GHK-Cu powder... anyone using?

You can get a vial to test from a few places online for a low price. I've been mixing it with bac water and then adding that to lotion. Because it's water-soluble, aim for creams with "hydra" in the name.
The Palmer's cocoa butter is great. There are protocols on Reddit in skincare subs.
 
A good addition to GHK-CU or an alternative is taking collagen peptide powder every day. I add it to my shake. Also, vitamin E cream is great on the skin. Be careful of cheap stuff. A cream with only a small amount of E can be advertised as Vit E cream. Check how much vitamin is in it.
 
There are labs that specialize in peptide purity testing. I've heard of Janoshik, but there are others. It's not a cheap process, so unless you're buying in bulk it might not be worth it for personal use. Mostly you just want to vet your sources and look for reviews from other users. If multiple people have had good experiences, that's a good sign.
 
I'm also new to peptide stuff. I'm confused about mixing instructions. I can find places to buy it, but no clear info on how much water to use or how much to inject.
 
There are peptide calculators online that can help. I found one that's pretty useful:

Peptide Calculator

It helps with dosing and reconstitution. There are also dosage guidelines on other forums. All this stuff can be confusing at first.
 
Ok, I'm still confused about how much water to add when reconstituting. Say I have a 5mg vial of something and I want to dose a certain amount, how do I figure out the water?
 
An easy method is to add the same amount of water as the drug amount in the vial. For example, a 5mg vial, add 5ml of bacteriostatic water. This makes the math easier.
 
That doesn't track with me—reconstituting in separate vials then mixing shouldn't change pH either way. Factory blending and lyophilizing is fine but home kitchen version isn't? Combine all powders then add the preservative shouldn't matter logically. I'm no chemist but that logic gap's big. Mostly going off that one protocol I found laid out before.
 
Pharmacy-grade BAC is the only way. Non-pharmacy stuff tested by others often has too little or no alcohol at all - pH is off and it degrades peptides fast, especially picky ones. Hospira is the standard but not always available.
 
Bulk cosmetic-grade peptides for topical formulations are significantly cheaper per gram than individual vials when bought in bulk - the cosmetic ingredient suppliers are a different supply chain from the injection-grade vial market and the pricing reflects that.
 
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