Carebeau Vitamin E Milky Care [Ultra Sensitive Care] is a specially formulated body cream designed to provide ultra-sensitive care for the entire family, including children aged 3 years and up. Enriched with Aloe Vera and Strawberry extracts, this cream helps to soothe and moisturize the skin, leaving it soft, smooth, and healthy-looking.
Product Features
● Suitable for All Ages: Ideal for children 3 years and older, and adults, making it perfect for family use.
● Gentle Formula: Maintains the skin’s natural pH balance of 5.5, ensuring it is gentle enough for daily use without causing irritation.
● No Harsh Chemicals: Free from color, parabens, and common allergens, ensuring a safe and hypoallergenic experience.
● Skin Benefits: Aloe Vera helps to soothe and hydrate the skin, while Strawberry extract provides a refreshing and nourishing touch. Both ingredients work together to improve skin texture and tone.
● Versatile Use: Effective in moisturizing dry areas like elbows and knees, and helps in reducing the appearance of scars and insect bite marks.
● Dermatologically Tested: Proven to be non-allergenic with 26 fragrance allergens tested, ensuring safety for sensitive skin types.
● Carebeau Vitamin E Milky Care (500 ml) - Strawberry
● Carebeau Vitamin E Milky Care (500 ml) - Aloe Vera
Usage Directions
Apply body cream over your body after shower to keep the moisture in. Apply to rough area like elbows or knees and dark spot. Use daily and as often as you need.
Packaging and Logistics
◉ Shelf Life:
3
Years
◉ Carton Quantity:
12
Pieces
◉ Net Weight (Product):
500 ml
◉ Net Weight (Product):
6.6 kg
◉ Carton Dimension (W x L x H):
30 x 40 x 12.3 cm
◉ Package Includes:
-
Product Identification
◉ Thai FDA Number:
● Strawberry: 10-1-6200008363
● Aloe Vera: 10-1-6200008364
◉ Barcode Number:
● Strawberry: 8851427016585
● Aloe Vera: 8851427016578
◉ Manufacturered by:
SB Interlab company limited (Thailand)
◉ Country of Origin:
Thailand
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Learn how to use a honeypot in Webflow
Here is some great advice and guidance provided by Felippe Regazio. In an article on dev.to, he provided some great guidance and I would recommend reading through the entire post there. I'm also referencing a wonderful article from Rachele DiTullio to make sure it's accessibility friendly. WCAG recommends using honeypots for your forms to deflect bots and keep things accessible.
I was still seeing submissions with this approach, so I modified this and added a tabindex="-1" to the honeypot input to keep screenreaders from focusing it.
Styling your hidden elements
Add in some inputs and make sure they have realistic names that a bot wouldn't be fooled by. Wrap them in a div and add a class. I did this and my class is business. Then I set the CSS in Webflow to the following:
Make sure your hidden input is also set to display:none so that users can't tab over to index it. Or, if you want to leave it with display: block, then you can try adding a custom attribute of tabindex="-1".
Also, make sure the label on for the hidden input has a custom attribute of aria-hidden="true". This will prevent screen readers from reading that label.
Now your form is set so that sighted users and users who rely on assistive technology will never know that hidden input exists.
Using JavaScript to prevent submission
Now you need to use JavaScript to prevent the form from submitting if the honeypot filled is submitted. What I did, was added an event on input that disables the submit button. Feel free to improve this or try other methods.
A lot of the time, folks check to see if it's spam on the backend if that field exists and has been filled out. But, that still allows submissions to go through so set this up in a way that works best for you. Here's my JS I'm using:
Filtering out spam form submissions with Webflow Logic + Honeypot
Credit: Henry Lee, Webflow Technical Support
Webflow has a feature called Logic Flows, that allows us to respond to incoming form data in customised ways.
We can use it to stop spam from submissions reaching our email inbox, if we combine it with our honeypot field.
Here’s an overview of how to use Logic Flows.If we use a Conditional Block, we can set our Flow to only send us an Email when the honeypot field is blank:
In this example, I’ve set the Conditional Rule so that if my Honeypot Field submitted value = [blank], then send me an Email Notification.
If the form is submitted with the Honeypot field not blank, meaning a spambot filled it out, then the Logic Flow just terminates right there, and the spam data never reaches our inbox.
This is a useful way to filter submissions automatically, and will work even when the spambot isn’t running javascript.
Learn how to use a honeypot in Webflow
Here is some great advice and guidance provided by Felippe Regazio. In an article on dev.to, he provided some great guidance and I would recommend reading through the entire post there. I'm also referencing a wonderful article from Rachele DiTullio to make sure it's accessibility friendly. WCAG recommends using honeypots for your forms to deflect bots and keep things accessible.
I was still seeing submissions with this approach, so I modified this and added a tabindex="-1" to the honeypot input to keep screenreaders from focusing it.
Styling your hidden elements
Add in some inputs and make sure they have realistic names that a bot wouldn't be fooled by. Wrap them in a div and add a class. I did this and my class is business. Then I set the CSS in Webflow to the following:
Make sure your hidden input is also set to display:none so that users can't tab over to index it. Or, if you want to leave it with display: block, then you can try adding a custom attribute of tabindex="-1".
Also, make sure the label on for the hidden input has a custom attribute of aria-hidden="true". This will prevent screen readers from reading that label.
Now your form is set so that sighted users and users who rely on assistive technology will never know that hidden input exists.
Using JavaScript to prevent submission
Now you need to use JavaScript to prevent the form from submitting if the honeypot filled is submitted. What I did, was added an event on input that disables the submit button. Feel free to improve this or try other methods.
A lot of the time, folks check to see if it's spam on the backend if that field exists and has been filled out. But, that still allows submissions to go through so set this up in a way that works best for you. Here's my JS I'm using:
Filtering out spam form submissions with Webflow Logic + Honeypot
Credit: Henry Lee, Webflow Technical Support
Webflow has a feature called Logic Flows, that allows us to respond to incoming form data in customised ways.
We can use it to stop spam from submissions reaching our email inbox, if we combine it with our honeypot field.
Here’s an overview of how to use Logic Flows.If we use a Conditional Block, we can set our Flow to only send us an Email when the honeypot field is blank:
In this example, I’ve set the Conditional Rule so that if my Honeypot Field submitted value = [blank], then send me an Email Notification.
If the form is submitted with the Honeypot field not blank, meaning a spambot filled it out, then the Logic Flow just terminates right there, and the spam data never reaches our inbox.
This is a useful way to filter submissions automatically, and will work even when the spambot isn’t running javascript.
Learn how to use a honeypot in Webflow
Here is some great advice and guidance provided by Felippe Regazio. In an article on dev.to, he provided some great guidance and I would recommend reading through the entire post there. I'm also referencing a wonderful article from Rachele DiTullio to make sure it's accessibility friendly. WCAG recommends using honeypots for your forms to deflect bots and keep things accessible.
I was still seeing submissions with this approach, so I modified this and added a tabindex="-1" to the honeypot input to keep screenreaders from focusing it.
Styling your hidden elements
Add in some inputs and make sure they have realistic names that a bot wouldn't be fooled by. Wrap them in a div and add a class. I did this and my class is business. Then I set the CSS in Webflow to the following:
Make sure your hidden input is also set to display:none so that users can't tab over to index it. Or, if you want to leave it with display: block, then you can try adding a custom attribute of tabindex="-1".
Also, make sure the label on for the hidden input has a custom attribute of aria-hidden="true". This will prevent screen readers from reading that label.
Now your form is set so that sighted users and users who rely on assistive technology will never know that hidden input exists.
Using JavaScript to prevent submission
Now you need to use JavaScript to prevent the form from submitting if the honeypot filled is submitted. What I did, was added an event on input that disables the submit button. Feel free to improve this or try other methods.
A lot of the time, folks check to see if it's spam on the backend if that field exists and has been filled out. But, that still allows submissions to go through so set this up in a way that works best for you. Here's my JS I'm using:
Filtering out spam form submissions with Webflow Logic + Honeypot
Credit: Henry Lee, Webflow Technical Support
Webflow has a feature called Logic Flows, that allows us to respond to incoming form data in customised ways.
We can use it to stop spam from submissions reaching our email inbox, if we combine it with our honeypot field.
Here’s an overview of how to use Logic Flows.If we use a Conditional Block, we can set our Flow to only send us an Email when the honeypot field is blank:
In this example, I’ve set the Conditional Rule so that if my Honeypot Field submitted value = [blank], then send me an Email Notification.
If the form is submitted with the Honeypot field not blank, meaning a spambot filled it out, then the Logic Flow just terminates right there, and the spam data never reaches our inbox.
This is a useful way to filter submissions automatically, and will work even when the spambot isn’t running javascript.
Learn how to use a honeypot in Webflow
Here is some great advice and guidance provided by Felippe Regazio. In an article on dev.to, he provided some great guidance and I would recommend reading through the entire post there. I'm also referencing a wonderful article from Rachele DiTullio to make sure it's accessibility friendly. WCAG recommends using honeypots for your forms to deflect bots and keep things accessible.
I was still seeing submissions with this approach, so I modified this and added a tabindex="-1" to the honeypot input to keep screenreaders from focusing it.
Styling your hidden elements
Add in some inputs and make sure they have realistic names that a bot wouldn't be fooled by. Wrap them in a div and add a class. I did this and my class is business. Then I set the CSS in Webflow to the following:
Make sure your hidden input is also set to display:none so that users can't tab over to index it. Or, if you want to leave it with display: block, then you can try adding a custom attribute of tabindex="-1".
Also, make sure the label on for the hidden input has a custom attribute of aria-hidden="true". This will prevent screen readers from reading that label.
Now your form is set so that sighted users and users who rely on assistive technology will never know that hidden input exists.
Using JavaScript to prevent submission
Now you need to use JavaScript to prevent the form from submitting if the honeypot filled is submitted. What I did, was added an event on input that disables the submit button. Feel free to improve this or try other methods.
A lot of the time, folks check to see if it's spam on the backend if that field exists and has been filled out. But, that still allows submissions to go through so set this up in a way that works best for you. Here's my JS I'm using:
Filtering out spam form submissions with Webflow Logic + Honeypot
Credit: Henry Lee, Webflow Technical Support
Webflow has a feature called Logic Flows, that allows us to respond to incoming form data in customised ways.
We can use it to stop spam from submissions reaching our email inbox, if we combine it with our honeypot field.
Here’s an overview of how to use Logic Flows.If we use a Conditional Block, we can set our Flow to only send us an Email when the honeypot field is blank:
In this example, I’ve set the Conditional Rule so that if my Honeypot Field submitted value = [blank], then send me an Email Notification.
If the form is submitted with the Honeypot field not blank, meaning a spambot filled it out, then the Logic Flow just terminates right there, and the spam data never reaches our inbox.
This is a useful way to filter submissions automatically, and will work even when the spambot isn’t running javascript.
Learn how to use a honeypot in Webflow
Here is some great advice and guidance provided by Felippe Regazio. In an article on dev.to, he provided some great guidance and I would recommend reading through the entire post there. I'm also referencing a wonderful article from Rachele DiTullio to make sure it's accessibility friendly. WCAG recommends using honeypots for your forms to deflect bots and keep things accessible.
I was still seeing submissions with this approach, so I modified this and added a tabindex="-1" to the honeypot input to keep screenreaders from focusing it.
Styling your hidden elements
Add in some inputs and make sure they have realistic names that a bot wouldn't be fooled by. Wrap them in a div and add a class. I did this and my class is business. Then I set the CSS in Webflow to the following:
Make sure your hidden input is also set to display:none so that users can't tab over to index it. Or, if you want to leave it with display: block, then you can try adding a custom attribute of tabindex="-1".
Also, make sure the label on for the hidden input has a custom attribute of aria-hidden="true". This will prevent screen readers from reading that label.
Now your form is set so that sighted users and users who rely on assistive technology will never know that hidden input exists.
Using JavaScript to prevent submission
Now you need to use JavaScript to prevent the form from submitting if the honeypot filled is submitted. What I did, was added an event on input that disables the submit button. Feel free to improve this or try other methods.
A lot of the time, folks check to see if it's spam on the backend if that field exists and has been filled out. But, that still allows submissions to go through so set this up in a way that works best for you. Here's my JS I'm using:
Filtering out spam form submissions with Webflow Logic + Honeypot
Credit: Henry Lee, Webflow Technical Support
Webflow has a feature called Logic Flows, that allows us to respond to incoming form data in customised ways.
We can use it to stop spam from submissions reaching our email inbox, if we combine it with our honeypot field.
Here’s an overview of how to use Logic Flows.If we use a Conditional Block, we can set our Flow to only send us an Email when the honeypot field is blank:
In this example, I’ve set the Conditional Rule so that if my Honeypot Field submitted value = [blank], then send me an Email Notification.
If the form is submitted with the Honeypot field not blank, meaning a spambot filled it out, then the Logic Flow just terminates right there, and the spam data never reaches our inbox.
This is a useful way to filter submissions automatically, and will work even when the spambot isn’t running javascript.