This mask is literally just dirt. Like, scraped from a single hole in the ground on Skye. The quarry changes color with the rain, so each batch pulls different minerals — your jar is never the same as mine.
That’s not marketing fluff. It means the texture shifts seasonally. My summer batch was grittier. Winter one is almost creamy. You’re buying a timestamp of Scottish weather.
**Section 2 of 6**
It’s a clay mask. £42 for 100ml. I tried it because someone said “it’s like getting a facial from a Hebridean witch” and I was sold.
Zero additives
No preservatives. No fragrance. Just dried clay + water. It smells like rocks.
Single-origin clay
Most masks blend clays from multiple sources. This one is strictly from that one quarry on Skye.
It expires
Because there’s nothing in it, it dries out faster than standard masks. Use it within 6 months or it turns into actual dust.
Photo: Mockup Free / Unsplash
**Section 3 of 6**
Three main minerals, and they’re all pulled from volcanic ash deposits that settled in that quarry 60 million years ago. It’s basically fossilized island in a pot.
- Silica: Sucks up oil without stripping the barrier
- Alumina: Gives it that slight grit for physical exfoliation
- Iron Oxide: That grey-green color, also calming
- Montmorillonite: The main clay, draws out congestion
Photo: ibnu ihza / Unsplash
**Section 4 of 6**
First time I put it on, I panicked. It dries in under 10 minutes — like, fully hard. You can’t talk. You can’t smile. You just sit there looking like a gargoyle. Weirdly satisfying.
By week three I noticed something annoying: my pores looked smaller but my skin felt tighter. Not in a good way. I had to learn to not leave it on until it cracks. 7 minutes, max.
Photo: Content Pixie / Unsplash
**Section 5 of 6**
My T-zone stopped producing enough oil to fry an egg. But it did nothing for my dark spots — that’s not what clay does. Blackheads visibly shrunk after 4 uses. Redness? Same as before.
Photo: El S / Unsplash
**Section 6 of 6**
It’s weird, it’s specific, and it’s overpriced for mud — but it actually works for oily skin in a way most clay masks don’t. I’ll keep buying it, but only in summer.