Ourself wants you to believe $190 buys you purity. But their “clean” preservative system? It’s a chemical cocktail that’s technically not on the banned list—but barely.
The real problem: They swapped parabens for phenoxyethanol and ethylhexylglycerin. Safer? Debatable. More stable? Not really. Your moisturizer might separate faster than their marketing holds up.
It’s a daily moisturizer with SPF 30. The claim that made me try it: “Clinically proven barrier repair in 28 days.” Bold for a brand that launched two years ago.
Dual-Phase Delivery
Oil and water layers you shake together—like a salad dressing for your face.
SPF 30 Mineral
Zinc oxide only. No chemical filters. White cast is real but fades in 90 seconds.
The Pump
Airless. Actually works. Doesn’t spit product at you like a toddler with a straw.
Three active ingredients do the heavy lifting. The rest is filler—literally. Water is #1, then glycerin, then the preservatives that make the “clean” label possible.
- Squalane: mimics your skin’s natural oils — no greasy residue
- Ceramide NP: plugs holes in your moisture barrier — actually works
- Zinc Oxide: reflects UV without hormone drama — but leaves a chalky film
- Phenoxyethanol: preservative that’s ‘clean’ only by marketing definition
It’s a milky lotion that feels thin going on, then dries down tacky. Not sticky—like a post-it note on your cheek for 30 seconds. Then it disappears.
Week 2: My redness was quieter. Week 3: I noticed the pump started clogging if I didn’t clean the nozzle. Gross. Also—why doesn’t anyone talk about this?
My skin stopped feeling tight after washing. Fine lines around my nose looked softer—not gone, just less dramatic. The SPF didn’t break me out, which is rare for mineral filters. But my pores? Same size. Same story.
It’s a good moisturizer trapped inside a $190 marketing claim. The “clean” badge is a distraction—the formula is fine, not revolutionary.