Everyone’s feed is flooded with that pink bottle. It’s the serum that launched a thousand reels.
The real question isn’t about the glow — it’s whether a brand built on ‘clean fruit’ is just juicing your wallet.
Glow Recipe’s Watermelon Glow Niacinamide Dew Drops. $39 for 1 oz. They promise a “fruit-powered,” clean, pore-blurring radiance. I wanted the glow without the greenwashing.
Niacinamide
5% to help with pores and oil.
Watermelon Extract
The star fruit — for hydration.
Dewy Finish
Meant to give that lit-from-within sheen.
Photo: The Design Lady / Unsplash
It’s not just watermelon water. The formula is smarter than the branding. Niacinamide is the real workhorse here.
- Niacinamide (5%): Pore-refining & oil control
- Watermelon Extract: Lightweight hydration
- Hyaluronic Acid: Plumps skin
- Cactus Water: Adds another layer of moisture
Photo: Clarissa Watson / Unsplash
Texture is a sticky-slick gel. Absorbs in 20 seconds but leaves a distinct tackiness — not a dry-down. You feel it.
Surprise: that tacky layer is a makeup magnet. Applied before foundation? Perfection. Worn alone? My hair stuck to my face all day.
Photo: Fleur Kaan / Unsplash
My skin was definitely more hydrated. Pores? Slightly smoother. But the “glow” is more surface-level sheen than deep cellular change.
It’s a good, multitasking product with a fun vibe. But ‘clean’ is a vibe, too — the formula is fine, not revolutionary. You’re buying the experience.