Alternate by session, not within a session. If you're targeting both hyperpigmentation (green) and fine lines (red), don't try to squeeze both into one 15-minute session. Instead, alternate — red one day, green the next. Each session is 15 minutes and the effects are cumulative over time.
Example multi-concern schedules:
- Acne + anti-aging: Alternate blue and red, or use purple (which combines both) on days you want to address both at once.
- Hyperpigmentation + anti-aging: Alternate green and red sessions throughout the week.
- Redness/rosacea + overall tone: Lean on yellow and cyan, with red worked in 2–3x per week.
There's no wrong combination as long as you stick to one color per session and keep sessions to 15 minutes.
Using Two Colors Back-to-Back
Some customers do two consecutive sessions — for example, blue for 15 minutes followed immediately by red for 15 minutes. This is generally fine, but start with one session and see how your skin responds before doubling up. Some skin types may find 30 minutes of back-to-back exposure temporarily drying or sensitizing.
Can I Use It for Specific Skin Conditions?
Acne: Blue light is your primary color. Purple is a strong secondary option since it combines blue with red's healing properties.
Rosacea: Yellow is the most commonly recommended color. Cyan can help with the inflammatory component. Avoid aggressive settings when skin is actively flared.
Psoriasis: Blue light has been studied for psoriasis. Some customers also find red light helpful for the inflammatory aspects. Results vary — consistent use over several weeks is key.
Dark circles / puffiness: Green targets pigmentation; some customers find yellow helpful for the vascular component of dark circles.
Dull or uneven skin: White and green are good options for overall luminosity and tone correction.
Adjusting Intensity
Tap above the left eye area to cycle through the 4 intensity levels. The intensity is clearly visible by how bright the light appears. Start at a lower level if you have sensitive skin and work up from there. Most customers use levels 3–4 for established routines.
How Often Should You Use Each Color?
Daily use (or 3–5x per week) is ideal for results — see WHEN WILL I SEE RESULTS? for a detailed timeline. You don't need to use the same color every session. Rotating colors based on what your skin needs that day is a perfectly valid approach.