Lately, I've seen quite a few "Miracle Cures" for wrinkles. Of note, there are three companies that people need to be REALLY careful of. IMAGE REVIVE, FACE REPLEN, VISAGE RENEW.
They all offer "trial orders", and this is where you really need to be careful. The fist two companies give you the standard two weeks to try the product and decide if you want tho sign up for monthly deliveries, each at around a $100.00. Not cheap. What they don't tell you, is your "trial" is actually a month's supply. The product definitely does not perform the miracles they claim, so when you call to tell them you don't want to receive more product, you are told that you have to send the bottles back, and you have to register them, then call them back with a tracking number. So you spend $1.60 for a. "Sample", and it costs you $25.00 to send it back, otherwise, they charge you the full price.
The last one is a very famous persons new project. This one REALLY gets you. Again, the sample is a month's supply. And when you phone to cancel, because, again, it's no better than Nivea Skin Soft, you're told that the sample was a month's supply, so you will be charged the $100.00. (at least you don't have to return the bottles)
I had actually learned from my first mistake, so I read the Terms and Conditions, so as not to get stung again. If you are a Laywer, you could probably understand the page long, legal jumble. So, I just called the Customer service number. It was hard to get a straight answer, but in the end, she finally admitted that your "sample" was going to cost you the amount of a months supply. I phoned back later and spoke to another rep, and again, after some dancing around, he told me there was a "keeping fee" of $19.95. So i'm not sure who to believe, but it seems strange that they would let you keep a hundred dollars worth of product for less than twenty.
So, no matter that their miracle creams and lotions are going to make you look 25 years younger, ( all it did for me was give me pimples!), read the fine print, or better yet, call the Customer Service line before you get scammed.