Another “clean” balm. Another promise. My sensitive, acne-prone skin is a harsh critic.
The real test? A formula that dissolves sunscreen without leaving a film that clogs pores overnight.
It’s a solid-to-oil makeup melter from Farmacy ($36). The hook? It “feeds your skin’s microbiome.” Bold.
Moringa + Papaya Enzymes
They’re the workhorses that break down mascara and sebum.
Probiotic Complex
The “good bacteria” claim. Sounds fancy, does it survive the rinse?
No Mineral Oil
Key for us — less chance of a pore-clogging residue.
Photo: Harper Sunday / Unsplash
It’s heavy on plant butters and oils. Good for melting, risky for acne. The probiotic bit is likely just fermented extracts — soothing, not live cultures.
- Moringa Butter: The main emulsifier – rich, but can be heavy.
- Sunflower Oil: High in linoleic acid, which acne-prone skin often lacks.
- Lactobacillus Ferment: A calming postbiotic, not an active probiotic.
- Tuberose Extract: The fragrance. The press release doesn’t mention this, but it’s there.
Photo: Lina Verovaya / Unsplash
Warms to a silky, luxurious oil. Smells like a spa — not “fragrance-free.” Rinses clean-ish. Not that tight, squeaky clean.
After two weeks, no new major breakouts. The surprise? It didn’t *fully* rinse on its own for me. Left a faint veil — a double cleanse is non-negotiable.
Photo: Igor Rand / Unsplash
Makeup removal: 10/10. Skin feel: soft, not stripped. Zero dryness. But that faint residue means I can’t skip my second cleanse. Ever.
Photo: ONNE Beauty / Unsplash
It’s a very good, indulgent first cleanse. But “clean” and “acne-friendly” here mean it needs a partner. Not a miracle.