Dieux Skin says this SPF is “pure enough to eat.” Cute marketing, but I wouldn’t put it on a salad. They’re hiding two preservatives that make me side-eye the whole “clean” flex.
Phenoxyethanol and sodium benzoate aren’t toxic nightmares, but for a brand that charges $38 for 1.7 oz and talks like it’s farmer’s market fresh? Feels like greenwashing with a bow on it. You don’t need those if your formula is actually stable.
It’s a mineral mousse SPF 50 — $38, 1.7 oz. The claim that hooked me: “zero white cast, no zinc dust.” That’s rare for a physical sunscreen. I was skeptical.
Mousse texture
Puffs out like whipped cream — you have to pat it in, not rub. Weird at first, but no streaking.
Zinc oxide 20%
High enough for real protection. Not the useless 5% you see in “clean” brands.
No fragrance
Actually unscented. No “natural” citrus oils that burn your eyes. Thank god.
Photo: Aleksandrs Karevs / Unsplash
Hero ingredients are zinc oxide and shea butter — decent for barrier support. But the preservatives are where it gets murky. Phenoxyethanol is a common synthetic, and sodium benzoate can form benzene under heat. Not ideal for a “pure” claim.
- Zinc Oxide 20%: Blocks UVA/UVB, no nano particles
- Shea Butter: Moisturizes, doesn’t clog
- Phenoxyethanol: Synthetic preservative, safe but not ‘clean’
- Sodium Benzoate: Can degrade into benzene if stored hot
Photo: Tomas Hudolin / Unsplash
First pump — it’s weird. Light as air, disappears in 15 seconds. No white cast on my medium skin, which is a damn miracle. But it leaves a slightly tacky finish — you’ll want powder if you’re oily.
Two weeks in: it pills under makeup if you don’t wait 5 minutes. And that “edible” claim feels hollow when you read the label. The texture is genuinely good, but the hype is louder than the formula.
Photo: Lal MAHAMMAD / Unsplash
No breakouts. No burning. My skin actually felt less dry by day 5 — the shea butter helps. But I didn’t wake up glowing like a Dieux ad. It’s just a solid sunscreen with a marketing problem.
Photo: Divya Bhardwaj / Unsplash
Great texture, decent protection, but the “pure enough to eat” shtick is exactly that — shtick. If you can ignore the greenwashing, it’s a good mineral SPF. Just don’t kid yourself about what “clean” means here.