I saw the glue-grip claims and rolled my eyes. Then I watched a girl dunk her face in a pool and come out with perfect makeup. That’s not normal.
The real flex? This $9 tube holds my foundation tighter than the $48 Tatcha gel I hoarded samples of. Nobody talks about the finish — it’s not sticky like you’d expect. It dries down weirdly velvety.
It’s a clear, tacky gel from e.l.f. Cosmetics that claims 16-hour grip for $9. I bought it specifically to prove it wouldn’t work on my oily T-zone.
Tack Level
Sticky enough to hold a penny upside-down. Not sticky enough to trap your baby hairs in a web.
Drying Time
30 seconds to set. Not 5 minutes like some gel primers. You can rush and still win.
Pilling Factor
Zero pilling under matte foundations. Cream blush will slide if you don’t wait the full 30.
Photo: Nada Gamal / Unsplash
Glycerin is the first ingredient — that’s the glue. But it also has aloe to stop that tight, mask-like feeling. The real shocker? No silicone. So no clogged pores from dimethicone overload.
- Glycerin: Creates the tacky grip layer that grabs pigment
- Aloe Vera: Prevents that drying, shrink-wrapped feel
- Panthenol (B5): Calms redness so you don’t look reactive
- Phenoxyethanol: Keeps it fresh without parabens
Photo: Poko Skincare / Unsplash
Squeezed out like a clear, loose Jell-O shot. Spreads weirdly — you have to pat, not rub. First wear? My makeup slid off my nose by hour 4. I almost threw it out.
Week 3: I stopped globbing it on. A pea-sized dot, pressed in. Suddenly my foundation survived a 90-minute workout. The trick is less product, not more.
Photo: Lidye / Unsplash
My blush stayed visible for 10 hours. My nose still got shiny by hour 6 — it’s not a miracle worker. But my foundation didn’t break apart into gross patches. That’s a win.
Photo: Tato Lopez / Unsplash
It’s not the best primer I’ve ever used — it’s the best primer for the price, period. If you’re not oily, this is your new ride-or-die.