When Chaley Covelli, 11, put on the Yes To Grapefruit Vitamin C Glow-Boosting Unicorn Paper Mask she felt burning. The mask in question, the “Grapefruit Vitamin C Glow-Boosting Unicorn Paper Mask,” is made by Yes To, WHO reported. The Grapefruit Vitamin C Glow-Boosting Unicorn Paper Mask Style Nothing says a family vacation like an RV People is on Community! "It's scary when you think you can trust a product from past use and then something like this happens," she said.Meanwhile, Baines said she is sharing her daughter's story so the company knows there is a real, pervasive problem and something needs to be done. “I bought the “Yes To Grapefruit vitamin c glow-boosting unicorn paper mask” and within less than 3 minutes I noticed my face was burning. "Adults said they had a bad reaction to the grapefruit mask as well. “[We] will continue to follow-up with each store to make sure that the product is pulled from shelves as quickly as possible,” they said.“!!BEWARE!! Several people have come forward on social media to show "extreme" burns on their faces after using the company's brightening Vitamin C "Unicorn" paper mask The Yes To beauty brand has recalled one of its products as several customers are coming forward with skin concerns after using the brand’s face mask.Over the weekend, the company announced that they would be pulling their Grapefruit Vitamin C Glow-Boosting Unicorn Paper Mask from store shelves due to a growing number of consumers revealing the that the mask left “extreme” burns on their faces.“Yes To is committed to ensuring the safety and integrity of all of our products and has maintained a strong track record of delivering quality products to our customers since our founding in 2006,” the beauty brand tells PEOPLE in a statement.“We have recently seen reports on social media that children have used the Grapefruit Vitamin C Glow-Boosting Unicorn Paper Mask, unfortunately resulting in skin irritation. I’m so upset right now. Pate said she found the ordeal confusing because she doesn't have sensitive skin and has used Yes To products before.Francis said she will never buy a Yes To product again. "Where the mask was, my face was bright red and looked like I had the worst sunburn of my life." When Kimberly Francis saw a charcoal face mask sold by the company Yes To at her local Target before the holidays, she thought it would be the perfect stocking stuffer for her 11-year-old stepdaughter.But after the tween used the mask on Monday night, she ran upstairs to her parents and told them the mask "felt like it was burning" her face. "Where the mask was, my face was bright red and looked like I had the worst sunburn of my life," she said. Similar to the negative review on the website, the young girl told her stepmother that she had almost left the mask on for longer due to the instructions that read “if it’s tingling it’s working.”Yes To told PEOPLE that they have directed stores to refund anyone who comes in to return a recalled mask that hasn’t been used yet. From Princess Beatrice to Meghan Markle Chelsea Anders told WHO that her stepdaughter wore the face mask for about two minutes before complaining about it burning her skin. Unicorn face mask pulled from shelves after reports of chemical burns.