I woke up late, threw this on my cuticles, brows, cheekbones, and under my eyes — and still made my train. That’s when I knew the $26 tube of Ole Henriksen Pout Preserve wasn’t just a lip balm.
The real flex? It’s thick enough to stay put but sinks in before you look greasy. Unlike that sticky laneige everyone hoards.
It’s a peptide lip treatment — $26, 0.5 oz. I bought it because it claimed to “plump without sting.” I hate that bee-sting tingle.
Cuticle Rescue
Dab on dry hangnails — absorbs in 10 seconds flat. No oily residue on your keyboard.
Brow Tamer
Swipes over unruly brows. Holds better than most clear gels I’ve tested.
Liquid Highlighter
Tap on cheekbones. It’s a glassy, not glittery, sheen. Lasts 4 hours without sliding off.
Three peptides do the heavy lifting — they’re not just filler. The shea butter is what makes it multitask without feeling like a glue stick.
- Palmitoyl Tripeptide-1: Signals collagen production — plumps fine lines
- Shea Butter: Melts at body temp, so it spreads thin but hydrates deep
- Squalane: Locks moisture without clogging pores — rare for a balm
- Vitamin E: Calms redness under eyes — I woke up less puffy
First dip: it’s a waxy-solid balm. Friction warms it into a silky oil — like butter left out on a summer counter. Not tacky, not greasy. Just… there.
Week two: I started using it as an eye cream. Surprising win — zero milia. That never happens with thick balms near my eyes.
My lips feel softer — not fuller, just less flaky. Under eyes: fine lines looked less angry by day 5. Cuticles: stopped peeling. Brows: stayed tamed through a sweaty subway commute.
It’s not a miracle worker. It’s a really good balm that happens to fix five problems. I’d repurchase just for the cuticle trick alone.