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Two tools. One ritual.
The kind of five minutes your face has been waiting for
Most of us carry more tension in our faces than we realize — in the jaw we clench at our desks, the brow we furrow at screens, the puffiness that greets us in the mirror every morning. It doesn't take much to change that. It just takes the right tools and five minutes you were probably going to spend scrolling anyway.
The RIKI rose quartz gua sha and acupressure kit is designed around that window. Not a complicated skincare step. Not something you need a tutorial to figure out. Just two tools that work together to leave your face feeling lighter, less tense, and more like itself.
The rose quartz gua sha facial tool is shaped to follow your face — jaw, cheekbones, brow — so the strokes land where they're supposed to rather than skating past. Rose quartz stays naturally cool against the skin without needing to be chilled, which matters more than it sounds. A tool that feels good from the first stroke is one you'll actually reach for tomorrow morning.
Use it with your usual serum or facial oil and the difference shows up quickly — the kind of "I look awake" result that's hard to explain but easy to see.
The gua sha handles the surface. The acupressure wand handles what's underneath.
Targeted pressure on the spots that hold the most tension — temples that have been tight since your third meeting, the jaw you didn't realize you were clenching, the space between your brows that's been furrowed since Tuesday. Two minutes with the wand on those points releases something the gua sha can't reach. That's why this is a kit and not just a single tool — one without the other only gets you halfway there.
After cleansing, apply a serum or facial oil. Work the gua sha outward from the center of your face using slow, even strokes — jaw, cheeks, forehead, neck. Follow with the acupressure wand on areas that hold tension, holding gentle pressure for a few seconds on each point. Five to ten minutes total. Simple enough to do every morning, effective enough that skipping it starts to feel like a loss.
 No. Hold the tool flat against your skin, work outward from the center of your face, keep the pressure light and the strokes slow. Most people feel comfortable by the second or third use. The routine section above covers everything you need to get started.
Daily is ideal, but three to four times a week is enough to notice a difference. A short routine you actually stick to will always outperform a longer one you do occasionally.
Both are widely used for gua sha. Rose quartz stays closer to room temperature throughout your session — jade tends to warm up with use. If a consistently cool feel matters to you, rose quartz holds that better.
Different jobs. The gua sha is for movement — broad strokes across the skin. The acupressure wand is for stillness — pressure held on specific tension points. One covers ground, the other goes deep. Worth having both.
Rose quartz is non-porous with a naturally smooth surface. Start with very light pressure, and do a patch test if you have skin sensitivities. If you have a diagnosed skin condition, check with your dermatologist before use.
Rinse with warm water after each use and dry thoroughly. Avoid dropping them — rose quartz is a natural stone and will chip on hard surfaces. Store in the included box between uses.
Yes. Box included.
Two tools. One ritual.
The kind of five minutes your face has been waiting for
Most of us carry more tension in our faces than we realize — in the jaw we clench at our desks, the brow we furrow at screens, the puffiness that greets us in the mirror every morning. It doesn't take much to change that. It just takes the right tools and five minutes you were probably going to spend scrolling anyway.
The RIKI rose quartz gua sha and acupressure kit is designed around that window. Not a complicated skincare step. Not something you need a tutorial to figure out. Just two tools that work together to leave your face feeling lighter, less tense, and more like itself.
The rose quartz gua sha facial tool is shaped to follow your face — jaw, cheekbones, brow — so the strokes land where they're supposed to rather than skating past. Rose quartz stays naturally cool against the skin without needing to be chilled, which matters more than it sounds. A tool that feels good from the first stroke is one you'll actually reach for tomorrow morning.
Use it with your usual serum or facial oil and the difference shows up quickly — the kind of "I look awake" result that's hard to explain but easy to see.
The gua sha handles the surface. The acupressure wand handles what's underneath.
Targeted pressure on the spots that hold the most tension — temples that have been tight since your third meeting, the jaw you didn't realize you were clenching, the space between your brows that's been furrowed since Tuesday. Two minutes with the wand on those points releases something the gua sha can't reach. That's why this is a kit and not just a single tool — one without the other only gets you halfway there.
After cleansing, apply a serum or facial oil. Work the gua sha outward from the center of your face using slow, even strokes — jaw, cheeks, forehead, neck. Follow with the acupressure wand on areas that hold tension, holding gentle pressure for a few seconds on each point. Five to ten minutes total. Simple enough to do every morning, effective enough that skipping it starts to feel like a loss.
 No. Hold the tool flat against your skin, work outward from the center of your face, keep the pressure light and the strokes slow. Most people feel comfortable by the second or third use. The routine section above covers everything you need to get started.
Daily is ideal, but three to four times a week is enough to notice a difference. A short routine you actually stick to will always outperform a longer one you do occasionally.
Both are widely used for gua sha. Rose quartz stays closer to room temperature throughout your session — jade tends to warm up with use. If a consistently cool feel matters to you, rose quartz holds that better.
Different jobs. The gua sha is for movement — broad strokes across the skin. The acupressure wand is for stillness — pressure held on specific tension points. One covers ground, the other goes deep. Worth having both.
Rose quartz is non-porous with a naturally smooth surface. Start with very light pressure, and do a patch test if you have skin sensitivities. If you have a diagnosed skin condition, check with your dermatologist before use.
Rinse with warm water after each use and dry thoroughly. Avoid dropping them — rose quartz is a natural stone and will chip on hard surfaces. Store in the included box between uses.
Yes. Box included.