Spoiler: slathering retinoids in your morning coffee routine is the fastest way to ruin your skin barrier. I don’t care how “clean” the formula is — UV light degrades retinoids and turns your face into a flaky, sensitive mess by noon.
This oil is strictly a PM thing. The real trick? It’s actually hydrating enough that you don’t need a separate moisturizer on top — which means one less layer in your nighttime routine.
Pestle & Mortar calls this their “Superstar Retinoid Night Oil” — $58 for 30ml. I bought it because the claim was “no irritation, results in 4 weeks.” Bold. I had to test that.
Retinyl Palmitate Base
Not the strongest retinoid, but also not the angry one. Your skin won’t revolt.
Squalane + Rosehip Oil
Actually sinks in within 20 seconds. No greasy pillow situation.
Glass Dropper
Thick glass. Feels expensive. Doesn’t suck up half the bottle per drop.
Photo: Masum Rahimi / Unsplash
Retinyl palmitate is the gentle cousin of tretinoin — less drama, same slow glow. But the real MVP here is the bakuchiol + CoQ10 combo that keeps your barrier from crying while the retinoid works.
- Retinyl Palmitate: Mild retinoid that resurfaces without peeling your face off
- Bakuchiol: Plant-based retinoid alternative that calms redness
- CoQ10: Antioxidant that fights morning-after dullness
- Squalane: Locks everything in without clogging pores
Photo: Poko Skincare / Unsplash
Texture is thin oil — like a fancy salad dressing but for your face. Two drops cover my whole face and neck. Absorbs in about 10 seconds, leaves zero shine if you wait a minute.
Week 2 surprise: my chin breakouts just… stopped forming. Not dried out — just stopped. I wasn’t expecting that from a “gentle” retinoid.
Photo: Viva Luna Studios / Unsplash
Fine lines around my eyes softened by week 4. Pores didn’t disappear but looked less like craters. Skin tone evened out — no more random red patches. Texture improved about 60%.
Photo: Kaeme / Unsplash
It won’t give you that aggressive “retinoid glow” in two weeks, but it also won’t make you hide from mirrors. For real life, not a photoshoot — this is the one.