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28 Skincare Products That "Work Like Magic"

28 Skincare Products That "Work Like Magic"

Buzz Feed17-05-2025
A convenient set of dual-textured toner pads made with lactic and salicylic acid to gently exfoliate skin and refine the appearance of those T-zone pores you swear can be seen from a mile away.
A fragrance-free CeraVe eye cream because you've seen this holy grail product evveerrryyyyyyywhere and wanna know what all the hullabaloo is about. Here's the deal — the non-greasy formula was developed with dermatologists and helps combat puffiness and dark circles with a nourishing combination of ceramides and hyaluronic acid.
A bottle of professional-grade callus-removing gel so you can quickly get your feet ready to be seen by removing years' (I repeat, YEARS') worth of hard calluses without endless scraping and scrubbing. Time to schedule a date with your strappiest sandals!
A reviewer-loved Juno & Co.'s Clean 10 Cleansing Balm if disposable wipes just can't seem to cut through your most stubborn mascara, foundation, and SPF. All you need is a pea-sized amount of this creamy miracle worker to leave your skin feeling clean and hydrated without any icky residues.
A TikTok-beloved Bio-Collagen Real Deep mask that works the night shift so you can wake up to skin that's next-level bouncy and glowy. The mask turns transparent as its absorbed into the skin, and loads of reviewers mention visible results after just one treatment.
A Hero Cosmetics post-blemish rescue balm for after the big pop to soothe irritation before a long-lasting scar sets up shop on your face. Simply pat your pimple with this gentle, nonirritating formula to relieve dryness, calm angry redness, and help reduce hyperpigmentation.
An Acure brightening facial scrub to de-gunk pores with a combination of French green clay, sea kelp, and Madonna lily that delivers soft, glowy results while still being gentle enough to use several times a week.
A soothing piercing solution because you've been watching that bump growing on your new piercing for weeks, and it's time to take action. This aftercare formula is designed to reduce the size of your keloid over time with 2–3 daily applications.
Plus, a two-ingredient Briotech spray reviewers have used to soothe inflammation of all kinds, from angry piercings and acne to stubborn rashes and rosacea. It uses hypochlorous acid, an ingredient found naturally in our white blood cells, similar to the much pricier Tower 28 spray.
An exfoliating mitt if you love the delightful feeling of disgust that comes with seeing dead skin slough away right before your eyes and knowing that your skin is going to feel SO SMOOTH after.
A gentle pore-clearing cleansing oil that's so effective at removing makeup and other residue that reviewers say you can actually see bits of gunk leaving your pores. WILD. It's suitable for all skin types and is formulated with heartleaf extract to help you get that *glowy* glass skin look.
Or a mega-popular CeraVe hydrating facial cleanser so you can keep your skin clean and clear with one simple product that won't leave your face feeling stripped and dry afterward. It also doubles as a bodywash if you're struggling with bacne, chestne, or buttne.
A powerful 2% BHA salicylic acid exfoliant if harsh scrubs haven't done your skin any favors. This helps to clear skin and unclog pores by gently sloughing away dead skin to reveal the texture-free glow hiding underneath.
A blemish-busting Mario Badescu drying lotion to take on pimples while you sleep with an effective blend of salicylic acid, sulfur, calamine, and zinc oxide. It'll feel like Christmas morning when you jump out of bed to check out your gifts. In this case, the gift of smaller pimples and a more clear complexion.
Plus, a pack of nose pore patches for making your skincare dreams a reality by expunging gunk and excess oil from troublesome hot spots like your nose or chin. The hardest part will be resisting the urge to touch your post-treatment skin now that it's as smooth as a baby seal.
A gentle LilyAna Naturals retinol cream because retinol is a skincare workhorse that can do wonders for the appearance of fine lines and uneven texture. Combine that with a slew of hydrating ingredients like hyaluronic acid, shea butter, organic green tea, and jojoba oil, and you've got a daily moisturizer that feels closer to a magic potion.
A bottle of fragrance-free Goami rice toner so you can add an extra dose of hydration to your skincare regimen when you need it without shaking up your entire routine.
A Shea Butter Vanilla Cashmere body lotion if you're still on the hunt for a moisturizer that's hydrating, lightweight, and soothing. Allow me to introduce you to this delicious-smelling formula at a price that's just * chef's kiss.*
Or a retinol body lotion jam-packed with dermatologist-recommended ingredients like retinol and ferulic acid that promote skin cell turnover to target common complaints like wrinkles and rough, crepey texture. And that's on top of just being a nourishing, non-greasy moisturizer you can use allllllll over.
A hydrating snail mucin repairing essence for soothing *all* skin types (reviewers love how gentle it is) with the potential to help heal acne scars, fade dark spots, and smooth fine lines...all for under $20!!
An oil-free La Roche-Posay daily face moisturizer to seal in hydration with a fragrance-free formula that does more than just moisturize with ceramides and niacinamide to help repair the skin barrier. And you can get it with or without SPF 30?!? Pinch me.
A wildly popular Bio-Oil because real-life magic (aka science) has gifted us this powerful blend of moisturizing oils and vitamins to help fade the scars and stretch marks you thought were going to stick around for the foreseeable ever.
An anti-bacterial butt acne-clearing lotion made with tea tree oil that'll finally give your booty the same blemish-busting TLC you treat your face to.
A cruelty-free intense-therapy lip balm to take even chronically irritated lips from dry and cracked to hydrated and smooth while protecting them from future damage.
Plus, a vegan and cruelty-free lip scrub because your favorite lipstick will go on much smoother with a bit of extra skin prep. Scrub away any dry, flaky layers with this nourishing combination of coconut, sugar, avocado oil, and jojoba oil.
A vegan exfoliating body scrub for anyone who struggles with persistent KP. This buffs away bumps by combining the benefits of a chemical peel and microdermabrasion into one gentle, at-home treatment.
A pack of two dark spot corrector soap bars because they're packed with all the skin-loving good stuff (vitamin C, turmeric, hyaluronic acid, collagen, and MORE) to help even out skin and diminish dark spots wherever they pop up.
And a multi-tasking, plant-powered vitamin C serum with over 97,000 5-star ratings that can help minimize the appearance of a long list of skin woes like dark circles, sun spots, redness, and even breakouts.
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The future of wearable wellness tech: 5 wild predictions for 2035 according to experts and industry leaders
The future of wearable wellness tech: 5 wild predictions for 2035 according to experts and industry leaders

Tom's Guide

time11 hours ago

  • Tom's Guide

The future of wearable wellness tech: 5 wild predictions for 2035 according to experts and industry leaders

Artificial Intelligence | Smart Glasses | Wearable TechSmartphones | iPhones | Robots | Cars | TVs In 2035, your Apple Watch Series 36 could arrive with enough battery power to last the lifetime of the wearable; I'm talking years rather than days, i.e., no recharging required. Don't like wearing a watch? All those holistic sensors may come in an assortment of new forms, including flexible and near-invisible stick-on 'smart patches' that look kind of like a Band-Aid but stay put for weeks or even months. As the speed in which health data can be processed and analysed continues to improve, while physical holistic sensors get tinier and tinier, keeping tabs on your vitals ten years from now will likely not be handled by one piece of dedicated wearable tech, but by an array of health-sensing devices you don't even have to think about, like the steering wheel of your car if you commute by automobile, your contact lenses (even if you don't require corrective vision), or even the waistband of your favorite underpants. With so much information to decipher, AI will be the backbone that powers future wearable wellness technology. The promise of early detection of not just chronic disease but everyday illness will be another crucial selling point of tomorrow's wearable devices, and the best devices will offer sensible, actionable steps to follow if something does come up. To get a clearer picture of our possible wearable/embeddable future, I spoke with an array of experts and industry leaders in the field, including, Angela McIntyre, the director of the Stanford's Wearable Electronics Initiative; Amaury Kosman, the founder and CEO of the smart ring brand, Circular; Jason Russell, the vice president of software at Oura Ring; Antoine Joussain, a lead product manager at the consumer health technology brand, Withings; Roman Axelrod and Dr Valentyn Volkov, cofounders of the smart contact lens startup Xpanceo; and Michael Hayes, the CEO of the smart contact startup InWith Corp. These conversations resulted in five major trends surrounding wearables and embeddables for the year 2035: More form factors, batteries that last the life of the device, predictive monitoring for both chronic diseases and everyday conditions, AI connecting the dots between wellness metrics and healthcare, and further incorporation of smart features that make life easier/less stressful. Battery life, or lack thereof, is one of the biggest factors holding back today's wearables. Relatively reliable subscription-free wearables can be picked up for $100 or less (see the Amazfit Active 2), but few last longer than a week on a single charge. Fortunately, in 2035, the need to plug in may be as antiquated as the away message. 'Our goal is for [the battery] to last the lifetime of the device,' says Antoine Joussain, a lead product manager at the French wellness tech brand, Withings. 'So if a device is lasting for five years, we'd like [the battery] to last for five years too.' This will come through both innovations in battery technology and reductions in power consumption. Nearly everyone I spoke to for this article mentioned flexible or even stretchable batteries. Such technology would be crucial for developing a truly band-aid-style "smart patch," notes Angela McIntyre, the Executive Director of Stanford University's Wearable Electronics Initiative (eWEAR). More on that below. Some wearables brands like the smart ring manufacturer, Circular, already use bendable batteries in their product design. However, at the rate at which battery technology is currently developing, the batteries of 2035 will likely look vastly different than today's. 'We already have flexible batteries in our rings, and we're trying to max them out. Over the past six years, I've seen three different technologies used in batteries, so different materials that can withstand more and more capacity,' says Amaury Kosman, the Founder and CEO of Circular. 'By 2035, it's plausible that wearables could integrate hybrid energy systems that passively recharge throughout the day, vastly extending runtime and reducing dependency on charging cycles.' Power management improvements won't only come in the form of better batteries. 'More efficient signal paths and the ability to disable unused sensors will also contribute meaningfully [to improved battery life]' says Jason Russell, Oura's VP of consumer software, when asked what a theoretical Oura Ring 10 might look like. Another hot topic: energy harvesting. While ten years is likely too soon for our smartwatches to be powered solely by body heat, McIntyre reports that researchers at Stanford and elsewhere are hard at work making the concept a reality. 'Motion of a person could be harvested as well,' says McIntyre. Of course, self-charging wearables do exist in 2025. The Garmin Instinct 3 Solar, which features a light-sensative cell behind the device's screen, is a great example. However, by 2035, solar charging capabilities might be small enough to fit directly into a contact lens. 'We are developing light-harvesting features integrated into the lens surface, allowing ambient sunlight or indoor lighting to contribute to the power supply. While energy harvested this way is modest, the low power demands of contact lenses make even small boosts valuable," says Dr Valentyn Volkov, the cofounder of Xpanceo. While the founder of the Circular Ring, Amaury Kosman, seemed skeptical of wearables' self-generating energy by 2035, Oura's VP of Consumer Software, Jason Russell, sounds more optimistic. 'By 2035, it's plausible that wearables could integrate hybrid energy systems that passively recharge throughout the day, vastly extending runtime and reducing dependency on charging cycles,' says Russell. Don't expect watches or rings to disappear anytime soon, because whether smart or not, this style of jewelry is likely here to stay. On the flip side, do expect the sensors you already see in smart rings and smartwatches to eventually appear in other wearable products, like earbuds, bracelets, stick-on patches, contact lenses and smart clothing. 'The idea is to make it disappear,' says Joussain when asked what the future of health-sensing technology looks like for Withings. That's a pretty bold statement for a brand that makes a somewhat chunky metal smartwatch with considerable heft in 2025. Ultimately, ten years from now, holistic sensors will be small enough to be installed just about anywhere, not just in wearables but also your computer mouse and even your car's steering wheel. Essentially, wherever you're most likely to interact with them. 'All these new [health tracking] technologies will be implemented in everyday objects. So, you take your car every day, when you are holding the steering wheel, it will monitor your vitals,' predicts Joussain. Ultimately, Joussain suspects that health sensors will be embedded directly into the user's body. However, he confesses that the concept is almost certainly more than a decade off. Stanford's McIntyre agrees. Instead, she thinks stick-on smart patches packed with holistic sensors are more likely to make an impact in the next ten years. 'There are new sensors that are coming, and with your flexible, stretchable capabilities, they'll be even more that we can do from a sticky patch,' says McIntyre. 'All these new [health tracking] technologies will be implemented in everyday objects. So, you take your car every day, when you are holding the steering wheel, it will monitor your vitals' Much to my surprise, Circular's founder, Amaury Kosman, also thinks that smart patches could be the way of the future when it comes to at-home health monitoring. 'A patch, which is tiny and anybody can wear, I think that's the future of where we're heading. As time goes by, everything gets miniaturized, everything gets more precise, and it gets cheaper. So it's just a logical next step for me,' says Kosman when asked what future wearables will most likely look like. Similarly, Oura's Jason Russell acknowledges that the future of wellness monitoring might go beyond the singular smart ring. "We foresee stretching the boundaries of biometric sensing via the ring while integrating complementary wearables that together enable an even more complete picture of your health," Russell says. Outside of smart patches, what other new wearable health-monitoring tech can we expect to take off in the next decade? 'Smart contact lenses, being in direct contact with the eye's surface and tear film, function as a tiny biochemical laboratory on the eye. This close proximity enables continuous, noninvasive monitoring of a variety of health metrics,' says Dr. Volkov. The best smartwatches already alert users to potential signs of chronic health issues. Popular models like the Apple Watch 10 and Samsung Galaxy Watch 8 monitor for signs of sleep apnea and heart abnormalities, like AFib. The Google Pixel Watch 3 can even trigger an alert and send for help if a loss of pulse is detected. However, these tools are just scratching the surface. In ten years, your smart wearable may be able to screen for a whole range of chronic conditions, like diabetes, cancer or heart disease. These devices may also be able to give you a 72-hour heads-up to an upcoming cold, or alert you to heightened biomarkers that could indicate elevated stress, with actionable advice to return to your baseline. 'As sensors become more advanced and miniaturized, the depth and granularity of data will also increase significantly. But the biggest shift will be in how insights are delivered: instead of just showing you the data, future insights could anticipate changes in your health, offer personalized, real-time guidance, and adapt to your unique physiology and goals—making the experience more predictive, proactive, and deeply personalized than ever before,' says Oura's Jason Russell. Ultimately, the future of disease detection may rely less on developing new sensor technology and more on making the most of the data already coming off the sensors we currently have. Enter, the promise of AI. 'AI is getting a lot better, being able to discern what's a 'real' signal out of very noisy data, and then being able to make insights that are more valid for us from that data,' says McIntyre. The use of artificial intelligence to analyze health data, effectively replacing manually written code, will exponentially increase the ability for software to sniff out health trends and make personalized recommendations, notes McIntyre. 'As sensors become more advanced and miniaturized, the depth and granularity of data will also increase significantly. But the biggest shift will be in how insights are delivered: instead of just showing you the data, future insights could anticipate changes in your health, offer personalized, real-time guidance, and adapt to your unique physiology and goals—making the experience more predictive, proactive, and deeply personalized than ever before.' Tomorrow's wearables might even analyse your blood, urine, or sweat, as all three contain a multitude of easily trackable biomarkers that could indicate whether you're dehydrated, stressed, or a whole host of other conditions. Monitoring stress, in particular, is a focus of researchers. 'Cortisol is another ingredient that people are trying to sense with sensors on wearables. I should say that people have cortisol and sometimes feel very pumped and excited, and other people might have a lot of cortisol and feel very afraid. So it really depends on circumstances and on the individual what putting out cortisol means, ' says McIntyre. Future wearables may additionally be able to take the guesswork out of taking medication, says Michael Hayes, the CEO of the smart contact startup InWith. 'There's a plethora of health applications with smart contacts. From early warning of disease to therapeutic delivery of drugs to the eyes to prevent certain conditions, to bringing new focus capabilities. The tear fluid is a rich medium for biomarkers,' says Hayes. yes. Smart contact lenses could even one day replace today's blood-based health monitoring methods. 'Glucose levels in tears can be tracked to assist people with diabetes in managing their condition without the need for finger-prick blood tests. Similarly, fluctuations in hormone or vitamin concentrations in the tear film can offer valuable insights into a person's metabolic or nutritional status,' says Dr. Volkov. The concept of a faceless, nameless artificial intelligence interface spitting out wellness advice based on the augmentation of my sleep, workout, dietary, etc., data is beyond unsettling to me. However, everyone I spoke to on the subject assured me that the aggressive AI analysis of my holistic metrics is actually a positive thing. Doctors are busy. Wearable data is useful, but in 2025, there's no conduit to make that data easily accessible to the medical field. And even if there was, the amount of data would likely be entirely overwhelming. This is where AI can help. With more sensors and more users, it will become better at finding patterns that may warrant alerting your doctor or wellness team. In a time-sensitive health emergency, AI could potentially trigger an alert to your medical provider on its own, similar to Google's Loss of Pulse Detection or crash/fall detection. Representatives from Oura, Circular, and Withings all emphasised the importance of wearable data being more accessible to a user's healthcare team in the future, with AI playing a crucial role as the middleman. 'In the future, [wearable tech] could support clinical applications like remote patient monitoring, early detection of chronic conditions, or continuous tracking of biomarkers relevant to metabolic, cardiovascular, or hormonal health. They may enable secure sharing of health data with care teams, integrate with electronic health records, or even assist with medication adherence through real-time prompts,' predicts Russell. If you're like me, not so hot with remembering names, I've got great news. Tomorrow's wearable tech may make awkward social situations a thing of the past. 'The smart contact lens will act as the ultimate personal assistant embedded directly into your vision and capable of analyzing complex social environments in real-time,' says Roman Axelrod, the (other) co-founder of Xpanceo. 'Yes, at a party, the lenses could scan the room and instantly recognize faces, drawing on your personal contacts and social databases to remind you of people's names, how you met, and important details about them before you even approach,' says Alexlrod, though he acknowledges that privacy concerns and regulations for such features are still far from being sorted out. 'The smart contact lens will act as the ultimate personal assistant embedded directly into your vision and capable of analyzing complex social environments in real-time.' You can also expect these next-gen devices to potentially improve our human capabilities, Inspector Gadget-style. For example, InWith CEO Michael Hayes predicts that smart contacts in 2035 will not only offer night vision but potentially even zoom capabilities. 'Seeing better in the dark is an advanced function, but we've already made significant progress. We can engineer lenses that enhance low-light vision. Nanoparticles alter the way the lens interacts with incoming light, effectively expanding what the eye can perceive in dim environments,' says Dr. Volkov. 'The idea of zooming in on distant objects is perhaps the most futuristic, but not impossible. This feature would require smart lenses with materials whose refractive properties can be dynamically controlled. Using electrical signals, the lens could adjust how it focuses light, effectively creating a variable 'optical zoom' function.' 'Although this technology is still in the research phase,' Volkov says, he also suspects that rapid progress in the field should mean working prototypes well before 2035. • Artificial Intelligence • Smart Glasses• Wearable Tech• Smartphones • iPhones• Robots• Cars• TVs

Belite Bio Reports Second Quarter 2025 Financial Results and Provides a Corporate Update
Belite Bio Reports Second Quarter 2025 Financial Results and Provides a Corporate Update

Associated Press

time13 hours ago

  • Associated Press

Belite Bio Reports Second Quarter 2025 Financial Results and Provides a Corporate Update

SAN DIEGO, Aug. 11, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Belite Bio, Inc (NASDAQ: BLTE), a clinical-stage drug development company focused on advancing novel therapeutics targeting degenerative retinal diseases that have significant unmet medical needs, today announced its financial results for the second quarter ended June 30, 2025, and provided a general business update. 'This quarter, we remained on track with the strategic objectives we outlined at the start of the year, including the completion of enrollment in our pivotal Phase 3 PHOENIX trial — an important milestone in our development efforts for people living with geographic atrophy,' said Dr. Tom Lin, Chairman and CEO of Belite Bio. 'We also received Breakthrough Therapy Designation for Tinlarebant for the treatment of Stargardt disease from the FDA, underscoring its potential as the first-ever treatment for this patient population and acknowledging the significant unmet need for people living with this debilitating disease. With the DRAGON trial on track to complete by the end of this year, we remain focused on advancing Tinlarebant toward key clinical and regulatory milestones.' Second Quarter 2025 Business Highlights and Upcoming Milestones: Clinical Highlights Tinlarebant (LBS-008) is an oral, potent, once-daily, retinol binding protein 4 (RBP4) antagonist that decreases RBP4 levels in the blood and reduces vitamin A (retinol) delivery to the eye without disrupting systemic retinol delivery to other tissues. Vitamin A is critical for normal vision but can accumulate as toxic byproducts in individuals affected with STGD1 and GA, the advanced form of dry age-related macular degeneration (AMD), leading to retinal cell death and loss of vision. Corporate Highlights Second Quarter 2025 Financial Results: Current Assets: As of June 30, 2025, the Company had $149.2 million in cash, liquidity funds, time deposits, and U.S treasury bills. R&D Expenses: For the three months ended June 30, 2025, research and development expenses were $11.0 million compared to $9.1 million for the same period in 2024. For the six months ended June 30, 2025, research and development expenses were $20.4 million compared to $15.8 million for the same period in 2024. The increase in research and development expenses in both the quarter and year-to-date was primarily attributable to (i) higher pass-through expenses related to the PHOENIX trial and manufacturing expenses payments, partially offset by lower DRAGON trial expenses and a development milestone payment for the completion of a phase 2 trial in 2024; (ii) an increase in share-based compensation expenses. G&A Expenses: For the three months ended June 30, 2025, general and administrative expenses were $6.5 million compared to $1.4 million for the same period in 2024. For the six months ended June 30, 2025, general and administration expenses were $12.7 million compared to $3.0 million for the same period in 2024. The increase in general and administrative expenses in both the quarter and year-to-date was primarily due to an increase in share-based compensation expenses. Other Income: For the three months ended June 30, 2025, other income was $1.3 million compared to $1.0 million for the same period in 2024. For the six months ended June 30, 2025, other income was $2.5 million compared to $1.4 million for the same period in 2024. The increase in both the quarter and year-to-date was attributed to interest from time deposits and U.S. treasury bills. Net Loss: For the three months ended June 30, 2025, the Company reported a net loss of $16.3 million, compared to a net loss of $9.5 million for the same period in 2024. For the six months ended June 30, 2025, the Company reported a net loss of $30.6 million, compared to a net loss of $17.4 million for the same period in 2024. Webcast Information Belite Bio will host a webcast on Monday, August 11, 2025, at 4:30 p.m. Eastern Time to discuss the Company's financial results and provide a business update. To join the webcast, please visit A replay will be available for approximately 90 days following the event. About Belite Bio Belite Bio is a clinical-stage drug development company focused on advancing novel therapeutics targeting degenerative retinal diseases that have significant unmet medical need, such as Stargardt disease type 1 (STGD1) and Geographic Atrophy (GA) in advanced dry age-related macular degeneration (AMD), in addition to specific metabolic diseases. Belite's lead candidate, Tinlarebant, an oral therapy intended to reduce the accumulation of toxins in the eye, is currently being evaluated in a Phase 3 study (DRAGON) and a Phase 2/3 study (DRAGON II) in adolescent STGD1 subjects and a Phase 3 study (PHOENIX) in subjects with GA. For more information, follow us on X, Instagram, LinkedIn, and Facebook or visit us at Important Cautions Regarding Forward Looking Statements This press release contains forward-looking statements about future expectations and plans, as well as other statements regarding matters that are not historical facts. These statements include but are not limited to statements regarding the potential implications of clinical data for patients, and Belite Bio's advancement of, and anticipated preclinical activities, clinical development, regulatory milestones, and commercialization of its product candidates, and any other statements containing the words 'expect', 'hope' and similar expressions. Actual results may differ materially from those indicated in the forward-looking statements as a result of various important factors, including but not limited to Belite Bio's ability to demonstrate the safety and efficacy of its drug candidates; the clinical results for its drug candidates, which may not support further development or regulatory approval; the timing to complete relevant clinical trials and/or to receive the interim/final data of such clinical trials; the timing to submit trial data to regulatory authorities for drug approval; the content and timing of decisions made by the relevant regulatory authorities regarding regulatory approval of Belite Bio's drug candidates; the potential efficacy of Tinlarebant, as well as those risks more fully discussed in the 'Risk Factors' section in Belite Bio's filings with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. All forward-looking statements are based on information currently available to Belite Bio, and Belite Bio undertakes no obligation to publicly update or revise any forward-looking statements, whether as a result of new information, future events or otherwise, except as may be required by law. Media and Investor Relations Contact: Jennifer Wu [email protected] Julie Fallon [email protected]

See Why Reviewers Love This Version Of A Viral Facial Spray
See Why Reviewers Love This Version Of A Viral Facial Spray

Buzz Feed

time21 hours ago

  • Buzz Feed

See Why Reviewers Love This Version Of A Viral Facial Spray

I won't beat around the bush: You're probably a whole lot sweatier, thanks to the summer heat. That can spell disaster for your skin if you don't stay on top of it — a buildup of sweat (and therefore bacteria) can cause acne on your face and elsewhere. Of course, washing your face regularly after you work out or find yourself in another sweaty situation can help prevent these breakouts, but hey, you don't always have the time. That's where a superstar skincare ingredient — and recent TikTok-viral product — come in. The SkinSmart Antimicrobial Facial Cleanser has similar ingredients as the TikTok-viral Tower28 spray, including hypochlorous acid, water, and sodium chloride (although we can't account for ingredient quantity and potency levels). The main difference is that the SkinSmart spray comes in an 8-ounce bottle for $17.46 on Amazon, giving you twice the product for $10 less. (A 4-ounce bottle of Tower28′s spray costs $28.) Multiple buyers couldn't believe their luck in the reviews, with many comparing it favorably to the Tower 28 spray for keeping their skin clear and leaving them feeling refreshed. The SkinSmart spray has racked up over 3,700 5-star ratings on Amazon, so you know this is the real deal. So if you're looking to save money on skincare without sacrificing the benefits of hypochlorous acid, these satisfied reviews will give you the final push to add your next holy grail product to your cart. Get it from Amazon for $17.46.

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