It started in 1851 with a guy named John Kiehl selling leeches and bear grease from a single Manhattan storefront.
The real magic happened a century later when an apprentice, Irving Morse, decided customers needed a no-nonsense moisturizer that could survive a New York winter — and a subway ride to work.
Today, it’s the Ultra Facial Cream. $38 for 1.7 oz. The claim? 24-hour hydration. I tried it because my radiator heat is a war crime against skin.
Squalane
Sinks in stupid fast — like 15 seconds fast.
Glacial Glycoprotein
A fancy term for an extract from Antarctic sea microbes that helps skin retain water.
No Frills Jar
The packaging is aggressively plain. It’s giving “scientist, not influencer.”
Photo: Poko Skincare / Unsplash
It’s a short, focused list. No fairy dust. The heroes are moisture magnets and barrier supporters.
- Squalane: Mimics skin’s own oils, no greasy residue
- Glacial Glycoprotein: Helps prevent water loss in dry air
- Glycerin: The OG humectant, pulls moisture in
- Vitamin E: A gentle antioxidant to soothe
It’s a rich, dense cream that vanishes. Leaves a faint, cool sensation — not a tingle, more like a drink of water for your face.
By week two, my foundation stopped clinging to dry patches. The surprise? It’s boringly consistent. No drama, just hydration.
My skin was consistently cushioned. No flakiness. But it’s not a miracle — a deep wrinkle didn’t budge. It just does its job.
Sometimes the classics are classics for a reason. This is the skincare equivalent of a perfectly broken-in leather jacket.