I bought Epara Moisture Balm for my Sahara-desert cheeks. Now I use it on my cuticles, my brows, and the dry patches on my elbows that look like lizard skin.
The real flex? It turns split ends into something I can actually hide until my next haircut. That’s $88 well spent.
It’s a thick, buttery balm from Epara — a Black-owned luxury brand. Price tag: $88. They claim it’s an intense moisturizer for face and body. I called bullshit until I tried it.
Melts on contact
Touch it once and it liquefies into oil. No tugging, no residue.
Stays put for hours
It doesn’t vanish into your skin in 10 minutes. You wake up and it’s still there.
Zero fragrance
Smells like nothing. Perfect if you hate scented stuff near your eyes.
Photo: Soheil Kmp / Unsplash
It’s not a 20-ingredient circus. Just a few heavy hitters that do the job without drama. The shea butter is the star — it’s unrefined, so it’s still got all the vitamins.
- Shea Butter: Locks in moisture without clogging pores
- Baobab Oil: Sinks in fast, no greasy film
- Vitamin E: Heals cracks and softens rough spots
- Jojoba Oil: Mimics skin’s natural sebum, so it actually absorbs
Photo: Content Pixie / Unsplash
It’s a solid balm — think chilled butter. You scrape a tiny bit, and it melts into a silky oil that disappears in about 10 seconds. First night, I slathered it on my face and woke up looking like a glazed donut. Too much.
Week two, I learned: a pea-size for the whole face. Now? It’s my go-to for dry nostrils in winter — weirdly specific, but if you know, you know.
Photo: yunona uritsky / Unsplash
My cuticles stopped peeling after 3 days. The dry patch on my left elbow? Gone by day 5. My split ends still exist, but they’re less obvious — a dab on damp ends does the trick. My face? Hydrated, not greasy. No breakouts.
It’s not a miracle in a jar. But it’s the most versatile balm I own, and it earns its spot in my bag every single day.