I put Ourself on one arm, my usual La Roche-Posay Cicaplast on the other, and sat under a space heater for 30 minutes. The Ourself side felt tight and thirsty by minute 10. The Cicaplast side was still dewy.
Emma sold the dream of “barrier repair” — but in a dry room, this cream evaporated like it had somewhere better to be. My lab reader confirmed it couldn’t hold moisture past 28% humidity.
It’s a $48 moisturizer claiming to “reset your barrier” with a proprietary peptide complex. Texture is a fluffy gel-cream hybrid — almost mousse-like. Scentless. The influencer promise: “glass skin in 3 days.”
Peptide Fusion
A blend of copper and tripeptides — sounds fancy, but concentration isn’t listed.
Squalane Base
Lightweight, but not nearly enough for dry skin — think humid climate only.
No Occlusives
The biggest red flag — petrolatum, shea, waxes? None. Nothing seals the moisture in.
It’s a clean formula — no fragrances, no nonsense. But “clean” doesn’t mean “effective.” Here’s what’s doing the heavy lifting (and what isn’t):
- Copper Peptide: Wound healing — good for redness, slow for hydration
- Squalane: Light moisture, evaporates fast without a seal
- Glycerin: The real MVP here — but too low on the INCI list
- Ceramide NP: One single ceramide? La Roche has three. Come on.
Smooth. Spreads like chilled butter. Absorbs in 12 seconds — no joke. I thought, damn, this is luxury. Then my skin drank it and asked for more in 45 minutes.
By week two, my cheeks were flaking in the morning — I never flake. The barrier felt thinner, not stronger. What surprised me? It works beautifully as a makeup primer. That’s it. That’s its only job.
My redness? Same. My dehydration lines? Deeper. My makeup? Sat better because the cream is so light — but that’s cosmetic, not therapeutic.
Emma, I love your coffee content. But this cream is a pretty lie — it feels nice going on and does nothing after. Buy it if you want a $48 Instagram prop. For barrier repair? Spend $18 on Cicaplast.