Josh Rosebrook’s Vital Balm Cream looks like a million bucks on a vanity. But flip it over, and you’ll find a plastic jar labeled “biophotonic” glass. That’s not glass. That’s marketing.
The real issue? A $68 balm in misleading packaging feels less like clean beauty and more like a clever upcharge. The ingredients are stellar — but the container is a trust test.
It’s a rich, waterless balm that Josh Rosebrook calls a “nutrient concentrate.” $68 for 1.7 oz. The claim that got me: “complete barrier repair in one jar.” Bold. I had to see.
Texture Lie
It’s not a cream. It’s a solid butter that melts on contact — think coconut oil’s high-maintenance cousin.
Scent Surprise
Smells like a farmer’s market herb bundle. Not perfumey. Just… honest dirt and rosemary.
Application Friction
You have to warm it between fingers for 10 seconds or it sits on skin like wax. Not lazy-friendly.
Photo: Mockup Free / Unsplash
The formula is genuinely lush. No water, no fillers — just oils, butters, and extracts. But here’s the thing: the hero ingredients are common in high-end balms. Nothing revolutionary, just well-sourced.
- Tamanu Oil: Calms redness and scars — smells funky though
- Sea Buckthorn: That orange tint? This. High vitamin C, stains pillowcases
- Beeswax: Locks everything in — not vegan, heads up
- Echinacea: Fancy name for coneflower. Anti-inflammatory, but low in the list
Photo: Kaeme / Unsplash
First touch: like scooping cold butter. Melted on my palm into an oily slick that took 3 minutes to fully absorb. My skin felt velvety, not greasy — but my T-zone disagreed by morning.
Two weeks in, my dry patches were gone. But I broke out on my chin. Turns out, this is too rich for combo skin unless you use a pea size max. The surprise? It fixed my cuticles better than any hand cream ever has.
Photo: Aleksandrs Karevs / Unsplash
My cheeks felt plump and calm. My forehead stayed the same. The balm delivered on moisture, but the “repair” claim is vague — my barrier wasn’t broken, so I can’t verify that.
It’s not greenwashing — the ingredients are clean. But the packaging claim is a stretch, and the price is for the brand name. Good balm, not a miracle. Buy it for the formula, not the glass.