I bought this for my chapped winter lips. Then I accidentally used it to glue down a flyaway on the subway and realized I’d been gaslit by the packaging.
It’s not a lip balm. It’s a survival stick in a tube — and the label is playing small on purpose.
It’s a $16 tube of medical-grade lanolin + petrolatum from Lanolips. The claim? One balm for lips, cuticles, dry patches, flyaways, and “highlighting.” I rolled my eyes, but my cuticles were begging.
Texture that refuses to slide
It’s thick — think chilled butter. Not greasy. Stays put for hours without reapplication.
The smell is… sheep
Honest lanolin scent. Mild but real. If you hate barnyard vibes, get the coconut version.
One tube, six months
I’ve had mine since November. Still have half left. This thing outlasts relationships.
Photo: Poko Skincare / Unsplash
No water, no fragrance, no filler. Just lanolin (the same stuff nurses use on cracked nipples), petrolatum, and shea butter. It’s boring on purpose — and that’s the point.
- Lanolin: seals moisture in, doesn’t just sit on top
- Petrolatum: the OG barrier builder, stops wind from wrecking your face
- Shea butter: sinks in fast, saves your nail beds from winter
- No water: means no dilution, just pure occlusive power
Photo: Jocelyn Morales / Unsplash
Scoop with your pinky. It’s dense, almost waxy. Rub between fingers and it melts into a clear, glossy film — no white residue. Took 12 seconds to absorb into my knuckles.
Week 2: I dabbed it on my cheekbones as a highlighter. Looked dewy, not greasy. But don’t use under makeup — it’ll break down foundation like a makeup wipe.
Photo: Marius Muresan / Unsplash
My cuticles stopped peeling in 4 days. My lips survived a 20°F windstorm without cracking. But my hair? Still frizzy — this is a tamer, not an anti-frizz serum. Don’t expect miracles.
It won’t change your life, but it’ll fix your cuticles, save your lips, and make you look dewy for a date — all without a second product. That’s enough.