I put this on my cuticles yesterday. On purpose. And it worked better than my $22 oil.
The SPF 15 is basically useless indoors, but the texture? That’s the real plot twist. It sinks in so fast you can type immediately — no greasy keyboard keys.
Skeyndor Stay Young Day Cream costs around $55. I bought it because the claim was “anti-aging + instant glow” — which usually means glitter. It’s not glitter.
Eye shadow primer substitute
Dab a dot on your lids. Shadow stays put for 8 hours. No creasing. I’ve tested this through a crying session.
Cuticle rescue
Rub the excess into your nail beds after applying to face. Dry cuticles disappear in one day. No joke.
Highlighter hack
Tap a tiny bit on your cheekbones. It catches light without shimmer particles. Makes you look hydrated, not sweaty.
Photo: Laura Chouette / Unsplash
It’s got peptides (the “fake Botox” ingredient) and shea butter — which normally scares me because it clogs pores. This one doesn’t. The SPF 15 is mineral, so no white cast if you’re medium skin or lighter.
- Peptide complex: plumps fine lines in 2 weeks, not 2 days
- Shea butter: moisturizes without breakouts — shockingly
- Vitamin E: calms redness fast
- SPF 15: honestly, barely enough for your face, fine for hands
Photo: Poko Skincare / Unsplash
It’s a thick cream that somehow turns into water on your skin. Weirdest texture. I keep rubbing it in because it feels like nothing’s there — then my face looks dewy 10 seconds later.
Two weeks in, my forehead lines looked less angry. Not gone. Just… softer. The cuticle thing is the real unexpected win — I’m not even kidding.
My skin felt bouncier by week 2. Pores didn’t shrink, but they looked less obvious. The SPF is too low for serious sun protection — don’t rely on it.
It’s a solid daily cream that moonlights as three other products. Buy it for the cuticle trick alone — that’s worth the price.