Farmacy just swapped real honey for lab-grown stuff. And the texture? Chaos. Some people are *furious*. Others swear it’s better.
The real drama: the old version felt like a warm hug. This one feels like a polite handshake. That matters when you’re paying $48.
🧪 **What You’re Actually Getting**
It’s Farmacy’s Honey Halo Ceramide Moisturizer — now with synthetic honey. $48 for 1.7 oz. They claim it’s “identical” to bee-made. I call bullshit until proven otherwise.
Synthetic Honey
Smells less like honey. More like a vague floral candle.
Ceramide Complex
Same barrier-repair squad. Still works.
Texture Shift
Thinner. Slicker. Slides on like a primer.
Photo: ibnu ihza / Unsplash
📊 **The Ingredient Shuffle**
Old formula: real honey + propolis + ceramides. New formula: lab-fermented honey mimic + propolis + ceramides. The swap is for sustainability — bees are stressed, honey harvest is messy.
- Synthetic Honey: Lab-grown, no bees involved — same humectant power? Almost
- Propolis: Still there, still calming redness
- Ceramide NP: Locks moisture in, no change
- Glycerin: Still the hydration workhorse
💬 **First Touch vs. Two Weeks In**
First dab: weirdly lightweight. Like a gel-cream hybrid. Absorbs in 8 seconds — no joke. But that warm, sticky honey scent? Gone. Now it’s faintly sweet, like a clean towel.
Week two: my skin didn’t freak out. But I missed the original’s “I’m wearing a cozy blanket” feel. Unexpected win: no breakouts. The old version sometimes clogged my T-zone. This one didn’t.
🔍 **Did It Actually Do Anything?**
My dry patches? Still there, but less angry. Fine lines? Same as before. The ceramides are doing their job, but the honey swap didn’t magically transform anything.
📝 **Verdict**
It’s a fine moisturizer. But it’s not the same product. If you want the original vibe, stock up on old stock. If you’re open to change, this works — just don’t expect the same soul.