It started with a blog post. Into The Gloss, 2010. Emily Weiss just asking women what was in their medicine cabinets.
The real genius? She listened. The feedback was clear: we want simple, effective, pretty things. That blog became Glossier. And the first product? A lip balm.
Balm Dotcom. $16. Marketed as a “universal skin salve.” The claim that hooked me? “Wearable moisture.” Sounded less like a chore.
The Tube
Squeezes out like toothpaste — you control the amount.
The Scent
Not artificial. Birthday Cake smells like vanilla batter, not a candle.
The Finish
Sheen, not sticky gloss. Actually lets you drink water.
Photo: Alexandra Tran / Unsplash
It’s an occlusive balm, not a treatment. Forms a protective seal. The hero is lanolin — a waxy emollient from sheep’s wool.
- Lanolin: Seals in existing moisture — classic, effective
- Castor Oil: Adds that signature glossy sheen
- Beeswax: Gives it body so it doesn’t melt
- Antioxidant Blend: A tiny nod to skincare, but it’s minimal
Photo: deanna alys / Unsplash
Thick. Like smoothing softened candle wax onto your lips. Takes a full 30 seconds to settle in.
Week 3 update: It’s a top coat. My lips weren’t magically healthier, but they *looked* hydrated all day. The surprise? Used it on a paper cut. Worked better than on my lips.
Flakes vanished. Color looked better. But I still needed a thinner balm underneath for actual healing. It’s the final step.
It’s a mood. A perfectly packaged, sensory delight that makes moisturizing feel cool. Not a skincare miracle, but a cultural one.