It started as a blog post. Into The Gloss, 2010. Emily Weiss asking models what was in their medicine cabinets.
The real product was the comment section — thousands of girls asking for the same thing: a simple, effective, no-fuss balm. Glossier was the answer.
A $14 multi-purpose skin salve. The claim? One tube for lips, cuticles, dry patches — anywhere. The marketing was genius. The product had to deliver.
The Tube
Squeezes out a perfect, tiny bead — no messy fingers.
The Texture
Thick, waxy, and occlusive. It sits on top of skin.
The Flavors
Rose smells like a grandma. Birthday Cake has edible glitter.
It’s not magic. It’s petrolatum and lanolin — the heavy lifters. They create a barrier that locks moisture in. The rest is scent and marketing.
- Petrolatum: The classic occlusive, seals everything in.
- Lanolin: Emollient wax from sheep’s wool — super hydrating.
- Castor Seed Oil: Adds a subtle gloss.
- Beeswax: Gives it that solid, waxy structure.
Waxy is the word. You feel it the second it hits your lips — a distinct, slightly tacky layer. Not a slick oil. It’s a blanket.
Week 3: My cuticles looked better. My lips? Soft, but no more hydrated than with Vaseline. The surprise? I kept reaching for it. The ritual — the scent, the cute tube — was half the point.
It prevents further dryness brilliantly. It does not absorb and heal. You wake up with it still on. That’s the point.
It defined an era of aesthetic-first beauty. You’re buying a feeling — not a miracle.