Everyone’s obsessed with ‘clean’ beauty. But what does that even mean?
For Glossier Lash Slick, it means a “clean formula” and “no smudging.” I had to check the receipts.
It’s a $18 tubing mascara. The claim? A clean, buildable, no-flake formula. Promises a lot.
Tubing Formula
Wraps each lash in a polymer tube—comes off with warm water.
Fibers
Contains tiny fibers to extend length, not volume.
Clean at Sephora
Meets Sephora’s “Clean” seal standards. Which, honestly, is a low bar.
Photo: Alexander Grey / Unsplash
It’s not packed with scary synthetics. But “clean” is a vibe, not a regulation. The hero is the polymer film-former.
- Acrylates Copolymer: The tubing agent that creates the washable film.
- Propanediol: A plant-derived humectant—basically moisture.
- Beeswax: Helps the formula grip to lashes.
- Panthenol (Pro-Vitamin B5): A conditioning agent to soften.
Photo: Nick Noel / Unsplash
The wand is a skinny plastic comb. The formula is thin—like tinted water. Zero clumps on the first coat. Zero.
After two weeks, I noticed the tube dries out faster than my other mascaras. By week three, it was getting a little crusty on the wand.
It gives a perfect, feathery lash look. Truly no smudging on my oily lids. But it also gives zero drama. It’s a my-lashes-but-better, on a very good day.
It’s a relatively simple, gentle formula. But “clean” is a marketing halo here, not a transformative truth. It’s a good, basic mascara with great removal.