You don’t just slap Dr. Althea 345 Relief Cream on your face. You *place* it. And the order matters more than you think.
Put it wrong in the AM and your sunscreen pills into sad little eraser shavings by 10am. Put it right and your makeup sits like silk.
It’s a moisturizer. It’s a barrier cream. It’s $28. I bought it because it promised to fix my tretinoin peel without clogging my angry pores.
Centella + Madecassoside
Calms redness in 2 minutes flat — no burning.
Shea Butter (Refined)
Hydrates without sitting on top like a grease slick.
Ceramide NP
Plugs the holes in your barrier so shit stops stinging.
Don’t let the “relief” name fool you — this has actual actives, not just oat water. The ingredient list reads like a derm’s love letter to dehydrated, irritated skin.
- Centella Asiatica: Soothes within one wear — not a ‘long term’ lie
- Ceramide NP: Restores barrier so your face stops feeling raw
- Panthenol: Locks moisture in without that suffocating film
- Shea Butter: The MVP for night repair — use a pea more at bedtime
Texture is a fluffy gel-cream hybrid — think cloud fluff that melts. Absorbs in 12 seconds. Leaves a demi-matte finish that says “I have my life together.”
Week 2: I stopped layering it under SPF. Big mistake. Here’s the hack — apply it *last* in your morning routine, right before sunscreen. It’s thick enough to act as a buffer but light enough to not pill. At night, layer it *first* after cleansing, then seal with a heavier cream if you’re dry. I do this and my tret peel disappeared by day 4.
Redness? Down 60%. Breakouts? Same — it’s not acne medicine. But my face stopped feeling like sandpaper after washing it.
Keep it in your routine if you’re repairing. Skip it if you just want basic hydration — there are cheaper options. But for barrier rescue? This is the one.