This cleanser started with two brothers and their grandma’s cold-pressed juice recipes. No lab coats, just a Vitamix.
The real hook? They took that “drink your greens” ethos and literally bottled it for your skin. A family legacy, not a marketing gimmick.
It’s a $36 gel cleanser. I tried it because Youth to the People claimed it could remove makeup without stripping. Skeptical, but intrigued.
Vegan & Leaping Bunny Certified
No animal testing, ever.
pH-Balanced Gel
Cleans without the tight, squeaky feeling.
100% Recycled Packaging
The bottle is made from post-consumer plastic.
Photo: kevin laminto / Unsplash
It reads like a smoothie menu. Kale, spinach, green tea—all cold-pressed to preserve the antioxidants. The idea is to feed your skin, not just clean it.
- Kale: Fights free radicals and soothes
- Spinach: Packed with vitamins C, E, & A
- Green Tea: Calms inflammation and redness
- Alfalfa: A mineral-rich multivitamin for skin
The texture is a slick, emerald gel. It lathers into a light foam—not the sudsy, stripping kind. Smells like crushed stems and fresh air. Not “fragranced,” just…green.
After two weeks, my skin felt balanced. Not “moisturized,” but clean without that desperate post-wash urge to slather on serum. The surprise? It got my sunscreen off. Every time.
My complexion looked clearer—less morning puffiness, fewer random red spots. It didn’t magically shrink pores or cure acne. It just made my skin feel reliably calm and prepped.
It’s the chill, effective green juice of cleansers. Does one job exceptionally well without the drama.