Dieux Airy-Feather Cream: Is It Actually Clean?

Greenwashing Check
Dieux’s new gel-cream promises ‘clean’ formulas—but a closer look at the preservative system and fragrance claims tells a different story.
Expert Analysis · Honest Reviews · Real Results
1.🧪Clean on Paper

Dieux wants you to believe their Airy-Feather Cream is so pure you could eat it. They lean *hard* into “clean beauty” — no fragrance, no “nasties,” all virtue.

But here’s the thing their marketing glosses over: the preservative system uses sodium benzoate and potassium sorbate. That’s not bad — it’s actually smart for a water-based gel. But “clean” brands usually brag about “natural” preservatives. Dieux uses the same ones as mass-market drugstore lotions. That’s either refreshingly honest or a convenient silence.

2.🔍What $48 Gets You

It’s a gel-cream, $48 for 50ml. The claim that made me buy it: “feather-light hydration that doesn’t sit on top of the skin.” I’ve heard that lie before. This one actually delivers.

1

No Fragrance, No Drama

Zero scent. Not even a “natural” essential oil whisper. Rare for “clean.”

2

Absorbs in 8 Seconds

Not exaggerating. Rub it in and it’s gone — no tacky film, no waiting.

3

Pump Actually Works

Nice pump. Dispenses a perfect pea-sized blob. Small wins matter.

A tray with a bunch of bottles and a vase of flowers

Photo: Aleksandrs Karevs / Unsplash

3.📋The Ingredient Reality

The hero list is short and boring — which is the point. No peptides, no retinol, no magic. Just solid barrier support. The preservative thing still bugs me though — it’s fine, but don’t pretend it’s revolutionary.

  • Glycerin: pulls water in, keeps it there
  • Sodium PCA: your skin’s own moisture magnet
  • Sodium Benzoate: preservative, works great, sounds scary
  • Potassium Sorbate: same vibe, keeps mold out
a couple of bottles and a mirror

Photo: Mariia Shalabaieva / Unsplash

4.🧴Feels Like Nothing

First pump — it’s a bouncy gel that melts into water on contact. No slip, no drag, no residue. I literally touched my face 10 seconds later and felt *nothing* — just clean skin.

Week 2: my oilier zones stopped overproducing. My dry patches didn’t drink it up and ask for more. It just… balanced. Unexpectedly boring in the best way.

💡

One Thing: Use it on damp skin — not wet, damp. Pat a few drops of water on first. The glycerin grabs that extra moisture and locks it in. Game-changer for dry skin.
person holding black pen in close up photography

Photo: Chalo Garcia / Unsplash

5.⚠️What Actually Changed

My skin stopped feeling tight after washing. No breakouts. No irritation. But also no glow-up — it’s maintenance, not magic. Fine lines stayed the same.

Buy if
You’re oily-combo, hate texture, or want a no-fuss AM moisturizer under SPF
⏭️

Skip if
You need heavy cream for dry winter skin or want anti-aging actives
💰

Worth it?
$48 is fair for the texture and simplicity. Not a steal, not a scam.
woman in white tank top

Photo: Fleur Kaan / Unsplash

6.Final Call

It’s a good moisturizer that happens to be “clean” — not a clean moisturizer that’s good. The difference matters.

7.5/10
Solid, boring, actually hydrates
🛍️

Where to Buy: Dieux site direct — they do a travel size for $18 if you’re skeptical. Try that first.