First scoop felt like I was digging into frozen frosting. Not greasy. Just… solid ambition.
The second it hits your fingers, it surrenders. Turns into this silky cloud-balm that disappears before you can even spread it. That’s the trick — you barely need to rub.
It’s a rich moisturizer ($52) that claims to “melt” into a protective barrier. I bought it because my winter skin started looking like crumpled parchment.
Whipped Texture
It’s not a cream. Not a balm. It’s the lovechild of a cloud and a butter pat. Weirdly satisfying.
10-Second Absorption
No joke. Press it in, glance at your phone, and it’s gone. No sticky residue on your pillow.
Scent Situation
Smells like a spa’s idea of “clean” — faint cucumber + something green. Fades in 30 seconds. Not perfumey at all.
Photo: Linh Ha / Unsplash
It’s packed with barrier repair stuff, but not in a “slather on science” way. The formula feels calming, not complicated. Hero players:
- Ceramides: Glue your skin cells back together
- Squalane: Lightweight moisture that doesn’t clog
- Shea Butter: The actual melt factor
- Wild Arctic Rose: Fancy name for antioxidant soothing
Photo: averie woodard / Unsplash
First use: I almost panicked — went on like a thin oil, then… nothing. No film. No slime. Just softer skin that didn’t feel “moisturized” in a heavy way.
By week two, my cheeks stopped flaking. That never happens. The weird part? It’s rich enough for dry skin but light enough I didn’t break out. Unexpected win.
Photo: Alexandra Tran / Unsplash
My redness calmed down. Texture smoothed out. But it didn’t fix my dry nose overnight — that took a week. Honest results, not magic.
It’s the moisturizer for people who don’t like moisturizer. Does the job, vanishes, and your skin just… behaves.