Imagine leaving a corner office at Goldman Sachs to hunt for shea butter in Nigeria. That’s Epara founder Ozohu Adoh — and she did it because Western luxury skincare had zero clue what melanin-rich skin actually needed.
Every ingredient in the Rose Gold Edit has a literal origin story. The moringa isn’t just moringa — it’s from a specific women’s co-op in Ghana where they hand-harvest it at dawn.
It’s a 3-piece ritual set: cleanser, serum, moisturizer. $275. The claim that made me actually hit “add to cart” was “visible firmness in 14 days” — bold for a brand that doesn’t use retinoids.
Fermented Rice Water Cleanser
Not stripping. Actually smells like sake but in a bougie way.
Illuminating Serum
Thicker than water, thinner than oil — lands somewhere between honey and a light gel.
Regenerating Moisturizer
The one thing you’d buy alone if you had to pick. Sinks in before you finish blinking.
Photo: Poko Skincare / Unsplash
This isn’t “inspired by” Africa — these are ingredients your grandmother probably used. The hero lineup is absurdly specific: baobab from Senegal, African potato from South Africa, and a wild-harvested Kalahari melon seed oil that smells faintly of cucumber.
- Baobab oil: absorbs instantly, zero greasy film — better than squalane for oily zones
- African potato: anti-inflammatory without that tingly sting most calming ingredients have
- Marula: not the trendy one — this is cold-pressed, unrefined, and smells like roasted nuts
- Kalahari melon: lightweight enough for daytime under SPF, actually hydrates vs just sitting there
Photo: Vera Marian / Unsplash
First pump of the moisturizer: it’s deceptively thick — almost like a soft buttercream frosting. Then it melts. Literally liquifies on contact. I sat there waiting for it to feel heavy. It never did.
Week 2: my skin started holding moisture longer into the day. Weird thing — the serum gave me one tiny whitehead on day 4, then nothing. I think it was purging. After that, my pores looked… smaller? Not vanished, but visibly less interested in being pores.
After 3 weeks: skin looks more even — not lighter, just less patchy. The firming claim? Subtle. My jawline looks slightly more defined, but I wouldn’t call it a facelift in a jar. Dark spots from old breakouts faded about 30%. They’re still there, just less rude about it.
This is luxury skincare that actually earns its price tag — not because of packaging (though the rose gold is pretty), but because the ingredients have a point. It’s heritage, not hype.