Skin Care Education
BBL Photofacial for Sun-Damaged Skin: How It Works and What to Expect
Reno sits at around 4,500 feet above sea level. Lake Tahoe, where many Reno residents spend their winters skiing and summers on the water, sits at over 6,000 feet. At those elevations, UV radiation is meaningfully more intense than at sea level and it accumulates across decades of outdoor activity into the sun spots, redness, and uneven texture that BBL photofacial is specifically designed to address.
Table of Contents
Key takeaways
- BBL stands for broadband light. It delivers precise pulses of high-intensity light to the skin, targeting the chromophores in pigmentation (melanin) and vascular lesions (hemoglobin) without damaging the surrounding tissue.
- BBL effectively treats sun spots, age spots, redness, visible broken capillaries, and diffuse facial redness. It can also improve overall skin texture and quality over a series of treatments.
- Results are gradual. Pigmentation often darkens briefly after treatment — the ‘pepper effect’ — before the body clears it. Visible improvement typically emerges over two to four weeks after each session.
- Candidacy depends on skin tone. BBL works best on lighter skin tones where there is strong contrast between the pigment or vascular target and the surrounding skin. Clients with medium to darker skin tones require careful assessment. The wrong settings or wrong candidate can cause adverse reactions.
- In Reno’s high-UV environment, consistent sun protection between sessions is non-negotiable. Treating sun damage while continuing to accumulate new damage significantly undermines results.

What BBL treats — and how
Sun spots and age spots (solar lentigines)
The melanin in sun spots absorbs the BBL light energy, heating the pigment and causing it to fragment. The body then clears the treated pigment over the following weeks. Most clients see spots darken to a coffee-ground texture in the week after treatment before they flake off and fade. Multiple sessions are typically needed for full clearance.
Facial redness and broken capillaries
BBL targets hemoglobin in visible blood vessels, collapsing small broken capillaries and reducing the diffuse redness associated with rosacea or chronic sun exposure. The vascular component often responds faster than pigmentation — clients frequently notice reduced redness within the first few sessions.
Overall skin quality
Research on BBL has shown that beyond treating specific lesions, regular treatment stimulates collagen production and can shift gene expression in skin cells toward a younger pattern. Over a series of treatments, clients often notice improvements in overall texture, tone uniformity, and skin quality that go beyond the targeted pigmentation and vascular concerns.
The Reno UV factor
At 4,500 feet, Reno receives UV radiation roughly 15 to 20 percent more intense than at sea level and that intensity is present year-round, not just in summer. Skiers get significant UV exposure even in winter, particularly at higher elevations like Tahoe. For clients who have spent decades in this environment, the cumulative UV damage can be substantial. BBL is one of the more effective tools for addressing that accumulated damage systematically.
The trade-off is that ongoing sun exposure, particularly without consistent SPF, works against treatment. The Reno team emphasizes sun protection as a non-negotiable part of any BBL series.
Who is a good candidate?
| Better candidates | Requires careful assessment / may not be suitable |
|---|---|
| Lighter skin tones (Fitzpatrick I-III) with clear pigmented or vascular targets | Medium to darker skin tones (Fitzpatrick IV-VI) — risk of hyperpigmentation or hypopigmentation |
| Sun spots, age spots, freckles with good contrast against skin tone | Melasma — BBL can worsen melasma; requires specific protocol if at all |
| Facial redness, broken capillaries, mild rosacea | Active tan — always need to let tan fade before treatment |
| Commitment to consistent SPF use between sessions | Clients unwilling or unable to protect from sun between sessions |
The candidacy assessment at the You Review is essential, not optional, for BBL. Your provider examines your skin tone, the nature and distribution of your pigmentation concerns, and your history with sun exposure to determine whether BBL is the right tool and what settings and protocol are appropriate.
What to expect during and after treatment
| Stage | What to expect |
|---|---|
| During | Bright light pulses with a warm snapping sensation; protective eyewear required; session 20–45 minutes depending on area treated |
| Days 1–3 | Mild redness and warmth; pigmented spots may darken to a ‘pepper’ or ‘coffee ground’ appearance — this is normal |
| Week 1–2 | Darkened spots flake off gradually; redness subsides; SPF essential throughout |
| Weeks 2–4 | Clearer skin emerges; pigmentation fades; vascular redness reduces |
| Series | Most clients plan 3–5 sessions spaced 4–6 weeks apart for full results; annual maintenance recommended |
How our Reno team approaches BBL
Sophia, our Reno esthetician, starts every BBL consultation with a thorough skin assessment of skin tone, pigmentation type, vascular concerns, and sun exposure history. That assessment drives the candidacy decision and, if BBL is appropriate, the treatment protocol. She also discusses SPF and sun avoidance expectations directly, because results depend heavily on what happens between sessions, not just during them.

BBL Photofacial: Frequently Asked Questions
Most clients plan three to five sessions spaced four to six weeks apart for full results. Maintenance sessions once or twice a year help sustain the improvement.
Most clients describe a warm snapping sensation during treatment, similar to a rubber band flick. Topical numbing is available if needed. The session itself typically takes 20 to 45 minutes.
BBL (broadband light) and IPL (intense pulsed light) use similar technology, but BBL systems like the Sciton BBL are considered more precise and adjustable than earlier generation IPL devices. Both target pigment and vascular concerns with filtered light pulses.
BBL can reduce the visible redness and broken capillaries associated with rosacea, though it does not cure the underlying condition. Multiple sessions are typically needed and maintenance is important.
No. This is why a provider assessment is essential before any BBL treatment. BBL works best on lighter skin tones and can cause adverse reactions in medium to darker skin tones if not properly assessed and calibrated.
Masseter Botox is priced by the number of units used. Your provider assesses your masseter and gives you a clear, itemized total at your complimentary You Review.
OrangeTwist Reno is at 6629 S Virginia St, Suite C, Reno, NV 89511, on S Virginia Street in south Reno. Call (775) 787-8877 or email reno@orangetwist.com and the team will take it from there.
The bottom line
For Reno clients who have accumulated sun damage from years at altitude — skiing Tahoe, hiking the Sierra, spending summers outdoors — BBL is one of the most effective tools for addressing that pigmentation and redness. Results depend on consistent SPF and on an honest candidacy assessment. A complimentary You Review at OrangeTwist Reno is where that conversation starts.
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Book a complimentary You Review and we will assess your skin honestly, confirm whether BBL is the right fit, and map a realistic treatment plan.
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