I bought June Jacobs Pumpkin Enzyme Mask for my face. Now I use it on my feet, my cuticles, and — swear to god — my frizzy ponytail. It’s not a one-trick pony. It’s a whole damn stable.
The real flex? It’s the only product in my bathroom that multitasks without making me feel like I’m using a hammer on a nail.
A $68 jar of orange goo that smells like pumpkin pie fell into a spa. It’s a chemical + physical exfoliant — think gentle acid peel meets a light scrub. No microbeads, no stinging.
Pumpkin enzymes
Eat dead skin cells for breakfast. No scrubbing needed.
AHAs + BHAs
Salicylic acid sneaks into pores. Glycolic smooths the surface.
Jojoba beads
Roll away flakes without scratching your face off.
Photo: Poko Skincare / Unsplash
It’s not just pumpkin. The ingredient list reads like a farmers market exploded into a lab. Here’s what’s doing the heavy lifting — no filler, no fluff.
- Pumpkin enzymes: Dissolve dead skin without irritation
- Papaya enzymes: Brighten like a highlighter pen
- Salicylic acid: Unclog pores without the burn
- Jojoba oil: Softer skin, zero greasy film
Photo: ibnu ihza / Unsplash
It’s thick — like canned pumpkin but silkier. Spreads weird at first (you’ll think you used too much). Then it dries down in 3 minutes and tingles like a mild secret.
Week 2: I slapped it on a random dry patch on my elbow. Three days later, that patch was gone. Weirdest win of the month.
Photo: simon / Unsplash
My face looked smoother after one use. My feet? Took three masks over two weeks. My hair? One mask, rinsed out, and my frizz was genuinely quieter for two days. Not a miracle — but for a face mask? Wild.
Photo: Sonia Roselli / Unsplash
If you want one jar that exfoliates your face, softens your cuticles, and de-frizzes your hair — yes. It’s not perfect for everything, but it’s damn close.