The Halo - Wearable red light therapy
Description
Your eyes give it away first, the short nights, the long screen days, the back-to-back calls. Before anything else on your face does, they look tired.
The Eye Reset is a few minutes built for exactly that. Red light and a gentle vibration massage around the eyes, to leave them looking calmer, less puffy, and more awake.
Not a fix for getting older. A reset for looking worn out. The small, private thing you do before a meeting, before going out, or at the end of a screen-heavy day, so your eyes stop announcing how tired you are.
For women who'd rather look rested than retouched.
Technology
Wearable, hands-free red light. A slim, glasses-shaped frame sits comfortably around the eye area and leaves your line of sight clear so you can keep reading, working, or watching while it runs.
Soft red light therapy. Red LEDs sit just under the eye, warming the under-eye and orbital area in one short, calming cycle.
Three intensity levels. Low for a quiet wind-down, higher for a more pronounced reset.
Ten-minute timer. One press, ten minutes, then it stops on its own. Built to fit between things, not become another thing.
Works with your routine. Use it over your own eye cream or serum it slots into what you already do.
Lightweight and rechargeable. About 1.5 oz and USB-rechargeable moves between desk, carry-on, and nightstand.
Specifications
In the box: Device, USB charging cable, cleaning cloth, user manual
Materials: Acrylic
Size: 5.5 × 2.1 × 1.5 in (13.9 × 5.3 × 3.7 cm)
Weight: ~1.5 oz (42 g)
Power: 0.5 W
Voltage: 3.7 V (Safety Extra-Low Voltage)
Battery: Rechargeable lithium, ~1 hour continuous use per charge
Charging: USB, 2–3 hours to full
Modes: 3 intensity levels (low / medium / high)
Timer: 10-minute auto-off cycle
Light: Red LED
Good to know
Best with eye cream or serum. Apply first the device is designed to run on prepped skin, not dry skin.
Consistency beats intensity. Short, regular sessions do more than one long one. This is cumulative care, not an instant fix.
Don't stare into the light. Keep eyes closed or relaxed during use.
Who it's for. Most adults looking for a calming, hands-free under-eye reset.
Who shouldn't use it. Skip this if you have a known photosensitive condition (e.g. lupus, porphyria), are taking medication that increases light sensitivity (e.g. isotretinoin, certain antibiotics, retinoids), have a recent eye surgery or active eye condition, or are pregnant. If unsure, check with your doctor first.
Not a medical device. This is a beauty and self-care tool, not intended to diagnose, treat, or cure any condition.
Not anti-aging. A reset for looking worn out.
One press, then it stops on its own.
The under-eye, the part that announces how tired you are.
A few minutes for the part that gives you away.
Your eyes show the short nights and long screen days before anything else does. The Eye Reset is built for exactly that red light and gentle massage, hands-free, in the time it takes to answer a few emails.
A slim, glasses-shaped frame sits comfortably around the eyes and keeps your line of sight clear. Keep reading, working, or watching while it runs.
One press, ten minutes, auto-off. Built to fit between things, not become another thing.
Soft red light and a gentle vibration massage around the orbital area — leaving your eyes looking less puffy, calmer, more awake.
Run it over your own eye cream or serum. No new routine, no extra step just prepped skin and a few quiet minutes.
Considered, not complicated.
Red light sits just under the eye, warming the under-eye and orbital area through one short, calming cycle.
Low for a quiet wind-down, higher for a more pronounced reset. You set the pace.
A single press starts a timed cycle that ends on its own. No watching the clock.
A lightweight, glasses-shaped frame holds everything in place around the eyes — about 1.5 oz
Built for the small area that gives you away.
- UNDER-EYE
- ORBITAL BONE
- INNER CORNER
- OUTER CORNER
The math most women never do.
You could spend:
Or, get Repose for only $149 and use it every night.
The details that matter
At a glance
Frequently asked questions - The Halo
Will I actually see a difference, or is this another gadget I'll forget?
The Halo is built around consistency, not drama. Used a few minutes most evenings, most people notice their under-eye area looking calmer, less puffy, and more rested over a few weeks. It's cumulative care not an instant fix, and it doesn't pretend to be. You have 60 days to decide if it earns its place.
How long does each session take?
Ten minutes. One press starts the timer, and it shuts off on its own so it fits between things instead of becoming another thing. It's hands-free, so you can read, work, or wind down while it runs.
Is it safe to use around my eyes?
The frame sits comfortably around the eye area and keeps your line of sight clear. Keep your eyes closed or relaxed during use, and never stare into the light. It's a beauty and self-care tool not a medical device, and not intended to diagnose, treat, or cure anything.
Who shouldn't use it?
Skip it if you have a photosensitive condition (e.g. lupus, porphyria), take medication that increases light sensitivity (e.g. isotretinoin, certain antibiotics, retinoids), have had recent eye surgery or an active eye condition, or are pregnant. If you're unsure, check with your doctor first.
Do I use it on bare skin?
Use it over your own eye cream or serum — it's made to run on prepped skin, not dry skin. It slots into the routine you already have; no new steps to learn.
How is this different from an eye cream?
It isn't a replacement it works alongside one. Red light and a gentle vibration massage around the eyes, over the product you already use. Think of it as the device that helps your routine show up, not another bottle on the shelf.
How long does the battery last?
About one hour of continuous use per charge that's several sessions. It recharges over USB in 2 hours and moves easily between desk, nightstand, and carry-on at about 1.5 oz.