Your skin isn’t dry. It’s *dead*. And that grainy, tight feeling? That’s just a layer of zombie cells pretending to be moisture.
The real fix isn’t more cream — it’s the June Jacobs Pumpkin Enzyme Mask. It eats the flakes so your moisturizer can actually *touch* live skin. First wash-off, I saw actual cheek shine. Not oil. *Shine*.
It’s a creamy orange paste that smells like a spiced latte but acts like a tiny chemical peel. The brand claims it “resurfaces without stripping.” I rolled my eyes. Then I washed it off.
Pumpkin enzymes
They digest dead protein. Not your face. Just the junk.
Lactic acid (gentle)
PH-balanced so it tingles, doesn’t sting. Rare for a drugstore peel.
Aloe + green tea
So much soothing that I forgot I was exfoliating. Weirdly relaxing.
Photo: Poko Skincare / Unsplash
Three actives, one mission: remove the winter crust without the redness. The pumpkin is the star — it’s not just marketing. Real fruit enzymes literally break down the “glue” holding dead cells together. The others just calm the chaos.
Photo: ibnu ihza / Unsplash
Texture is like a thin pudding — spreads like butter, doesn’t drip. Smells like a holiday candle (but not fake). I left it on 10 minutes. First wash-off: skin felt *slick*, not tight. That’s the dead stuff gone.
Week 3: I got cocky and left it on 15. No burn. Just smoother jawline. Surprising because most enzyme masks get angry if you blink wrong.
Photo: ibnu ihza / Unsplash
My forehead stopped flaking under makeup. My nose pores look *smaller* — not gone, just less “hello I’m a crater.” The weird part? My forehead lines looked softer. Didn’t expect that from a mask.
Photo: yunona uritsky / Unsplash
This is the winter mask I’ll repurchase until I die or move to a humid climate. It does one thing — eats dead skin — and does it better than anything under $100.