Kinship calls this eye cream “clean.” But I checked the label—there’s phenoxyethanol in there. That’s a preservative.
The brand hides behind “naturally-derived” while using the same stabilizers every drugstore jar does. Feels like greenwashing with a cute font.
It’s $28 for 0.5 oz. The claim that hooked me? “Zero irritation, maximum moisture.” I have raccoon eyes—dark circles, fine lines—so I bit.
Peptide-Rich Base
Feeds collagen, but takes weeks. Don’t expect instant lift.
Cream-Gel Texture
Not a thick balm. Almost watery—slides off if you use too much.
Squeeze Tube
Hate it. Can’t get the last 20% out without cutting it open.
Photo: Maria Lupan / Unsplash
Hero stuff? Bakuchiol (gentle retinol alternative) and caffeine. They depuff and soften. But the “clean” claim gets muddy fast—fragrance is buried in the middle of the list.
- Bakuchiol: Smoothes fine lines without peeling
- Caffeine: Tightens bags in 10 minutes
- Phenoxyethanol: Preservative—not toxic, but not ‘clean’
- Fragrance: Unnecessary. Can sting eyes
Photo: kevin laminto / Unsplash
First dab: cooling, like a gel toner. Absorbs in 8 seconds—no greasy film. But two hours later? My under-eyes felt tight. Not dry, just… thirsty.
Week 3: the puffiness is quieter. Dark circles? Same old. What surprised me? It pills under concealer. Like eraser shavings. Unwearable for makeup days.
Photo: averie woodard / Unsplash
Fine lines softened by 20%. Bags looked better in the morning. But the dark circles didn’t budge, and the fragrance made my eyes water on day 4.
It’s a decent basic eye cream—not a miracle, not a scam. But don’t buy it for the “clean” hype. Buy it for the caffeine.