Reduce visible vessels,
calm persistent redness,
and even the skin tone

It can be hard to tell what’s wrong when you see redness in the mirror because different problems can look very similar. Many people have both facial spider veins (the fine red lines on the cheeks or around the nose) and rosacea at the same time. Rosacea is a long-term condition that can cause flushing, redness that doesn’t go away, sensitivity, and sometimes bumps that look like acne. On the other hand, spider veins are vessels on the surface of the skin that can become more noticeable over time, especially when the skin is repeatedly flushed or irritated.

The best plan begins with being clear. Mayam Aesthetic focuses on separating what is causing the redness from what is just visible vessels. Then, they treat both in a controlled way so that the results look cleaner and calmer without making the skin more sensitive than it was before.

Two problems that often overlap (and why that matters)

Rosacea is usually about inflammation and reactivity. Skin flushes easily, stings with certain products, and can cycle through flare-ups. Spider veins are about visible vessels that sit close to the surface. They do not always “flare”, they simply stay visible and can slowly increase.

When you treat these as one issue, results can be inconsistent. When you treat them as two connected issues, outcomes tend to look cleaner and more stable.

The common “flare cycle” that keeps redness active

There is no permanent cure for rosacea, but with the right plan and consistency, it can often be kept under control. Things like heat, sunlight, spicy foods, alcohol, hot drinks, intense exercise, and stress can all cause flares. Once you see your pattern, it will be much easier to make flare-ups happen less often and less strongly.

This is also why it’s important to take care of your skin. If your barrier is irritated, your face will flush more easily and stay redder for longer. A calmer routine can often help with background redness even before any treatment in the clinic starts.

What a consultation should
clarify before treatment

Before choosing any technology, Mayam Aesthetics will typically assess:

  • Whether your redness is mainly flushing, visible vessels, or both
  • Whether bumps are present, which can change the treatment sequence
  • How sensitive your skin is and whether it reacts to common skincare ingredients
  • Whether your redness is new or changing, which may require medical review before aesthetic treatment

This step prevents overtreatment and helps choose settings that suit your skin type.

Treatment options that target
visible vessels and redness

Vascular laser treatments are often used to close off targeted surface vessels with little effect on the skin around them. This is done to get rid of visible facial thread veins and redness that won’t go away. You may also need more than one session, especially if the vessels are widespread or if the redness is part of a longer-term rosacea pattern.

People who have redness and visible vessels on their faces can also benefit from light-based treatments. These treatments are often chosen when the goal is to improve the overall tone and texture of the skin as well as the vascular problems. You should choose your plan based on the type of redness you have, how sensitive your skin is, and how quickly you want your skin to calm down.

At Mayam Aesthetics, the method is controlled pacing. For skin that reacts badly, lower intensity and smart spacing usually give a better finish than aggressive treatment.

The one routine shift that
protects results the most

Your results depend heavily on what you do between sessions. If triggers keep re-activating redness, the skin keeps signalling inflammation and vessels can look more prominent again. One simple “reset” helps many patients:

  • Use daily broad-spectrum sun protection consistently
  • Keep water temperature moderate when washing your face
  • Avoid harsh scrubs and strong exfoliation during flare-prone periods
  • Introduce new products one at a time, slowly
  • Track personal triggers for two weeks to identify patterns

This is not about restriction. It is about reducing the avoidable triggers that keep the redness cycle running.

What you can expect
after treatment

After vascular or light-based treatments, it’s normal to have some redness, warmth, and sometimes mild swelling for a short time. Some vessels fade quickly, while others get darker for a short time before fading over the course of days to weeks. Because rosacea is a long-term condition, you may need to keep up with your treatment depending on how often you come into contact with triggers and how sensitive your skin is.

Mayam Aesthetics can change the order of the treatments so that redness goes down, vessels soften, and the skin tone looks more even and natural over time if you want clearer, calmer skin without a clear “treated” look.