Dr. K sent me this serum with a note about “radical simplicity.” The bottle is gorgeous — frosted glass, millennial beige, looks expensive on a shelf. But I flipped it over and spotted something funky.
They market this as ultra-clean, 10 ingredients, skin barrier heaven. But buried near the bottom: “fragrance” — no asterisk, no explanation. For a brand that leans hard on transparency, that’s a fumble.
[IMG_1: close-up of ingredient list with “fragrance” circled in red pen on a marble counter]
🔬 **The 10-Ingredient Promise**
It’s $48 for 30ml. The claim: support your moisture barrier with the bare minimum. No filler, no fluff. I bought into the minimalist pitch immediately.
Barrier Support Complex
3 ceramides + cholesterol + fatty acids — the gold standard ratio, actually
Panthenol (B5)
5% concentration, which is solid for calming redness fast
No Water?
Wait — it’s water-free. All active. That’s rare and means it’s potent
[IMG_2: serum dropper dripping onto a finger, with the bottle blurred in background]
🌿 **Ingredients vs. Vibes**
Hero lineup is legit: ceramide NP, cholesterol, and linoleic acid. Plus green tea ferment for antioxidant backup. But that “fragrance” is almost certainly a masking scent — it smells faintly floral, not like raw ceramides. Not terrible, but not “clean.”
- Ceramide NP: Plugs gaps in your barrier like spackle
- Panthenol: Soothes irritation in under 10 minutes
- Green Tea Ferment: Light antioxidant, not transformative
- Fragrance: Unnecessary. Synthetic. Why?
[IMG_3: flat lay of ingredients — the bottle, a green tea bag, and a jar of ceramide cream]
⚠️ **Thick, Then Thin**
First pump: this is a *gel*. Almost sticky. It glides on like a thin jelly but dries down in 45 seconds to a velvety finish — no grease. Weirdly satisfying.
Week two: my cheeks are less reactive. But I also got a tiny whitehead on my jaw. Could be the fragrance. Could be purging. Either way, I’m watching it.
[IMG_4: texture shot — serum on the back of a hand, slightly tacky-looking in natural light]
📋 **Did It Work?**
My barrier feels bouncier, not broken. Redness around my nose faded by maybe 30%. But the fragrance made my sensitive friend break out within 3 days — so YMMV hard.
[IMG_5: shelfie with other minimalist skincare — the Dr. K bottle looks pretty but small next to a drugstore option]
🔍 **Final Call**
It’s a good serum with a solid base formula. But the hidden fragrance makes the “clean” label feel like marketing spin, not a promise.