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แคร์บิว แชมพู

แคร์บิว
แชมพู

แนะนำสินค้า แคร์บิว แชมพู

ออกแบบมาเพื่อตอบสนองความต้องการของเส้นผมทุกประเภท โดยมอบประสบการณ์การทำความสะอาดที่อ่อนโยนแต่มีประสิทธิภาพ แชมพู Carebeau ไม่เพียงแต่ทำความสะอาดเส้นผมของคุณอย่างหมดจดเท่านั้น แต่ยังทำให้ผมของคุณมีกลิ่นหอมสดชื่นและนุ่มนวล ไม่ว่าคุณจะมีผมแห้ง ผมมัน หรือผมธรรมดา แชมพู Carebeau คือทางเลือกแรกของคุณสำหรับการดูแลเส้นผมในแต่ละวัน ด้วยขนาดที่ใหญ่ คุณจะได้รับความคุ้มค่าที่คุ้มราคา ทำให้เป็นตัวเลือกที่ชาญฉลาดสำหรับกิจวัตรการดูแลเส้นผมของคุณ

คุณสมบัติของสินค้า แคร์บิว แชมพู

  • สูตรอ่อนโยนสำหรับผมทุกประเภท: แชมพูแคร์บิวได้รับการออกแบบด้วยสูตรอ่อนโยนที่เหมาะกับผมทุกประเภท ทำความสะอาดผมของคุณโดยไม่ทำลายน้ำมันตามธรรมชาติ ช่วยให้ผมของคุณมีสุขภาพดีและมีชีวิตชีวา ไม่ว่าคุณจะมีผมตรง ผมหยิก ผมหนา หรือผมเส้นเล็ก แชมพูแคร์บิวก็ช่วยดูแลผมของคุณได้อย่างที่ต้องการ ทำให้ผมนุ่ม จัดทรงง่าย
  • กลิ่นหอมอ่อนๆ: คุณสมบัติที่โดดเด่นอย่างหนึ่งของแชมพู Carebeau คือกลิ่นหอมอ่อนๆ แชมพูจะทำให้ผมของคุณมีกลิ่นหอมสดชื่นตลอดทั้งวัน กลิ่นหอมอ่อนๆ นี้จะเพิ่มความสดชื่นให้กับกิจวัตรการดูแลเส้นผมของคุณ ทำให้คุณรู้สึกมั่นใจและพร้อมที่จะเผชิญกับวันใหม่
  • ขนาดใหญ่ คุ้มค่า: แชมพู Carebeau มีขนาดใหญ่ คุ้มค่าเงิน คุณจะได้รับแชมพูคุณภาพสูงจำนวนมากที่ใช้ได้นานขึ้น ลดความถี่ในการซื้อซ้ำ ซึ่งทำให้แชมพู Carebeau ไม่เพียงแต่เป็นผลิตภัณฑ์ดูแลเส้นผมที่มีประสิทธิภาพเท่านั้น แต่ยังเป็นทางเลือกที่คุ้มค่าสำหรับทั้งครอบครัวอีกด้วย
สูตรสินค้า

● แคร์บิว แชมพู (1,000 g) - มะกรูต

● แคร์บิว แชมพู (1,000 g) - โยเกิร์ต

● แคร์บิว แชมพู (1,000 g) - แคนตาลูป

● แคร์บิว แชมพู (1,000 g) - ดอกอัญชัน

● แคร์บิว แชมพู (1,000 g) - กล้วย

● แคร์บิว แชมพู (1,000 g) - น้ำนมข้าว

● แคร์บิว แชมพู (1,000 g) - สูตรเย็น

● แคร์บิว แชมพู (3,000 g) - มะกรูต

● แคร์บิว แชมพู (3,000 g) - โยเกิร์ต

● แคร์บิว แชมพู (3,000 g) - แคนตาลูป

● แคร์บิว แชมพู (3,000 g) - ดอกอัญชัน

● แคร์บิว แชมพู (3,000 g) - กล้วย

● แคร์บิว แชมพู (3,000 g) - น้ำนมข้าว

● แคร์บิว แชมพู (3,000 g) - สูตรเย็น

วิธีการใช้

ชโลมแชมพูขณะที่ผมเปียก นวดเบาๆ ลงบนเส้นผมและหนังศีรษะ

ข้อมูลบรรจุภัณฑ์
◉ อายุการเก็บรักษา:
3
ปี
◉ จำนวนสินค้าต่อลัง:
6 / 12
ชิ้น
◉ น้ำหนักสุทธิ (สินค้า):
1,000 ml / 3,000 ml
◉ น้ำหนักรวม (ลัง):

● 1,000 ml : 13.77 kg

● 3,000 ml : 19.22 kg

◉ ขนาดลังสินค้า (กว้าง x ยาว x สูง):

● 1,000 ml : 31.5 x 40.3 x 23.8 cm

● 3,000 ml : 30 x 33.4 x 33.5 cm

◉ อุปกรณ์ภายในกล่อง:

-

ข้อมูลจำเพาะ
◉ เลขที่จดแจ้ง (อย.):

● มะกรูต: 13-1-6600039356

● โยเกิร์ต : 10-1-5867783

● แคนตาลูป : 13-1-6600039357

● ดอกอัญชัน : 10-1-5867783

● กล้วย : 13-1-6600039216

● น้ำนมข้าว : 13-1-6600039355

● สูครเย็น : 10-1-6200011992

◉ เลขที่บาร์โค้ด:

แคนตาลูป

● 1,000 ml : 8851427000607

● 3,000 ml : 8851427000720

ดอกอัญชัน

● 1,000 ml : 8851427001253

● 3,000 ml : 8851427000706

กล้วย

● 1,000 ml: 8851427001307

● 3,000 ml: 8851427001062

นมข้าว  

● 1,000 ml: 8851427005725

● 3,000 ml: 8851427005732

มะกรูด

● 1,000 ml: 8851427000065

● 3,000 ml: 8851427000850

โยเกิร์ต

● 1,000 ml: 8851427004414

● 3,000 ml: 8851427004513

สูตรเย็น

● 1,000 ml: 8851427016837

● 3,000 ml: 8851427016844

◉ ผลิตโดย:
บริษัท เอสบี อินเตอร์แลบ จำกัด
◉ ประเทศต้นกำเนิด:
ประเทศไทย
บอกเล่าประสบการณ์ดีๆ เกี่ยวกับสินค้านี้ให้เราฟังหน่อย
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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:

Screenshot of Webflow Logic taking no action when the honeypot field is completed

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:

Screenshot of Webflow Logic taking no action when the honeypot field is completed

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:

Screenshot of Webflow Logic taking no action when the honeypot field is completed

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:

Screenshot of Webflow Logic taking no action when the honeypot field is completed

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:

Screenshot of Webflow Logic taking no action when the honeypot field is completed

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.

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แคร์บิว แชมพู