Answer
A Baumann-style questionnaire maps oil, sensitivity, pigment tendency, and wrinkle-risk habits.
Heading to Olive Young in Seoul? Answer a short skin-type questionnaire first. Sua narrows the products worth checking and sends the report by email. Photos stay optional.
Sua does not rank products just because they are trending. The report checks type fit, texture, ingredients, and tolerance first. Popularity only helps when two products are close.
A Baumann-style questionnaire maps oil, sensitivity, pigment tendency, and wrinkle-risk habits.
Photo-assisted mode records visible cues like shine, texture, pores, tone marks, and redness-looking areas.
Products are checked against ingredient roles, texture, tolerance flags, links, source dates, and ranking signals.
The report gives a likely type hypothesis, a shopping shortlist, and skip notes for products that look mismatched.
The product database keeps images, product links, source dates, ingredients, texture tags, tolerance flags, and category coverage. The landing page should make that visible without pretending the service diagnoses skin.
Quick enough to read before you shop, specific enough to keep one viral serum from deciding the whole routine.
Likely oily, sensitive, pigment-prone, tight-leaning pattern. Start with light textures and keep brightening actives gentle.
Sua can help narrow skincare choices. This page still keeps the medical line visible, so the report never reads like a diagnosis.
The report helps with skincare product selection and routine order. It does not diagnose a condition.
Photos are not required. When used, they add visible context for the report and need explicit consent.
No medical-authority claim, no outcome promise, no wording that implies Olive Young is a partner, and no invented review story.
Reports are available in English, Korean, and Chinese. Start without photos. Add them only if visible skin notes would help.