50,000 people sat on a waitlist for a $42 moisturizer. I sat on it for 60 days.
The real flex? It didn’t just hydrate — it stopped my tretinoin flaking in week two. That’s when I stopped rolling my eyes at the hype.
Dieux calls this a “barrier-supporting moisturizer.” $42 for 50ml. The claim: repair your moisture barrier in days, not months. I called bullshit. Then I caved.
Biomimetic lipids
Three types that match your skin’s own oils — not just petrolatum slathered on top
5% Niacinamide
Enough to calm redness without that weird pilling most niacinamide creams do
Glycerin + Squalane
The boring workhorses that actually hold water in your skin
Photo: Alexandra Tran / Unsplash
No fragrance. No essential oils. No bullshit “adaptogenic mushroom” nonsense. Just lipids and humectants that have decades of research behind them. The hero is the ceramide complex — it’s the same ratio found naturally in healthy skin.
- Ceramide NP/AP/EOP: Rebuilds the bricks of your barrier
- 5% Niacinamide: Shrinks pores and fades red patches
- Squalane: Sinks in like your skin was thirsty for it
- Glycerin: The MVP that pulls water from the air
Photo: Rosa Rafael / Unsplash
First pump: weirdly thin. Not a thick cream — more like a gel-cream that breaks into water on contact. Absorbs in 11 seconds flat. Zero grease on my pillowcase.
Week two my cheeks stopped feeling tight after washing. Week three a patch of eczema on my jaw just… disappeared. The surprise? It actually works better on damp skin. Dry application feels like you’re wasting it.
Photo: Daniel Barnes / Unsplash
My barrier is objectively stronger. Less redness, no flaking, and my morning face doesn’t feel tight. My sebaceous filaments? Still there. It’s not a miracle — it’s just really good at one thing.
The hype is earned — but only if you have a compromised barrier. If your skin is already happy, save your $42 for a fancy sunscreen.