I dumped green powder in my palm, added water, and rubbed it on my face for 30 days straight. No foam. No bubbles. Just… green grit.
My redness didn’t vanish like the ads promised. But here’s the weird part: my skin stopped reacting to everything else. That’s the real win.
**Section 2 – What You’re Actually Buying** 📸
It’s a powder you mix yourself. $48 for 1.7 oz. The brand calls it a “fresh pressed” cleanser — sounds fancy, but it’s just dry ingredients you activate with water. The claim that hooked me: “calms redness in 7 days.”
Powder-to-paste weirdness
You have to eyeball the water ratio — too much = watery mess, too little = scrubby paste.
Zero lather
If you need bubbles to feel clean, this will freak you out. It never foams.
Jar life
It’s a glass jar. Pretty. But you’ll be dipping wet fingers in — hello, clumping.
**Section 3 – Ingredients That Actually Matter** ✍️
Four heroes. No filler. The Odacité formula leans hard on plant powders — and it works because they’re not diluted with water.
- Matcha: antioxidant bomb that calms angry skin without stripping
- Kaolin clay: pulls out gunk but doesn’t suck you dry — rare for clay
- Aloe: the soothing buffer so you don’t feel sandpapered
- Chamomile: the real redness fighter here, not matcha
**Section 4 – The Texture Rollercoaster** 🧴
First wash: felt like rubbing wet sand on my face. Not pleasant. Day 5: I figured out the water ratio and it turned into a soft, creamy paste — game of millimeters.
Week 2 surprise: my forehead texture (those tiny bumps) started smoothing out. Didn’t expect that from a cleanser. But my nose pores? Still there. Not a pore vacuum.
**Section 5 – The Real Results** 🔬
Redness: down about 40%. Texture: smoother on cheeks, no change on chin. Breakouts: none new, but didn’t fix existing ones either. It’s a stabilizer, not a miracle worker.
**Section 6 – Bottom Line** 🏁
It’s not the best cleanser I’ve used. But for sensitive skin that flips out at everything? It’s the safest bet you’ll make.