Found a tube of Aquaphor in my gym bag, my car, my nightstand. It’s the one thing every makeup artist and dermatologist actually agrees on.
The real magic? It’s not a moisturizer. It’s an occlusive — it locks in whatever moisture is already there. You’re sealing the deal.
It’s a $6 ointment. I bought it for chapped lips, then got bored. Started experimenting.
Cuticle Saver
Slather it on before a gel manicure — stops the dehydrating acetone from wrecking your skin.
Highlighter Topper
A tiny dab on the high points of your cheekbones over makeup. Gives that glass-skin sweat — not glitter.
Scent Mixer
One drop of perfume oil mixed with a pea-sized amount. Makes your favorite scent last twice as long on your pulse points.
Brow & Lash Tamer
The tiniest amount on a spoolie grooms brows and conditions lashes. Better than clear mascara — and cheaper.
Photo: Erik Lucatero / Unsplash
It’s simple. Petroleum jelly is the base — the barrier. The other ingredients do the healing work while the barrier protects.
Lanolin and glycerin are the humectant heroes. They pull water to the skin and hold it there.
- Petroleum Jelly: Seals the barrier, full stop.
- Panthenol (Pro-Vitamin B5): Soothes irritation, promotes healing.
- Glycerin: Humectant that draws moisture in.
- Bisabolol (from Chamomile): Calms redness, anti-inflammatory.
It’s a translucent, sticky balm. Thick. You feel it on your skin — it’s a presence. Not for the faint of heart.
After a week, I stopped hating the texture. You learn to use a microscopic amount. The shine becomes intentional.
My dry patches vanished overnight. My lipstick stopped feathering. But it didn’t “cure” my dry skin — it just managed the symptoms perfectly.
It’s not sexy. It’s functional. And sometimes, that’s the most beautiful thing you can have.