Founder Ozohu Adoh quit corporate law to chase shea butter in Abuja. That’s not a metaphor — she literally got in a car and drove to women’s cooperatives in northern Nigeria.
The wild part? She launched Epara without a single PR sample. No influencers. No launch party. Just cold emails to editors with a handwritten note about where each ingredient was harvested. It worked because the product wasn’t trying to be “luxury for Black women” — it was just luxury, full stop.
Radiance Regenerating Oil. $135 for 30ml. The claim that made me roll my eyes: “regenerates skin’s moisture barrier.” Every oil says that. But this one had me at first ingredient list scan.
Dry oil texture
Pours like honey, absorbs in 11 seconds. No grease halo on your pillowcase.
Scent profile
Smells like a spa that doesn’t charge $300 — earthy, not floral. No synthetic fragrance.
The dropper
Actually works. Not those tiny glass ones that suck up three drops. This one delivers.
Photo: Element5 Digital / Unsplash
Adoh sources ingredients from high-altitude regions in Africa — think Ethiopian highlands, Moroccan mountains. Plants grow slower up there, concentrate more active compounds. Smart. Most luxury brands just buy pre-processed oils from bulk suppliers.
- Baobab oil: Liquid gold from Senegal — sinks in like water, locks moisture for 12 hours
- Kigelia africana: Tree bark extract that actually firms skin (not just marketing fluff)
- Marula oil: Higher antioxidant content than argan, less hype
- Moringa: Purifies without stripping — the gentle micellar water of oils
First drop on my wrist — immediate thought: “This is going to break me out.” It’s thick. Amber-colored. Looks scary for oily-combo skin. But it melted in. Like butter on a warm pan. Zero film.
Week two: My forehead stopped producing its own grease slick by noon. That’s never happened. Not with $200 French oils, not with drugstore squalane. Something about the altitude-grown baobab is different.
Fine lines around my mouth? Still there, but softer. The big win: my skin stopped panic-producing oil. It’s calmer. More boring. Boring skin is good skin.
This isn’t a miracle in a bottle. But it’s the closest I’ve found to an oil that actually behaves like skincare instead of salad dressing.