I bought Florence by Mills because I was curious if Millie Bobby Brown actually *uses* this stuff or just slaps her name on it. Spoiler: the packaging is cute enough to leave on your counter, but the formulas? They’re not bad — they’re just… polite.
Here’s the thing nobody says: the brand’s biggest flex isn’t the ingredients. It’s the *vibe*. This is skincare for people who hate skincare routines. It’s low-commitment, smells like a Bath & Body Works sale, and works best if you’re already blessed with decent skin.
🔍 **The Routine That’s Not Really a Routine**
I tried the Dreamy Dew Moisturizer ($22) and Magic Mist setting spray ($16). The claim: “hydrating, glow-boosting, clean.” The reality: it’s fine. Not life-changing. But fine.
Dreamy Dew Moisturizer
Thin, gel-cream texture — sinks in in 8 seconds flat.
Magic Mist
Fine mist, not a firehose. Smells like cucumber water.
Cleanse & Glow Face Wash
Non-stripping, but won’t remove a full face of makeup.
💸 **Ingredients: The Good, The Meh, The Millie**
Hero ingredients? Niacinamide (calms redness) and squalane (locks in moisture). But don’t expect retinol or acids — this is *gentle* skincare. Like, “I just want to wash my face without thinking” gentle.
- Niacinamide: evens tone, reduces redness
- Squalane: lightweight hydration
- Vitamin E: basic antioxidant
- Fragrance: gives it that millennial pink smell
🧪 **Texture Talk & Real Talk**
The moisturizer feels like a slippery gel — almost like a watery Jell-O. First day I used too much and looked like a glazed donut. Learned fast: pea size, not grape size.
Week 2: My skin didn’t break out, but it didn’t transform either. The mist is the MVP — I use it to set makeup and it actually makes powder look less cakey. Unexpected win.
📊 **Did It Actually Do Anything?**
My redness? Slightly calmer. My glow? About a 6/10. My dry patches? Still there. So… it maintains, but doesn’t fix.
💡 **The Real Talk You Came For**
Florence by Mills is a solid 7/10 — cute, functional, and totally fine. But it’s not better than CeraVe or The Ordinary. You’re paying for the name and the aesthetic. Decide if that matters.