Florence Pugh’s face is everywhere for this. I bought it because I wanted to look like I just ran through a meadow, not because I needed another blush.
The real test? Wore it to a sweaty brunch and my friend asked if I was “naturally glowing” — never happens.
It’s $24 for 0.5 oz. A cheek and lip tint that promises a “second-skin flush.” The claim that got me: “buildable color that won’t slide off.” Bold for a cream.
The doe-foot applicator
Sucks up just enough product — no pooling, no waste.
The pigment load
One dot = sheer. Two dots = actual color. Three dots = clown territory.
The staying power
Survived a nap. Barely smudged on my coffee cup rim.
Photo: marianela / Unsplash
It’s not just pigment and hope. There’s actual moisture here — feels like you’re wearing a drink of water, not paint. The ingredients list reads like a smoothie recipe.
- Squalane: Locks in moisture without grease
- Hyaluronic Acid: Plumps so it doesn’t settle in lines
- Jojoba Oil: Helps it blend like a dream, not a streak
- Vitamin E: Keeps it from drying down patchy
Photo: Rosa Rafael / Unsplash
First dab — it’s deceptively watery. Then it warms up and turns into this silky mousse that melts in 15 seconds flat. No sticky residue, which I hate.
Week 2: I realized it doesn’t layer well over thick sunscreen. Got a weird separation. But on bare skin or light moisturizer? Chef’s kiss.
Photo: Karly Jones / Unsplash
My cheeks looked flushed for 6 hours straight. No caking. No dry patches. But my oily T-zone? Still oily. It’s a tint, not a miracle.
Photo: Nick Noel / Unsplash
It’s a solid, pretty tint that does exactly what it says. Not a revolution, but a reliable friend. Just don’t expect it to fix your skin.