So Ranavat sent me this serum and the first thing I noticed? The box smelled like a temple. No joke — sandalwood and old paper.
The flowers in here are hand-harvested by a third-generation farming family in the Himalayas. They pick them at 4 AM. That’s not a marketing gimmick — that’s the only time the petals hold their oils.
**Section 2**
$85. 30ml. A luxury Ayurvedic serum that claims to “illuminate and firm” — which is usually code for “smells nice, does nothing.” But I’m a sucker for a good origin story, so I caved.
Mushika Extract
A Himalayan root they dig up by hand. No machinery. It’s supposed to plump skin like a grape.
Saffron + Lotus
Two gold-standard brighteners. But here they’re cold-pressed, not heated. That matters.
Third-Gen Farming
The family has been doing this since the 1950s. They still use the same drying huts. Weirdly romantic.
Photo: ibnu ihza / Unsplash
**Section 3**
No filler nonsense. The hero here is Mushika — it’s an adaptogen that basically tells your skin to calm down and glow. Then there’s saffron (the expensive kind, not the dusty spice rack stuff) and lotus stem cells for moisture that doesn’t evaporate in 20 minutes.
- Mushika Root: Signals skin to firm up — like a gentle flex
- Saffron: Fades dark spots without irritation
- Lotus Stem Cells: Holds water like a sponge
- Vitamin C (from amla): Brightens without the sting
Photo: Poko Skincare / Unsplash
**Section 4**
It’s a lightweight oil — think honey that’s been thinned out. Absorbs in 10 seconds flat. I put it on damp skin and it just… disappears. No slick residue. No shiny forehead by noon.
Week 2, I woke up and my skin looked like I’d slept 10 hours (I’d slept 6). The glow is real, but subtle. Not a disco ball — more like a candle behind frosted glass.
Photo: Fleur Kaan / Unsplash
**Section 5**
Yes — but only for brightness and texture. My fine lines? Same. My dark spots? Noticeably lighter. My skin feels bouncier, like I’ve been drinking collagen (I haven’t).
Photo: Alexandra Tran / Unsplash
**Section 6**
It’s expensive, but it’s not overhyped. If you’re looking for a ritual that actually does something, this is it. Just don’t expect a miracle overnight.