I lost 95 pounds on Wegovy. The hardest part was the skin no one warned me about.
After eighteen months I had the body. The next twelve months were about the skin.

Two years ago I weighed 232 pounds. I had weighed more than 200 since my second pregnancy.
My A1C had crossed into pre-diabetic. My endocrinologist started me on Wegovy in March 2023. Eighteen months later I weighed 137. I had lost 95 pounds. I had to throw out my entire closet twice. My mother cried when she saw me at my niece's wedding.

That was the moment I expected to feel finished. I had done what the diet industry had told me for twenty years was impossible.
I went home and I took the dress off in the bathroom, and the body in the mirror was not the body in the wedding photos. My belly was loose. My upper arms looked like they belonged to someone twenty years older than me. My endocrinologist had spent eighteen months warning me about pancreatitis and gallbladder risk. She had not warned me about my skin.
She had not failed me. Loose skin, in the eyes of the medical system, is “cosmetic” — which means it is not medicine's problem. Except it is my problem. And it turned out to be the problem of a lot of women I would later meet.
What I knew, and what I had to figure out on my own body
I had spent twelve years in face microneedling — building and selling the devices clinicians use in dermatology and med-spa practices. Face only. Nobody had built the body version.
So I built one myself. This is the first version — what I ran on my own body for fourteen months.
The biology is not complicated.
Creams sit on the surface. They cannot reach the layer underneath, where loose body skin actually lives. Microneedling reaches it. The stamping creates tiny, controlled injuries at the right depth, and your body responds the way it responds to any micro-injury: bloodflow rushes to the area, carrying the signals that tell your skin's repair cells — the fibroblasts that build collagen and elastin — to start producing again. Apply a peptide serum in the minutes right after, and you give those cells the building blocks they need to do the rebuilding.
This is the wound-healing cascade that decades of peer-reviewed clinical literature have documented. The full citation list is at the bottom of this article for the women who want it.
What none of that literature had been written for was body application at home. The face devices my industry sold were calibrated for face skin — thinner and more delicate. Body skin is thicker. It needs deeper needles, a larger serum volume per zone, and a different formulation than what face products are built around. I had to figure that part out by running it on myself.
I ran it for fourteen months — once a week, on my arms and belly and thighs.
The first weeks were quiet. By the third, I started noticing something — the skin on my arms felt firmer when I pressed a fingertip into it. By the second month, the firming was harder to miss. When I walked, my stomach didn't move the way it had been moving. By month six, my sides were smooth and my arms were firm.
The body we earn isn't the body we picture.
The skin in the mirror was the obvious result. The less obvious one was bigger — I started getting dressed without flinching at the mirror, wearing things I had bought at 137 pounds and been afraid to put on.
That was the moment this stopped feeling like a personal workaround and started feeling like a question I owed to other women.
Every woman I knew who had gone through the same weight loss journey as I did told me the same thing in private. They had hit the weight. They looked great in clothes. They were healthier than they had been in twenty years. And the skin underneath was undoing all of it — every time they got out of the shower, every time they got undressed in front of someone, every time they were alone with their own body.
I had something that worked on my own body. And the problem those women kept describing to me was the one I had just stopped having. That is not the kind of thing you walk away from.
So I left, and I built it.
It took fourteen more months. I wrote the serum brief myself, on a single rule — every ingredient had to have decades of independent peer-reviewed literature behind it. No fragrance, no alcohol, no acid, no retinol, no essential oils. Nothing that would irritate skin that has just been stamped. The needle depth is calibrated for body skin, which is thicker and less forgiving than face. Each vial is sized for a body treatment, not a small face vial. The whole thing is a single weekly fifteen-minute session.
What I built is not surgery. Surgery removes excess tissue. This rebuilds what is still there — the collagen, the elastin, the dermal layer that lost its hold when the weight came off. It is the clinical mechanism that aestheticians have been delivering for two decades, now sized for body skin and built to do at home in fifteen minutes a week.
What the women who tested it first wrote me
I built this on my own body, but I did not put it on the market without testing it on other bodies first. Before this page went up, a small group of women had been using the device weekly and writing back.
“I stopped Googling 'skin tightening surgery' after week six.”
I'm not exaggerating. I had tabs open. I'd priced out consultations. After everything I did to lose the weight, the loose skin around my stomach felt like the universe's idea of a joke — like, I did the hard part, and this is what I get? I figured I'd try one more thing before booking anything. Six weeks in, I'm standing in front of the mirror and I'm not going to pretend it's gone. But tighter. Smoother. My stomach actually looks like a stomach I can live with instead of something I had to hide.
— Mira L., 38, used Vesper on belly
“The skin I'd given up on came back to life.”
Ok so I lost 87 lbs and the skin on my belly and thighs looked dead. Old. Dry. Wrinkled like it belonged to a woman 30 years older than me. My entire underwear drawer was high-waisted because regular ones would dig in and the belly would roll right over. My daughter got me this for my birthday because she's pushy. I figured I'd use it a few weeks and return it. I don't know how to describe what happened. My skin was looking more alive and was tightening up by each session. It's firmer when I press it. It looks like real skin again — not waxy, not dead. Younger. I'm wearing regular underwear. Nothing rolls. My thighs aren't the same crepey mess they were. I'm not stopping. As long as it keeps doing what it's doing, you can't pry this out of my hands.
— Helene K., 52, used Vesper on belly and thighs
“Looks more like an arm. Less like a hammock.”
73 lbs lost and there's plenty of my body the weight loss didn't fix. But the arms were the part that actually got to me. I had this drape on my upper arms that hung past my elbow when I'd reach forward. Three Florida summers in long sleeves. I held my arms a specific way in photos so the drape wouldn't show. A trainer told me arms were a surgery situation. I'd done the consultation — $17k for the brachioplasty, six weeks of recovery. I figured I'd try this first. Six weeks in and there's still skin there. I want to be clear about that. But it's so much tighter and less crepey. Looks more like an arm and less like a hammock. If it's done this much in six weeks — I cannot wait to see what the next three months brings. I'm not stopping.
— Patricia W., 56, used Vesper on arms
“And then people started asking if I'd lost more weight. I hadn't.”
I've been obsessed with fixing my stomach for years. Honestly? I've tried enough things at this point that I don't really expect anything to work anymore. The scale had stopped moving but my body still didn't look the way I wanted. There was loose skin around my middle that no amount of lifting or dieting was going to fix — I'd kind of accepted that. I picked this up thinking it'd probably be like everything else. Then a few treatments in, I could see the skin actually tightening. And then people started asking if I'd lost more weight. I hadn't. That's when I knew.
— Carla S., 29, used Vesper on belly
These women were part of an early-bird run we did three months ago. You can find more reviews on the page below — most still using it, most six to twelve weeks in. Most of them started seeing it inside that window.
Here is what I want for you
The standard price for the kit is $119. That's what it costs to use clinical-grade materials, and we don't cut corners on the device or the serum — the results depend on it.
But on this page, the price is $79 a month on the monthly plan, or $66 a month on the 3-month plan.
The subscription model is new. Customers who'd been reordering kit after kit asked for it — they wanted ongoing savings without committing to a 3-month bulk order upfront. So we built it: monthly subscribers now get savings every cycle, not just on the 3-kit purchase. Today's rates are the lowest they'll be — and locked for the life of your subscription when you sign up.
It's a risk-free trial. If 90 days in nothing has shifted on your skin or in the way it feels, we refund every dollar. Send back whatever's unused — we pay the shipping. No photos, no questionnaires, no fine print.
What I would tell you if we were on the phone
You feel it before you see it.
The first time someone at work asked if I'd lost more weight, I hadn't — but I'd been feeling it for weeks. Clothes I'd been afraid to wear started fitting the way they were meant to fit. By the time the mirror agreed with what I'd already been feeling, I had already started moving through rooms differently.
Try this before anything irreversible. Before anything that costs a year of your savings.
I know who you are because I was you. I had the $38,000 quote on the kitchen counter. I had the calendar block-out for six weeks of recovery. I went home expecting to schedule it. I never did — not because I lost my nerve, but because I had been running what I am offering you here for about six months at that point, and my own skin had started giving me reasons to wait. A tummy tuck is six weeks of recovery, scars that will not fully fade, and a procedure your body will carry forever. A tummy tuck doesn't come with a ninety-day trial. This does.
Show me the studies
Microneedling mechanism — selected peer-reviewed literature.
- Orentreich D.S., Orentreich N. (1995) — foundational mechanical-microneedling description.
- Maia M. et al. (2022) — body-area microneedling, post-weight-loss skin response.
- Girão L. et al. (2024) — serum delivery enhancement through micro-channels.
- Kim H. et al. (2025) — depth-response curves for body application.
- Wang J. et al. (2025) — long-term safety, at-home device use.
Serum actives — representative literature.
- Sodium hyaluronate — topical hydration and skin barrier literature, 1980s onward.
- Hydrolyzed collagen — bioavailability via transdermal channels, 1970s onward.
- Oligopeptide-1 — signaling peptide / fibroblast response literature, 2000s.
- Acetyl hexapeptide-8 — topical firmness studies, 2010s onward.
- Carnosine — antioxidant amino-acid literature, 1990s onward.
- Dipotassium glycyrrhizinate — licorice-derivative anti-irritation literature, 1980s onward.
Full citation list available on request. Vesper is a cosmetic delivery system, not a medical treatment.