I looked like a lightly toasted marshmallow. Not orange. Not streaky. Just… convincingly sun-kissed.
The real win? Zero transfer. Wore white sheets on day two. No regrets.
Isle of Paradise drops, $29. The hook: mix 3 drops with your moisturizer, sleep, wake up tanned. Too simple to be true.
Color-Correcting
Comes in green (light), peach (medium), violet (deep) to neutralize undertones.
Customizable
You control the intensity — 2 drops for a glow, 6 for a full bake.
No Guide Color
Applies clear. You’re blindly trusting the process until morning.
Photo: El S / Unsplash
It’s basically smart DHA (the tanning agent) in a hydrating base. The color-correctors are pure pigment, not dyes.
- DHA: Reacts with skin’s surface proteins to create color
- Erythrulose: A slower-acting tanning agent for a more even fade
- Coconut Water: Hydration, but let’s be real — it’s not a miracle
- Vitamin C: To help prevent oxidation (that dreaded orange shift)
Photo: Poko Skincare / Unsplash
Watery, not oily. Sinks into my CeraVe PM in 15 seconds flat. Smells like faint, sweet hay — not that classic biscuit stench.
By week three, my tan had a baseline. I could skip a day without looking patchy. The fade is shockingly even — no leopard spots.
Photo: Cosmin Ursea / Unsplash
My pale winter legs finally matched my face. Knuckles and elbows needed extra moisturizer first, or they grabbed more color.
Photo: Alia Hasan / Unsplash
This is the low-commitment tan for people who hate self-tanner. It’s idiot-proof if you follow the one mixing rule.