This balm calls itself “naked” — but the ingredient list isn’t telling the whole truth.
The real issue? Kinship leans hard into the “clean” aesthetic while using synthetic fragrance that’s a known irritant. Not exactly the vibe they’re selling.
$28 for 3.4 oz. They claim it dissolves everything from waterproof mascara to SPF without stripping your skin.
Papaya Enzymes
Gently exfoliate while you massage — no extra scrub needed
Moringa Oil
Grabs onto makeup and pollution like a magnet
Jojoba Beads
Microplastic-free, but still give that satisfying slip
Photo: Poko Skincare / Unsplash
Hero ingredients? Papaya extract is low on the list — more of a marketing cameo than a star. The balm base is heavy on ethylhexyl palmitate, which can clog pores if you’re prone to congestion.
- Papaya Extract: Softens top layer, but concentration is meh
- Moringa Oil: Good for binding impurities
- Jojoba Oil: Balances oil production
- Fragrance (Parfum): Unnecessary — and a common breakout trigger
First touch: like scooping chilled butter. Melts into an oily slip that dissolves a full face in 60 seconds. No tugging. Rinses clean-ish — but leaves a slight film if you don’t double cleanse.
Week 3: Surprise — my skin felt smoother, but I got two tiny bumps on my chin. Classic “clean” balm behavior: works great until your skin decides to be dramatic.
Makeup melted cleanly. Skin felt soft. But the fragrance made my eyes water on heavy removal days — and the “clean” label feels more marketing than science.
A fine balm that’s overhyped. If you’re already loyal to “clean” beauty, you’ll like it — but don’t expect a miracle, and don’t trust the “naked” promise blindly.