No use continuing for a whole 3 months. Comparing my photos from a month ago and today (PM me if you want them, not a fan of posting my hairy mug), I have to conclude that turmeric hair removal for androgen-driven hair is bollocks (note to self: make before and after pictures with a couple of days growth, otherwise it's hard to compare). I haven't seen myself shed a single hair, and I highly doubt it would just vanish in thin air (leaving the other hairs around it intact). Not a single hair shed either with the scrub/mask itself, or in the shower. No change in vellus/terminal ratio. Same hair pattern.
In other words, no real hair growth changes at all within 30 days. I don't buy the "keep at it" argument, our time is finite and most anything gives you visible results after a month. Eg building muscle is a slow and arduous process, but you're bound to see results after a month of daily 30-minute workouts, innit.
However... I had a blooshot spot on my face for a couple of years, which I thought was unremovable. Within the 4 weeks (I think I noticed it around the 2.5 weeks mark) of applying the turmeric face mask for a half an hour daily, the blemish faded and is hardly distinguishable from the area around it. The minimal number of days is is probably way lower (I would keep the mask on only until it dries, not for a full 30 minutes), but that's not what I was testing, just a side-effect.
The gist of it: although it does not work for androgen hair removal, if you want cheap and safe blemish removal, do try turmeric. It will give you very good results at least in the short term (I have not yet been able to check the long term effect). In my opinion, that's why turmeric's included in Hindu skin medicines.
However, I've found proper research about liquorice and its epilatory effect (on rats), inspired by hair removal customs from Turkmenistan - the photos after 3-6 days might make your jaw drop:
https://www.researchgate.net/publication/262016270_Topically_applied_glycyrrhizic_acid_causes_hair_removal_in_ratsIn case the link dies, look for Zaper et al Pharm Biol 2014.
According to the paper, liquorice works within days, at least mixed with ethanol and urea and heated up, then cooled down. I will probably just grind it, mix it with milk and slap it on, though. The rats were female, however - so it still might rain on our parade. A monthly test commencing next week, have a great weekend everyone!