Supergoop! calls Unseen Sunscreen ‘clean.’ Their website is a meadow of green buzzwords. I read the ingredient list.
The real issue? The term “clean” is totally unregulated. It’s a marketing free-for-all. So whose definition are we using — theirs, or ours?
It’s a $38 primer-SPF hybrid. The claim? A totally invisible, silicone-based gel. No white cast, ever.
Texture
A velvety, blurring gel — feels like a makeup primer.
Finish
Truly clear. Dries to a soft, slightly grippy matte.
Wear
Sits beautifully under makeup. Pill-city if you layer it wrong.
Photo: Joaquin Arenas / Unsplash
The hero is dimethicone crosspolymer — a fancy silicone. It creates that smooth, blurring film. The actual UV filters are chemical: avobenzone, homosalate, octisalate, octocrylene.
Photo: Aleksandrs Karevs / Unsplash
Weirdest first impression — it smells like a fancy spa, not sunscreen. Applies cold, sinks in fast. Leaves a slippery-satin feel.
By week two, I noticed it. Not my skin, but the feel. That silicone layer. It’s like wearing a very light, impermeable veil. My skin couldn’t “breathe” in its usual way.
Photo: Sarah Sheedy / Unsplash
Zero sunburns. Makeup looked flawless all day. But I got a few clogged pores on my temples — classic silicone reaction for some.
Photo: Raed Kasrwani / Unsplash
An excellent cosmetic sunscreen. A masterclass in greenwashing. It’s a great product hiding behind a dubious claim.