Prep & Skin Reset
These appointments are often associated with cleansing, hydration, and skin prep that leaves clients feeling clean, polished, and event ready.
At Harbour Aesthetic Spa, MIT is not meant to describe just one device or one service. It reflects the belief that aesthetic planning should begin with evaluation rather than assumption.
Instead of forcing every client into the same protocol, Harbour Aesthetic Spa evaluates skin condition, goals, tolerance, treatment history, downtime preferences, and overall aesthetic priorities before recommending a path forward.
That process may lead to hydro-infusion, microneedling, chemical peels, microblading, LED therapy, or another complementary option depending on what is most appropriate for the individual client.
Discover the kind of glow-focused, hydration-centered experience many clients choose when they want a fresher look and a treatment-driven facial approach.
These appointments are often associated with cleansing, hydration, and skin prep that leaves clients feeling clean, polished, and event ready.
Many clients choose infusion-style services because they want a stronger glow-focused experience that still feels approachable and low interruption.
For appropriate services and clients, this category is often associated with instant polish, a refreshed look, and relatively little downtime.
The value of MIT is that it emphasizes fit. Clients are not all trying to solve the same problem, and they should not all be pushed toward the same treatment.
Clients benefit when treatment selection starts with careful assessment rather than a default recommendation.
Some clients are better suited to hydro-infusion or LED, while others may be better candidates for microneedling, chemical peels, or microblading.
The final plan should make sense for both the provider and the client, with realistic expectations about benefits, comfort, recovery, and maintenance.
MIT is the evaluation framework. The treatment selected may come from more than one aesthetic category depending on the client.
These are often considered when the goal is cleansing, hydration, polish, and a refreshed look with relatively little interruption for many clients.
These options may make more sense when the client is looking for texture refinement, renewal, and a more structured corrective skincare plan.
Chemical peels may enter the conversation when brightness, tone, and surface refresh are part of the goal and the client is an appropriate candidate.
Microblading is not an infusion treatment, but it can still fit the broader MIT philosophy when the best solution is brow definition rather than another skin-focused service.
LED therapy and other add-ons may be used to support recovery, comfort, or overall results as part of a more tailored plan.
When appropriate and available, more advanced options can also be part of the consultation discussion if they better match the client’s needs than a basic facial pathway.
Start with the client’s skin, goals, treatment history, comfort level, timing, and tolerance for downtime rather than with a preselected service.
Consider more than one reasonable path, which may include infusion-based methods as well as other complementary esthetic treatments.
Select the treatment approach that best fits the individual client instead of treating every case as if the answer should be the same.
Professional infusion-style treatments work best when clients continue supporting their skin between appointments.
A strong home-care plan can help extend hydration, barrier support, and visible treatment results. For many clients, that means pairing in-office services with professional skincare selected for their routine and goals.
At Harbour Aesthetic Spa, MIT refers to a consultation-first planning philosophy that considers multiple possible treatment methods before choosing the one that best fits the client.
No. The MIT idea centers on evaluating more than one treatment path. That may include infusion-style services, but it can also include options such as chemical peels, microblading, LED, or other complementary modalities depending on the client.
You can contact us through our Contact page or book online if you want help deciding whether this treatment fits your goals.
Treatment recommendations depend on evaluation, suitability, availability, and provider judgment.