You’re layering it over damp skin, aren’t you? That’s exactly why it’s pilling into little eraser crumbs.
Retinaldehyde binds to the first layer it touches. If that layer is water + hyaluronic acid foam, the serum just sits on top and balls up. Wait 90 seconds after cleansing. Bone-dry skin only.
This is Medik8’s Crystal Retinal 3 — $68 for 30ml. The claim that made me try it: “visible results in 2 weeks without irritation.” I rolled my eyes. But the delivery system is actually smart.
Time-Release Spheres
Each retinal molecule is wrapped in a protective crystal shell so it doesn’t hit your skin all at once.
Dry-Touch Finish
It dries matte in under 15 seconds. No grease. No glow.
Stabilized Retinal
Retinal is notoriously unstable. This one doesn’t oxidize into orange sludge by week three.
Photo: Kimia Zarifi / Unsplash
Three ingredients doing the heavy lifting, plus one that keeps your barrier from screaming at you. No filler nonsense.
- Retinaldehyde (0.03%): Converts to retinoic acid in one step — faster than retinol, less angry than prescription tret
- Vitamin E: Stops oxidation so the serum stays active longer
- Glycerin: Humectant that pulls water in without letting the retinal penetrate too deep
- Allantoin: The unsung hero — calms redness before it starts
First pump: feels like a lightweight lotion. Disappears into skin in 10 seconds flat. No tacky layer. No silicone slip. Just… nothing. I kept touching my face to check it was still there.
Week two: my forehead texture got bumpy. Not purging — just dryness I wasn’t hydrating enough. I added a peptide toner *before* waiting the 90 seconds. Problem solved.
After 4 weeks: my chin texture is 70% smoother. The fine lines around my mouth? Still there — slightly softer, not gone. Pores look smaller, but that’s the retinal tightening effect, not a miracle.
This is the retinal that doesn’t act like a retinal. No peeling, no drama, just gradual turnover you only notice in photos. Buy it, but buy the travel size first to test your tolerance.