My elbows were staging a rebellion. All the hype for Rihanna’s Fenty Skin Butta Drop landed right as my skin hit its annual winter crisis.
The promise? A whipped oil cream that melts in. The reality? More complicated than that.
It’s a $42 body cream that claims to be a “whipped oil” — a texture contradiction that made me curious. The sell is instant absorption with a radiant finish.
Whipped Oil Texture
It’s less like cream, more like cool, dense marshmallow fluff.
Shimmer Level
Has a subtle pearl sheen — not glitter, just a soft glow.
Scent
Warm, sweet vanilla-coconut. Strong. Lingers for hours.
Photo: Sagar Sharma / Unsplash
It’s heavy on butters and oils for moisture, plus that signature Fenty shimmer. The hero is cupuaçu butter — supposedly more moisturizing than shea.
- Cupuaçu Butter: The heavy-hitting moisturizer
- Kalahari Melon Oil: For lightweight hydration
- Pearl Powder: That’s the source of the glow
- Fragrance: It’s potent, listed high up
Photo: Romina Farías / Unsplash
It feels luxurious scooping it out. But it doesn’t “melt” on dry skin — it drags. You need damp skin for that viral slip.
By week two, my skin was softer. But the scent is an event. My bedsheets smelled like a bakery. Not for scent-sensitive folks.
Photo: Alia Hasan / Unsplash
My legs looked hydrated with a pretty sheen. But my Sahara-desert elbows needed something heavier. This is for maintenance, not rescue.
Photo: deanna alys / Unsplash
It’s a vibe, not a workhorse. Rihanna’s fame got me to buy it, but the real flavor is a specific, sensory experience — not a moisture miracle.