Ida received her master esthetician certificate in 1992, from her teacher Irena Bobwicz in Warsaw. That's where the European in "Juno - A European Skin Care Salon" actually comes from. Not a marketing choice. A direct line back to a tradition of skincare that treats the work as craft, not as commerce.
Five thousand hours of training before she was allowed to touch a client's face. Thirty-four years of practice since. The way she works on a treatment is shaped by both of those, and the difference shows in the small details — how she holds her hands, how long she lets a product sit, when she stops what she's doing to check the skin again before continuing.
It's also why Juno will never be the cheapest facial in town. The work behind a Juno facial isn't shortcut-able. That's the trade-off, and that's what twenty-five years of returning clients in Amarillo have decided is worth it.
