I dripped this $200 oil on my brows last week out of sheer laziness. It worked better than my $30 gel.
That’s when I realized Vintner’s Daughter isn’t a face serum. It’s a liquid multitool that happens to be priced like a handbag.
It’s a cold-pressed, unfiltered botanical oil. 22 ingredients. $195 for 1 oz. I bought it because a derm said it made her skin “bounce back.” I wanted to see if that was real or just good marketing.
Absorbs in 8 seconds
Not greasy. You can touch your face immediately. Wild for an oil.
Smells like a forest
Earthy, not floral. No fake perfume vibes.
One pump is enough
Literally one. I over-pumped the first time and had to rub it on my elbows.
Photo: Natasha Kendall / Unsplash
There are 22 total, but most are filler-level doses. These four pull weight. The rest are just expensive garnish.
- Sea Buckthorn: Brightens without irritation — smells like a barn but worth it
- Coenzyme Q10: Plumps fine lines in 2 weeks, not 2 months
- Vitamin E: The stabilizer that keeps this from going rancid in your cabinet
- Chaga Mushroom: Calms redness better than any $80 cream I’ve tried
Photo: Rosa Rafael / Unsplash
It’s thin. Like, water-thin oil. I expected thick luxury goo. Instead, it slides off my finger like liquid silk. First impression: “Did I get a fake bottle?” Second impression: “Oh, this actually sinks in.”
Week 3: My left cheek texture evened out. My right cheek? Same as always. Skin is petty like that.
My pores shrank. Not dramatically, but visibly. My sunscreen stopped pilling. That’s a win. But my dark circles? Unchanged. It’s not a miracle worker — it’s a damn good oil.
It’s a luxury oil that earns its price tag if you’re creative with it. On face alone? Overpriced. On everything else? Smart.