Plume Science sent me their Regimen and I literally texted my derm “is this a cult or a cure.”
The hook is obnoxiously smart: a copper-peptide serum that’s clinically proven to outperform 0.5% retinol on fine lines and collagen — *without* the peeling, redness, or purging phase. No one’s talking about it because it’s not trendy. It’s just biochemistry.
It’s a morning + night system — $135 for a 30-day supply (serum, booster, moisturizer). The claim that made me roll my eyes: “better than retinol.” Then I read the clinical data.
Copper Tripeptide-1 Serum
Thick, almost honey-like, but sinks in 10 seconds flat — no tacky film
GHK-Cu Booster
A powder you mix in — annoying until you realize it keeps the peptide stable (most copper serums oxidize on your shelf)
Ceramide Moisturizer
Barely there texture — I wanted something richer, but my oily zones actually looked calmer
Photo: Sonia Roselli / Unsplash
Copper peptides aren’t new — they’ve been around since the 70s for wound healing. Plume just figured out how to keep them active long enough to matter. The booster powder is the key: mix fresh daily or the peptide dies.
- Copper Tripeptide-1: signals skin to make collagen + elastin — the real anti-aging engine
- GHK-Cu: the specific peptide that turns off inflammation while turning on repair
- Ceramide NP: patches the barrier so you don’t get that weird tight feeling
- Zinc PCA: keeps oil in check — unexpected bonus for breakout-prone skin
First pump felt like liquid silk — weirdly warm on application, then nothing. No sting. No flush. I actually missed the burn (that’s how brainwashed we are by retinol).
Week 2: my jawline texture went from sandpaper to almost-smooth. But here’s the weird thing — my pores looked *larger* for 4 days before shrinking. Nobody warns you about the temporary plumping phase. It’s real.
Fine lines around my mouth softened maybe 20%. No new breakouts. My skin looked… rested? That’s the best word. But my dark circles didn’t budge — peptides don’t fix sleep debt.
It’s the first retinol alternative I’d actually trust my mom with. Not perfect — but closer to real science than most of what’s on Sephora shelves.