Fleuria Cica Bounce Cream: Clean or Greenwashed?

Greenwashing Check
Its ‘100% natural’ label hides a formula full of synthetic stabilizers—here’s the ingredient truth.
Expert Analysis · Honest Reviews · Real Results
🔬 **Clean Girl Trap**

Fleuria slapped “100% natural” on the front of this jar. Turn it around — the second ingredient is a synthetic emulsifier. That’s not a flex.

Greenwashing isn’t always lying. Sometimes it’s just… omitting. This cream leans hard on the *Centella* trend but loads up on stabilizers to keep it shelf-stable for 24 months. Mother Nature doesn’t do preservatives that well.

[IMG_1: Close-up of ingredient list with synthetic stabilizers circled in red pen]

🧴 **Bounce House**

$38 for 50ml. The claim: “Cica bounce cream for glass skin.” I bought it because the texture looked like a cloud in a jar — and I’m a sucker for pretty textures.

1

Bounce Gel Texture

Feels like a memory foam pillow for your face. Jiggly, weirdly satisfying.

2

Cica Complex

They say 10,000ppm of Centella Asiatica extract. Sounds impressive until you realize “extract” is mostly water.

3

No Fragrance Oils

Actually true. Smells like nothing. Thank god — the “natural” scented stuff usually breaks me out.

[IMG_2: Spoon scooping out the jelly-like texture — that satisfying bounce shot]

📜 **Ingredient Reality Check**

Here’s the thing: Butylene Glycol is the second ingredient. That’s a synthetic humectant. Not bad — but not “100% natural.” The star is *Madecassoside* (the actual wound-healing compound in cica) at a decent concentration. But they buried it under thickeners and synthetic esters.

  • Centella Asiatica Extract: Mostly water, sorry
  • Madecassoside: The real healer — acne spots beware
  • Butylene Glycol: Synthetic hydrator, not natural
  • Hydrogenated Polyisobutene: Fancy name for synthetic oil — gives that bounce

[IMG_3: Ingredient deck screenshot with “100% natural” claim highlighted next to synthetic ingredients]

🌿 **First Touch**

It’s cold. Like, fridge-cold even at room temp. Spreads like a gel-cream hybrid — disappears in about 12 seconds. My dry skin felt *okay* after the first application. Not moisturized, more like… patted on the head.

Week 2: My pores looked smaller. Not smaller like a filter, but genuinely less noticeable. The cica calmed some redness around my nose. But by hour 4, my T-zone got slick. This is not for oily gals.

💡

One Thing: Apply to *damp* skin only. On dry skin it pills like a bad sweater. Spritz some thermal water first — trust me.

[IMG_4: Texture spread on inner arm — showing how it melts into skin]

❌ **The Honest Before/After**

Redness reduced by maybe 30%. Texture felt smoother. But my dehydrated lines? Still there. It’s a surface-level soother, not a hydrating deep dive.

Buy if
You have reactive skin and want a lightweight, non-greasy calming layer for summer
⏭️

Skip if
You’re dry, dehydrated, or expect “100% natural” to mean *actually* natural
💰

Worth it?
$38 for 50ml of cica water + thickeners? Only if you love the texture. The results are mid.

[IMG_5: Side-by-side of skin before and after — subtle improvement, not dramatic]

✅ **Final Call**

It’s a pleasant gel-cream that does *some* calming. But the “100% natural” claim is marketing BS. You’re paying for texture, not transparency.

6.5/10
Pretty bounce, shady claims
🛍️

Where to Buy: Sephora or Fleuria’s site. Get the mini first — $18 for 15ml — unless you love wasting money on mediocre moisturizers.