In Stillwater, Beauty Has a Conscience
In a quiet corner of Stillwater, Oklahoma, where the pace of life still feels personal, Dr. Jessica Halley and Shelby Devine, RN, built something that feels less like a business and more like an act of care.
Pure Skin & Aesthetics opened its doors in April 2022 after months of planning, design sketches, and long, conviction-testing days. What began as a shared vision between two working mothers—one a dentist with a passion for facial aesthetics, the other a nurse whose gift is quiet confidence—has become one of the region’s most respected medical spas.
Brooke Taylor (center), founder of the Rural Gone Urban Foundation, with the Pure Skin & Aesthetics team during the third annual I Pink I Can event in Stillwater. The event raised $1,750 to support the foundation’s programs for women navigating cancer.
Halley and Devine specialize in subtlety—the art of helping patients look like themselves on their very best day. “We never wanted to create a space that changed people,” Halley said. “We want to remind them who they already are.”
In their hands, their services are about comfort, confidence, and feeling at ease in your own skin. Clients come to Pure for that equilibrium—for results that whisper.
What makes Pure distinctive isn’t only its precision, it's also the heart behind it. Halley and Devine are Payne County locals, raising families just a few miles from their office. They’ve built a practice rooted in community, channeling their success into impact far beyond aesthetics. Since opening, they’ve helped raise tens of thousands of dollars for local charities and organizations, which is proof generosity and growth can coexist.
Custom cookies featuring the Pure Skin & Aesthetics logo and pink ribbons were shared with clients during the third annual I Pink I Can event in Stillwater, which raised $1,750 for the Rural Gone Urban Foundation.
Each October, that commitment takes center stage with their I Pink I Can event, a day that pairs appointments with purpose. A portion of every service, pre-paid treatment, and gift card is donated to the Rural Gone Urban Foundation, supporting Love Bomb grants for women navigating the trenches of a cancer diagnosis.
This year’s third annual event total—$1,750—will go directly toward women writing their own legacy stories in the midst of treatment. “It’s one of our favorite days,” Halley said. “What we do for a living becomes something much bigger.”
Devine added, “We’re surrounded by people who care deeply. To see that care turn into real impact—it’s humbling.”
Beauty is a relationship—between expertise and empathy, between Stillwater and the women who call it home. Halley and Devine’s story is one of precision and generosity: proof you can build something beautiful without ever losing your grounding.
 
                         
             
            