Isle of Skye’s Adaptogen Serum went viral for being “100% clean” — but ingredient #3 is rose essential oil, a known contact allergen. Feels like putting a “natural” sticker on a lit match.
The brand leans hard on “clinical strength adaptogens” but skips the part where fragrance is the #1 cause of irritation in skincare. That’s not clean — that’s clever marketing.
$54 for 1 oz. Claims to “rebalance stressed skin” in 7 days. The packaging is gorgeous — heavy glass, apothecary chic. That’s what got me.
Adaptogen Complex
Ashwagandha + rhodiola — meant to calm cortisol on skin. Sounds fancy.
Squalane Base
Lightweight, sinks in 8 seconds. Non-greasy. Actually nice.
Fragrance (Hidden)
Rose oil + geranium. Smells spa-like. Also irritates reactive skin.
Photo: Poko Skincare / Unsplash
Two legit adaptogens doing the work — but they’re drowned out by a fragrant essential oil that does nothing for stress. The hero: squalane. The villain: marketing.
- Ashwagandha: lowers cortisol in skin cells — real science
- Rhodiola: antioxidant + fatigue fighter — good
- Rose Oil: smells expensive, reddens sensitive skin
- Squalane: hydrates without clogging — the real MVP
Photo: Poko Skincare / Unsplash
Watery gel. Slides like silk. Absorbs before you blink. Smells like a fancy hotel lobby — which is lovely until your cheeks flush.
Week 2: My combo skin looked glowy. But my friend with rosacea tried it and got bumps within 48 hours. Not a universal win.
Photo: Greg Rakozy / Unsplash
My redness didn’t change. Texture improved slightly — less rough patches. But my stressed skin looked… the same. The glow was just hydration + squalane.
Photo: Kimia Zarifi / Unsplash
Greenwashed. A solid base formula ruined by unnecessary fragrance. If you want adaptogens, go with a fragrance-free brand like Dieux or Experiment.