That glass-skin glow Hailey has? It’s not just this. I’m sorry.
The real magic happens when you layer it over a *good* moisturizer — alone, it’s just a pretty sheen.
Rhode‘s Peptide Glazing Fluid is $29 for a tiny bottle. The claim? A “peptide-infused treatment” for instant and long-term glow.
Texture
Water-light, almost like slightly thickened rose water.
Finish
Super dewy — not sticky, but you will look wet.
Scent
Faint, clean, cucumber-melon vibes. Inoffensive.
Photo: Chandra Oh / Unsplash
It’s a peptide serum-slash-primer. The peptides are meant to support skin barrier health over time. The instant glow? That’s all glycerin.
- Niacinamide: Fades redness, regulates oil
- Peptide Complex: Claims to support collagen — hard to prove
- Glycerin: The real dew-maker, pulls moisture to skin
- Sodium Hyaluronate: Plumps, but not as much as a dedicated HA serum
Photo: pmv chamara / Unsplash
Applies like a dream — absorbs in 15 seconds flat. Skin feels bouncy, looks lit from within. A perfect makeup primer.
After two weeks, zero long-term “glazing” effect. My skin didn’t look fundamentally better in the morning. The glow washes off.
Photo: Renaldo Matamoro / Unsplash
My makeup sat beautifully. Dry patches vanished. But my fine lines and texture? Unchanged. This is a surface-level player.
Photo: DINESH BOCHARE / Unsplash
It’s a fantastic, overpriced glow juice. Does it “work”? For instant dew, absolutely. For anything else, it’s just famous-face fluff.