Beauty of Joseon finally lands in US stores with a clear stick that promises no white cast and “clean” ingredients. The reality? It delivers on the first part — but the “clean” label is doing heavy lifting.
The stick glides on like a silky lip balm. Zero ghost face. But that “clean” marketing? It’s mostly about what they *don’t* put in — not what they do. And for on-the-go reapplication, that matters less than you think.
🔬 **What’s Actually in the Tube**
It’s a $22 SPF 50 stick (Beauty of Joseon calls it “invisible”). I bought it because I’m lazy about reapplying sunscreen on my commute. The claim: no white cast, no sticky fingers, no pilling under makeup.
Tilt mechanism
Twist the base to push product up — no dirty fingers, which is huge for subway reapplication.
Transparent formula
No zinc oxide cloud. Actually clear on skin. Shocking, right?
SPF 50 PA++++
Legit protection. But the real question is whether you apply enough — sticks make people skimp.
Photo: BATCH by Wisconsin Hemp Scientific / Unsplash
✨ **The Ingredient Reality Check**
They tout rice germ oil and sunflower seed oil — nice for moisture, but these are *not* the antioxidant heavyweights you’d expect from a K-beauty brand. The “clean” claim is more about avoiding 18 questionable filters than adding hero ingredients.
- Rice Germ Oil: Light moisture, not breakout-city
- Sunflower Seed Oil: Vit E, but comedogenic for some
- Niacinamide: Actually decent — brightens over time
- No Oxybenzone: The real ‘clean’ flex
Photo: Aleksandrs Karevs / Unsplash
💧 **Texture That Lies**
First swipe: feels like a thick balm that should feel greasy. Absorbs in 8 seconds flat. Leaves skin with a velvety finish — not dewy, not matte. The unexpected win? Zero pilling under my silicone-based primer.
Two weeks in: I’m using it daily on my morning walk. The stick *does* get a little residue buildup on the surface after a week. Wipe it off with a tissue — not a dealbreaker, just annoying.
Photo: Lina Verovaya / Unsplash
📊 **Did It Actually Work?**
No sunburn. No new hyperpigmentation. But my dark spots didn’t fade either — the niacinamide is too low to do heavy lifting. What stayed the same: the stick still leaves a faint shine on my nose after 4 hours.
Photo: Jens Kreuter / Unsplash
🏆 **The Truth**
A solid on-the-go tool for lazy SPF reapplication, but don’t buy the “clean” hype — buy it because it works without making a mess.