This Color Got BANNED From Sports 🧠

April 18th, 2026

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The Key to Better aging: More NAD+

Most skincare works on the surface. Aramore goes where real aging begins: the basal layer of the skin, where new cells form. Backed by decades of research from Harvard and MIT scientists, Aramore is the first topical system designed to support skin’s NAD+ — the molecule your cells rely on for repair, energy, and resilience.

As NAD+ naturally declines with age, visible changes follow: dullness, uneven tone, fine lines, and loss of firmness. Aramore’s unique complex of NAD+ precursors, ketones, and fatty acids helps replenish cells at the source for skin that acts healthier and younger.

Clinically shown to improve tone, radiance, smoothness, and firmness as soon as 28 days.

The U.S. Navy painted their prison cells a very specific shade of pink in 1979 and watched something remarkable happen almost immediately. Football coaches heard about it and started using it against opposing teams — until the sports world stepped in and banned it. But the story of how a paint color became a weapon is wilder than it sounds.