I slapped this on my lips before bed, woke up, and accidentally rubbed the excess into my hangnail. That thing was gone by lunch. Not a joke.
The real reason this matters: I hate multi-step routines when I’m tired. This does three jobs in one swipe. Lazy girl gold.
It’s a $28 peptide lip mask that promises “overnight plumping.” I bought it because I’m a sucker for anything that says “peptide” and “sleep” in the same sentence.
Peptide complex
Sends blood rushing to your lips without that burning bee-sting feeling.
Squalane base
Absorbs in 10 seconds. Not greasy. Not sticky. You can kiss your partner without leaving a slick trail.
Thick but not goopy
Stays put all night. My pillowcase is clean. That’s a first.
Photo: Andrey Zvyagintsev / Unsplash
No fragrance. No nonsense. Just stuff that earns its spot. The hero is palmitoyl tripeptide-1 — fancy name, simple job: tells your skin to make collagen while you drool.
- Palmitoyl Tripeptide-1: Collagen booster on autopilot
- Squalane: Moisture that sinks in, not sits on top
- Shea Butter: The thick blanket that locks everything in
- Vitamin E: Fights off morning crepe-ness
Photo: Camille Brodard / Unsplash
It’s like cold butter that just met a warm knife. Melts on contact. I almost ate it the first night because it smells faintly like vanilla — thank god it doesn’t taste like it.
Two weeks in: my lips aren’t bigger. But they look bigger. Less lines. More “I just had a good cry” plumpness. The cuticle thing wasn’t a fluke — I now dab it on every dry patch on my hands.
My lips stopped peeling within 3 days. My cuticles stopped snagging. My brows looked groomed without gel. What didn’t change: my bank account. $28 for a lip mask that moonlights as hand cream? Fine.
Buy it for your lips. Keep it for your cuticles. Tell your friends it’s a lip mask — let them discover the rest themselves.