Here's what I gathered from reading their method.
Serolys doesn't sell mascara adapted for 60+ lashes. They sell mascara calibrated for these lashes — meaning it's been re-engineered across three simultaneous axes.
They call this 60+ Calibration.
Three pillars, corresponding to the three things other brands ignore.
1. The "Anatomy 60+" brush
At 25, a woman has between 100 and 150 lashes per eye, 10-12 mm long, straight and thick.
At 63, I might have 40 per eye, 6-8 mm long, thin, sometimes sparse.
When I run a standard brush over 40 thin lashes, what happens? The mascara builds up between the lashes instead of coating them. Result: clumps, spider legs.
The Serolys brush has shorter, more precise bristles. It separates lash by lash. It deposits exactly the right amount, without excess. And it reaches the root without touching the drooping eyelid — a detail no one thinks of, but which changes everything after a certain age.
2. The water-based, pH neutral formula
Here's what I learned this month, and no one had ever told me before.
During menopause, eyes become dry. And the body's reflex to a dry eye is to tear up in compensation, the paradox of the crying dry eye.
Waterproof mascaras are designed to resist water. But when there are constant tears, and the formula contains waxes + solvents, pigments migrate. They run down into fine lines. They color the hollow of the dark circles.
That's why my mascara was running. It wasn't me.
The Serolys formula, conversely, is water-based, without harsh solvents, with a pH calibrated for post-menopausal ocular sensitivity. It doesn't migrate. And for makeup removal: lukewarm water, no rubbing. No pulling out lashes.
3. Softened pigments
And this one, I hadn't seen coming.
The intense black mascara that everyone buys was designed for young, contrasted, luminous skin. On such skin, black elegantly intensifies.
On skin that has lost contrast with age — which has yellowed a bit, grayed a bit — intense black produces excessive contrast. It hardens. It freezes the gaze.
Serolys offers four shades calibrated for mature complexions: a softened Velvet-Black for light eyes, a Cocoa-Brown for brunettes, a Plum for gray/silver eyes, an Anthracite for dark brunettes.
I chose the Cocoa-Brown. On the recommendation of their consultant.