A guy named Ben mixed this in a cast iron pot in his kitchen. No lab. No focus groups. Just a Vermont farmhouse and a radical rule: zero synthetic fragrance.
That rule matters more than you think. Most “clean” SPF masks that sunscreen stink with fake vanilla or lavender. This one smells like pine needles and dirt—and somehow it works.
It’s the Ursa Major Force Field Daily Defense Lotion SPF 18—$48 for 2 oz, and the claim is it replaces moisturizer, primer, and sunscreen in one step. I called bullshit. Then I tried it.
Zinc-only SPF 18
No chemical filters. Just non-nano zinc. White cast? Barely—it disappears in 45 seconds.
Reishi mushroom extract
Sounds like wellness TikTok. Actually calms redness better than my prescription cream.
Cloudberry seed oil
Weird name. Even weirder fact: it’s packed with vitamin C that doesn’t oxidize in sunlight.
Three plants do the heavy lifting here. No silicones, no dimethicone, no “natural fragrance” loophole bullshit. Just things you could technically eat—but please don’t.
- Reishi mushroom: reduces inflammation without drying you out
- Cloudberry seed oil: stable vitamin C that survives UV exposure
- Aloe leaf juice: base ingredient, not water—way more hydrating
- Zinc oxide 20%: physical blocker that doesn’t clog pores
First pump: it’s thicker than you expect. Like a lightweight lotion that thinks it’s a balm. Rubs in weird for 10 seconds—then vanishes. Zero stick. Zero shine. My T-zone didn’t revolt.
Week 3: I stopped using moisturizer underneath. That scared me. But my skin looked… better? Less red, fewer morning breakouts. The surprise: it works better on oily skin than dry. Counterintuitive but true.
My redness dropped about 30% in three weeks. No new breakouts. But I still needed a separate moisturizer on my cheeks in winter—it’s not magic, just smart.
It’s the only SPF I’ve finished a bottle of without cheating on it. That’s rare for me. That means something.