Dieux Skin wants you to think their Forever Eye Mask is the eco-friendly savior of your under-eyes. But that “clean” label gets murky real quick when you look at the preservatives.
The tubes are recyclable — great. But the formula uses phenoxyethanol, which is a synthetic preservative that’s technically “clean” on paper but gives some derms pause. Not exactly the plant-based fairy tale they’re selling.
It’s a hydrating, reusable silicone eye mask that you slap on over your serums or creams. Retails for $48 — not cheap for a reusable patch.
Reusable silicone
Wash it with soap, use it 100+ times. Less landfill, more routine.
Cold therapy effect
Stick it in the fridge — the cooling actually helps depuff in 10 minutes flat.
Serum lock-in
It’s not magic, but it does stop your eye cream from evaporating into your pillowcase.
The mask itself is silicone — inert, non-pore-clogging. But the “clean” branding relies on the serum you pair it with, not the mask. The real hero is the brand’s own moisturizer, which uses squalane and ceramides — fine, but nothing revolutionary.
- Silicone: Non-reactive, zero absorption, just physical barrier
- Phenoxyethanol: Common preservative, but not ‘natural’ — some people react
- Squalane: Hydrates, but you can get it in any $15 drugstore cream
- Ceramides: Barrier support, but concentration is unlisted
Feels like a thick, flexible gel pad — slides on cool and sticks without slipping. First use: weirdly satisfying, like putting on a tiny wetsuit for your eyes.
Week two: the edges started curling after washing. Not a dealbreaker, but annoying. And the “zero waste” promise? You still have to buy their serum refills — so you’re not saving plastic, just shifting it.
My under-eyes looked less tired after 3 weeks — but so did my coffee habit. The fine lines? Same. The puffiness? Better, but only if I used it cold.
It’s a solid reusable tool, not a skincare savior. The “clean” label is marketing fluff — the real win is the reduction in single-use waste, not the ingredient list.