That viral serum from Glow Recipe is everywhere. The ‘clean’ label is the main character.
But ‘clean’ is a marketing term, not a legal one. Anyone can use it. The real test is the ingredient deck.
Guava Vitamin C Dark Spot Serum. $49. They claim it’s a clean, stable, brightening cocktail. I wanted the glow without the greenwashing.
THD Ascorbate
A stable, oil-soluble form of vitamin C.
5% Guava Extract
The fruit-derived antioxidant star.
Tranexamic Acid
Targets dark spots at the source.
Photo: Wilian de Oliveira / Unsplash
It’s a smart, hybrid formula. The vitamin C is stable (won’t oxidize in a month). But the ‘clean’ claim gets fuzzy with the fragrance.
- THD Ascorbate: Stable vitamin C derivative, penetrates deeply
- Guava Extract: Antioxidant, supports vitamin C
- Tranexamic Acid: Clinically proven for hyperpigmentation
- Fragrance: Listed last, but it’s there — a red flag for ‘clean’ purists.
Photo: freestocks / Unsplash
Texture is a dream — a silky, milky gel. Absorbs in 15 seconds. Smells like a fruity cocktail. Almost too pretty.
Week 2: No irritation (a win). But that scent? Noticeable every morning. Press releases never mention you might get bored of smelling like a guava gummy.
Photo: Jocelyn Morales / Unsplash
After 4 weeks, my post-acne marks were lighter. General glow? Definitely. But a fresh, deep-set spot didn’t budge. It’s a surface-level illuminator, not a pigment assassin.
Photo: hannah grace / Unsplash
A great serum that plays a bit loose with ‘clean.’ The fragrance is the tell. It works, but it’s not the clean beauty martyr it pretends to be.