I caved. The hype was too loud. For 30 days, I slathered my face in the Charlotte Tilbury Magic Cream every single morning.
My bank account wept. My skin? Let’s talk.
A $100 moisturizer that promises an “instant glow” and “plumped, hydrated” skin. The claim? It’s a red-carpet secret in a jar.
Instant Glow
Uses light-reflecting particles for that “lit-from-within” look.
Plumping Complex
Claims to boost hydration by 135% in one hour.
Anti-Aging Actives
Has a peptide and vitamin C blend to target fine lines.
Photo: Brayden Prato / Unsplash
It’s a cocktail. The good stuff is there, but so is a heavy fragrance blend. A press release would never admit it smells like a 90s floral perfume.
- Hyaluronic Acid: Binds moisture to skin
- Vitamin C: Brightens and protects
- Peptides: Signal collagen production
- Rosehip Oil: A source of fatty acids
Thick. Rich. Like whipped butter. Takes a full 60 seconds of patting to sink in—not 10. Leaves a dewy, slightly tacky finish.
By week three, I realized it’s a makeup primer in disguise. My foundation glided on flawlessly. But at night? Too heavy. Gave me a few closed comedones.
My dry patches vanished. That “glow” is real—but it’s partly cosmetic. Zero change in my fine lines. The hydration is undeniable, though.
It’s a fantastic product that’s also wildly overpriced for what it does. The magic is in the instant gratification, not long-term transformation.