That viral pink bottle is a trap. You see it everywhere — a juicy promise of clear, dewy skin and a clean conscience.
The real question isn’t if it makes you glow. It’s if Glow Recipe‘s entire “clean” ethos is just fragrance in a fancy jar.
A $39 serum-hybrid. The claim? A “clean,” water-light dew boost with pore-smoothing niacinamide. Sold.
The Scent
Overpowering fake watermelon candy — it lingers.
The Feel
Slick, not sticky. Absorbs in 15 seconds flat.
The Finish
Glass-skin sheen. Not for oily T-zones at noon.
Photo: Lina Verovaya / Unsplash
Niacinamide and hyaluronic acid are the real heroes here. They hydrate and smooth. But the star billing goes to watermelon extract — which is mostly water.
- Niacinamide (2%): Minimizes pores & evens tone
- Hyaluronic Acid: Plumps with hydration
- Watermelon Extract: Provides antioxidants (and scent)
- Fragrance/Parfum: That candy smell — not so ‘clean’
Photo: Element5 Digital / Unsplash
Cold, slippery texture — like aloe gel. The scent hits you first, a Jolly Rancher to the face.
Week 2: My cheek pores looked airbrushed. But my chin? Broke out in tiny, stubborn bumps. The fragrance, maybe.
Measurable glow? Yes. Pore blurring? For sure. But “clean” is a stretch with that much perfume. My skin was shinier, but also more reactive.
It’s a great illuminating serum wrapped in greenwashing. The performance is there, but the “clean” marketing feels as synthetic as the scent.