
Best Peptide Lip Balms for 2025, Tested by Wellness Editors With Sensitive Skin
Rhode peptide lip treatment: The vegan, cruelty-free Rhode peptide lip treatment has fun shades and scents, and you've likely seen all the influencers on your social media feed touting it. It also hydrates and plumps the lips with shea butter, peptides, cupuaçu (a chocolatey fruit native to the Amazon) and babassu (an oil made from the South American babassu palm). It provides high shine like a lip gloss.
This treatment is best for someone who wants a slightly thicker, shinier lip treatment akin to a lip gloss. It is available in an unscented option, as well as vanilla, salted caramel and watermelon slice scents. Rhode also has a fragrance-free peptide lip tint in five shades.
It's important to note that some consumers, including Anna, with the salted caramel scent, have experienced varying degrees of gritty particles in this balm. While it doesn't bother her, and she barely notices it after she rubs her lips together, it may bother some more than others, depending on the degree of grittiness. After taking a swatch photo of the balm, Anna decided not to include it in this list because of the amount of particles. While some haven't dealt with this, and others recommend soaking the product in warm water to melt the particles, she wouldn't recommend purchasing a lip product that may or may not be gritty.
Rituel de Fille Thorn Bite Peptide Plump Crème lip oil: This clean beauty brand is known for its lipsticks and lip products. Its peptide lip oil is available in three sheer shades and comes in a luxurious-feeling glass vial. CNET Editor Caroline Igo tested the rose dew shade, which is close to a clear shine with a hint of pink. It's made with Murla seed oil, mango butter, shea oil, jojoba extract, rosehip and coconut oil.
The Rituel de Fille peptide lip oil is best for those who are looking for a sheer color with a nice shine. This product is similar to lip gloss in that it's extremely smooth, shiny and has a plumping look. It's buildable and can go over any lipstick or lip stain.
While this is a clean beauty brand, some people experience some sensitivities, Caroline included. It contains ginger oil, which Caroline is allergic to, and it causes her a tingling sensation. While this won't happen to everyone, it's also important to note that it has a strong floral scent that may bother some with sensitive skin. Caroline didn't include this product in this list due to the reaction that it caused her, but she still considers it a great product for its volume, consistency, look and feel. Catie Boucher, DCNP, FNP-C, who is board-certified in dermatology and family medicine and founder of SavvyDerm, says, "Anyone with a history of sensitive skin or eczema should be sure to patch test a lip product with peptides to make sure they don't have a reaction."
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Fox News
24 minutes ago
- Fox News
Brooke Shields celebrates 60th birthday in bikini on the beach
Brooke Shields is proving age is just a number with new social media posts. The "Mother of the Bride" star took to Instagram over the weekend to celebrate her 60th birthday with photos of her lounging on the beach in her bikini. "Woke up today in paradise… and in a new decade of life! This is 6️⃣0️⃣! Thank you for all of the birthday love," she captioned the post. The photos featured Shields sitting in a hammock on the shore in a black bikini, which she accessorized with a sun hat and a chunky gold chain choker and sand-covered feet. Her famous friends quickly flooded the comments sections with well-wishes, with Christie Brinkley writing "Happy Birthday Beauty 60 looks GREAT on you," and Ricki Lake adding, "Yes Queen! Happy milestone Birthday!" In a separate Instagram post, shared on the account of her haircare brand, Commence, Shields spelled out "propaganda we're not falling for" anymore, writing in the caption, "We're not making any more time for nonsense." "That 60 means slowing down. That change is only for your twenties," the list written on the screen said. "That it's too late to learn something new. That my best days are in the rearview. That women 'of a certain age' aren't a force to be reckoned with. That I don't deserve products made specifically for me. That not every day can be a good hair day." "Woke up today in paradise… and in a new decade of life! This is 6️⃣0️⃣! Thank you for all of the birthday love." Shields is no stranger to sharing bikini photos. The star took to Instagram in April, to share photos from her time in the Bahamas, in which she posed on the beach in a black and white bikini. Having started her career at a young age, Shields has often spoken out about how difficult it was to grow up in the spotlight, telling AARP The Magazine in March 2024 she felt as if beauty "was a burden and a responsibility," but that now it "means freedom." "The 'Pretty Baby' documentary definitely empowered me," she explained. "I had never seen my life in its entirety. It made me feel very proud of my resilience and that little girl. I would be shocked as a kid to know that there would come a time that I would feel like I was enough. I would be shocked if I knew that I would one day really be confident and like myself." The 2023 documentary, "Pretty Baby: Brooke Shields," chronicled the actress' life as a sexualized young actress and model, "to a woman who embraces her identity and voice," according to the description on Hulu. When speaking with AARP The Magazine, she explained she has grown accustomed to hearing other people's opinions about her appearance, saying "it's an affront to people if Brooke Shields gets older." "You can't grow up, you cannot age. It's disappointing to them that I don't have the same face I had when I was 16," she said. "But it's been so liberating for me not to worry about it all the time. The pressure of being skinny is just so exhausting. I like food, and I like tequila!" She further discussed aging in Hollywood in her memoir, "Brooke Shields Is Not Allowed to Get Old."


Forbes
28 minutes ago
- Forbes
The Nordstrom Anniversary Sale Starts Next Month—Here Are All The Details
The 2025 Nordstrom Anniversary Sale is right around the corner. The department store's biggest sale of the year will open to select Nordstrom cardholders on July 8 and then to the general public on July 12. In years past, we've seen deals on top brands including Longchamp, Hoka and Charlotte Tilbury. Nordstrom recently announced that it'll be running a preview of some of this year's deals on June 26. In the meantime, here's everything we know about the sale so far—plus eight Nordstrom deals worth browsing right now. The Nordstrom Anniversary Sale is the department store's biggest sale of the year. The annual event features thousands of deals across just about every category, from fashion staples to skincare to baby gear. It's typically a good opportunity to stock up on designer finds and fall must-haves for less. The 2025 Nordstrom Anniversary Sale opens to select cardholders on July 8 through July 11. When exactly cardholders get access depends on how much they've spent at the store in the past year. Then, the sale is set to open to the general public on July 12. Nordstrom's Half-Yearly Sale is smaller bi-annual event that typically occurs once in the spring and once in the fall. Its Anniversary Sale takes place once a year over the summer and is known for major price cuts across all categories. Both sales always have notable offers, but the Anniversary Sale typically includes steeper discounts on more coveted items, as well as deals on fall and winter styles. Yes, Nordstrom cardholders can shop the sale early. The allotted dates are connected to your membership tier, which is a reflection of how much you've spent at the department store over the past year. The tiers are as follows: You don't have to wait until the Anniversary Sale to find good deals at Nordstrom. Here's what our assistant deals editor recommends adding to your cart right now.


New York Times
33 minutes ago
- New York Times
Why Women Are Leaving This Broadway Show in Tears
I cried the first time I saw the play 'John Proctor Is the Villain,' set in a high school in small-town Georgia during the height of the MeToo movement, and I couldn't stop thinking about it for weeks. On social media, I saw other women reacting similarly, leaving performances in tears. This past weekend, I went a second time with a friend. As the houselights went up, she was crying, as was the woman in the row in front of us. They spontaneously hugged, which is something I've never seen before at a Broadway show. Outside the theater, two women were sobbing. At least since the time of Aristotle, catharsis has been understood as one of the chief purposes of theater, but it's been a while since I've experienced it so viscerally, and I kept wondering why this play is having such an intense effect on so many. (No other play has received more Tony nominations this year.) One reason for its power, I suspect, is that it transports the viewer back to a time when MeToo still felt alive with possibility, the moment before the backlash when it seemed we might be on the cusp of a more just and equal world. It's not an uplifting play — an innocent girl is punished, and a guilty man is not — but it is still shot through with a kind of hope that's now in short supply. 'John Proctor Is the Villain' takes place in 2018 and revolves around an honors English class studying Arthur Miller's 'The Crucible.' The girls in the class are smart and ambitious; they're also, like many teenagers everywhere, swoony and bursting with contradictory emotions. They're so excited about the MeToo movement that they want to start a feminism club at their school, which school officials do not, at first, want to allow. Tensions in the community, their guidance counselor tells them, are too high. Those tensions soon creep in to the high school and start to shake the girls' solidarity. The father of one of the girls is accused of sexual harassment by two women, which leads her to question MeToo. 'We can punish the men if they're proven guilty, but if we find out the girls are making it up they should get punished just as bad,' she says. Another girl, Shelby — played by the 'Stranger Things' star Sadie Sink — returns from a mysterious absence with her own destabilizing accusation. Their drama is refracted through their engagement with 'The Crucible.' In 'John Proctor Is the Villain' the increasingly common idea that MeToo was a witch hunt is turned inside out. The playwright, Kimberly Belflower, had been captivated by the MeToo movement when it revved up in 2017. 'It just felt like, 'Oh, my God, we're doing this. We're naming these things,'' she told me recently. It gave her a new lens on her own adolescence in rural Georgia. 'I didn't have the vocabulary for this then, but I do now,' she said. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.