Top 23 Products of 2023

One would think that selecting your favourite products over the last year would be easy and not lead to overthinking and borderline existential doubt, but that was not the case for me. I tried to focus on new (to me) products I’ve tried in 2023 but I also included products that I included last year that I’ve still been loving and using and products from before that I’ve re-solidified my love for. For context, I have fine to medium, high density, high porosity wavy to curly hair and drier eczema-prone skin.

1. Verb Curl Shampoo ($22-27 CDN | 355 mLs)

This shampoo has been great as an addition to my routine, as it can remove silicone, oils, product build-up without drying out the hair afterwards and impacting curl definition when used without deep conditioning afterwards. I would describe it as a regular shampoo but it has the ability to remove buildup quite successfully and helps to keep on top of a dry itchy scalp that tends to flake. It serves me well as someone whose hair require a lot of product and who does fairly sweaty yoga throughout the week without washing in between. It does contain both a water-soluble silicone and amodimethicone (not water-soluble but doesn’t build up on itself), which I suspect are helping to add moisture back into the hair, along with sunflower seed extract and other humectants after thoroughly cleansing the scalp.

2. Curlsmith Core Strength Shampoo ($36 CDN | 355 mLs)

This was a newfound discovery and favourite last year when it was easily my most used shampoo by a wide margin — I think I used it most times I washed my hair — and while I experimented with other lines, I immediately repurchased to use when I finished those up. It’s a lightweight but very gentle shampoo that contains some protein and has the ability to remove buildup (and silicones and general funk) out of the hair, while being just cleansing enough. The formula is quite concentrated so it lasts me like a year with regular use, which is divine. It’s pretty slippery as well and hydrating which minimized the amount of tangling that occurred during the washing process.

3. Briogeo Curl Charisma Rice Amino + Shea Curl-Defining Conditioner ($38 CDN | 237 mLs)

2023 was the year of finding great rinse-out conditioners for me. This one is concentrated — which is super important because I have a lot of hair that drinks up a lot of conditioner and this is expensive — and both has the right amount of protein to help add bounce and life to the lazier waves and loose curls I have and add some curl-enhancement, while having enough moisture to encourage juicy curl clumps. It has great slip, really seals the moisture into the hair while being light to medium in weight but offering pretty substantial moisture. It contains shea butter, avocado oil, sunflower seed oil, rice amino acids, keratin amino acids and hydrolyzed quinoa for an ideal balance of moisture and protein, especially during the humid part of the year.

4. Curlsmith Essential Moisture Conditioner ($34 CDN | 355 mLs)

This is my absolute favourite moisturizing conditioner that I think I’ve ever tried and I was lucky enough to grab two backups at 50% off on the Black Friday/Cyber Monday sale. It’s my absolute favourite conditioner in dry winter weather — keep in mind that I live on the east coast so the rest of my year is rather humid — and it’s a great moisturizing conditioner year round. In weight, it’s light to medium but the moisture is rich and the best part is the slip is great and it’s concentrated enough that a single bottle lasts me months. Also, I find the moisture lasts until my next wash day, thanks to the sealing ingredients, and contributes to great curl clumps. It contains your usual emollients, slip agents, shea butter, coconut oil, avocado oil, sunflower seed oil, aloe and numerous plant extracts; I find it to be so moisturizing that it compares to many deep conditioners on the market without being too heavy. My only complaint is that it can make the hair so moisturized that it can be difficult to achieve any sort of grit in the hair afterwards with certain styling products.

5. Curlsmith Hold Me Softly Style Balm ($37 CDN | 237 mLs)

Despite being a fairly devout Curlsmith user for years now, I had never tried their original curl cream until 2023 and I found it to be really good. It’s really moisturizing and on the heavier side of medium in weight but when a small amount is used, it really imparts control to the hair and gets super juicy curl clumps. I really like that glycerin is up so high in the ingredient list as it tends to give me hydrated juicy ringlets, that it contains starch to form great clumpy curls and contains a cocktail of sealing oils, coconut oil, andiroba oil, avocado oil and olive oil. It’s rich and protein free but adds great control to the hair and is especially good in drier conditions. Paired with a gel, it gives great curl definition, and it’s great int he winter.

6. Curlsmith Frizz Rescue Curl Retainer ($37 CDN | 237 mLs)

When I saw the highlighted ingredients for the new Anti-Frizz Recipe Line and then heard that the styler did not have hard hold, I was not interested. Boy was I wrong about both of the stylers in Curlsmith’s new line. This jelly is kind of a cream gel or custard that works for me either on its own (with a little bit of harder hold gel glazed over the top to up the hold), as a curl-enhancer underneath a harder hold gel and as a refreshing product a few days in. It contains sunflower seed extract for a little bit of non-penetrating protein, starch to help form great curl clumps and watermelon seed oil, coconut seed butter, squalane and argan oil to seal everything in. It gives really great juicy curl clumps with hold that’s on the lighter end of the medium scale. It’s surprisingly versatile and I’m really enjoying adding it to my routine, but I will say the ingredients suggest to me that this won’t be great as a main styler in the humid summer months, as they offer more limited humidity resistance. However, it is super moisturizing and has great sealing ingredients.

7. Curlsmith Curl Defining Styling Souffle ($37 CDN | 227g)

While this is easily my favourite gel of all time — and I’m a girl who loves gel and has tried out many — I did fall back in love with this kind of custard-gel hybrid this year. It does well year round, but in the summer humidity, other gels provide more humidity resistance — as in, it can get fluffy and require some extra refreshing when it’s that humid. The rest of the time, it’s perfect, with buildable medium-strong hold, curl-enhancing and moisturizing without being too heavy. It relies on regular humectants, film-forming humectants like irish moss and flax seed extract and plant oils so it really gives enhanced bouncy waves and curls that do not feel product-y but last days.

8. Pattern Beauty Strong Hold Gel ($38 CDN | 425g)

If I remember correctly, I included this in last year’s favourite post as a new buy towards the end of the year. In 2023, I actually re-purchased it in full-size and really enjoyed using it, so it’s another repeater. It has a super thick and sticky gel texture but it’s less heavy than some other gels in this category. It’s great for keeping moisture in the hair and keeping the hair from drying out, and it’s amazing for humidity resistance but still gives me great grit and texture, especially in the roots. It has strong hold but is more flexible than some gels and it really can set curl clumps in place for long lasting hair. It contains PVP, polyquaternium and VA/VP copolymer for hold, and has glycerin followed by film-forming humectants and a number of plant oils. A little bit goes a long way so in the long run it’s surprisingly affordable, even on my dense high-porosity hair. 

9. Curlsmith Frizz Rescue Finishing Serum ($38 CDN | 74 mL)

Curlsmith’s new Anti-Frizz Recipe line was a surprising hit for me, despite there not being a strong-hold styler, or a curl cream, and even though I ordered this during the Black Friday sale as an after thought in order to qualify into a specific threshold, I’ve been borderline obsessed. It’s defined as a serum but it’s silicone-free, so it instead relies on oils, conditioning agents and polymers. A little goes a little long way which is great and it adds a bit of control to the hair when it’s applied and has a touch of hold, while removing any sort of cast and adding some definition. I use it in the place of a hair oil, often in the morning, especially when I’m not doing a refresh. A little bit goes a super long way and it can feel heavy if you overdo it, it does help with frizz and the packaging is super user-friendly and neither annoying to use or breakable, which I really appreciate.

10. Bumble & Bumble Bond-Building Repair Oil Serum ($61 CDN | 48 mL)

I really enjoy this “oil serum”, but I find it to be more of a milk-oil more than anything else and I use it on dry hair, which is likely not the way it’s designed to be used. I use it to either scrunch out the crunch and seal or on subsequent days to tame the mane. I enjoy the durable packaging — it really can make a difference on these products — and I like that it’s lightweight but hydrating and moisturizing, contains bonding ingredients with research a decent way up on the ingredient list and definitely helps with moisture retention. It contains honey, hydrogenated castor oil, apple seed oil, bond building ingredients and glycerin.

11. Ouidad Featherlight Touch-Up Gel Cream ($25.39 CDN | 101 mL)

The wavy/curly hair refresh — my hair sits somewhere between the two — is something that has taken me years to master and yet again this year, I loved and repurchased this product. It’s my favourite for when you aren’t quite at the point of needing much product or a full on wet but need to either spot fix some curls or just smooth things out overall. I either use it as is or dilute with a bit of water to refresh specific curl clumps and it always adds some bounce, reforms curls and minimizes frizz without adding weight and reactivating some of the product already in the hair. Protein is in the first couple of ingredients which both works to re-form the film and adds some structure back and it has humectants and wonderful slip which really helps bring back ringlets. I recently purchased my third tube if that says anything.

12. Curlfriend Collective Emerald Dreams Silk Hair Scarf ($79.95 US)

I never thought I would be the type to rave about high quality hair accessories but here I am. Most of the time, I sleep with the top layer of my hair in a silk scrunchie with this silk hair scarf on top. It’s super silky (great high quality silk) and is actually large enough to stay on my large head while covering the majority (or all) of my hair’s surface. I also love the jewel tones in this one and find that it looks nice enough to wear out and about, especially when twisted into a headband to hide crown frizz. It really helps to reduce tangling in my super-tangly hair and makes it easy for me to get to day 4-day 5 hair.

13. Curlfriend Collective Silk Scrunchie ($24 US)

The second part of my overnight wave preservation relies on this silk scrunchie usually. It’s mulberry silk, doesn’t make me overheat, and preserves volume when I use it to pile the top layer of my hair on the top of my head overnight underneath the hair scarf (or bonnet). I will also use it to pull up my hair throughout the week but I love it for preserving my waves and curls. It’s also great for keeping my roots from flattening overnight.

14. RNW Der. Concentrate Ceramide Plus Serum ($24.79 CDN | 30 mL)

This was a delightful milky humectant serum that I actually really noticed a difference after I stopped using. It’s fragrance free from what I can see and contains glycerin, niacinamide, oat, numerous forms of ceramides towards the top of the ingredients lists and peptides. I found using to really help lock in moisture and give me soothed, plumped and hydrated skin. I surmise that this was great in terms of barrier health and it’s affordable!

15. Paula’s Choice Triple Active Total Repair Serum ($48 US | 30 mL)

It’s becoming quite clear to me that milky serums are my favourite serum texture, as this is another one of them, but it’s more of a state-of-the-art serums targeting smoothness, brightness and barrier function, the latter being what actually tempted me to purchase. It contains 5% niacinamide for barrier function amongst other things, along with other antioxidants, a retinoid and a skin tone evening antioxidant, along with her usual beneficial ingredients. As a regular tretinoin user, I can’t really speak to the results yet but I am enjoying using thus far, and it’s not a product I’ve heard much talk about.

16. Laneige Water Bank Blue Hyaluronic Cream Moisturizer ($54 CDN | 50 mL)

This moisturizer proved itself to be a real favourite for me, despite not having an ingredient list full of all of the bells and whistles and it coming in jar packaging and being quite fragranced. It contains glycerin, squalane, lactobacillus, panthenol, hyaluronic acid and a ceramide, but in use, it’s quite plumping, nourishing and soothing. It’s a great moisturizer that does exactly that nicely and is not overly pricy of a moisturizer. Makeup also sits very nicely on top of it.

17. Paula’s Choice Skin Recovery Hydrating Treatment Mask ($29 US | 118 mL)

Years and years ago, I remember using this moisturizing mask and liking it but now I adore it. It’s reasonably priced and you get a whole bunch of product for that price and it’s perfect for using with irritating actives, or on skin that’s flaking or dealing with any sort of dermatitis. It’s definitely a thick cream but it sinks into the skin and contains replenishing borage oil, a couple of other plant oils, fatty acids and antioxidants. It also burns minimally on super irritated skin and makes things better overnight.

18. Cerave Acne Foaming Cleanser ($20.97 CDN | 150 mL)

Despite this being a creamy gel cleanser targeted for the face, I bought it entirely for use on the body and I’ve really enjoyed using it to minimize armpit odour (TMI sorry but I’m a stress sweat-er) and to minimize breakouts on the body. It did not flare up my eczema, unless used under the arms excessively, and actually had a creamy non-drying texture which my drier skin enjoyed. It helped to mitigate the effects of sweat in terms of exacerbating body breakouts which was entirely delightful, and I’m sure it would work in the same way on the face, whilst being mild. It contains benzoyl peroxide in a low concentration to reduce the burden of bacteria and reduce the formation of breakouts.

19. Isntree Hyaluronic Acid Natural Sun Cream SPF 50+ ($32.85 CDN | 50 mL)

I find that this mineral sunscreen leaves more of a white cast than I’d like when used on my face, without makeup or sunscreen over the top. However, it was my favourite sunscreen for my neck, chest, back and shoulders in the warmer months. It contains niacinamide and a bit of sodium hyaluronate but the real reason why I enjoyed it was that it was irritant free and it was cosmetically elegant, leaving just a sheer white cast that would go away on its own and a nice moisturized feel that was neither greasy or had that tight velvety feel that I’m not in love with. It did well in sunscreen testing and I found it to deliver really great protection. Any sort of actual tan or burning I developed while using this was 100% user error.

20. Aveeno Creamy Oil Moisturizer ($13.99 CDN | 354 mL)

Back in the warmer weather, I picked up this oil-lotion hybrid product and was pleasantly surprised. In the summer, it alone kept my eczema fairly in check, without using much else, when applied right after bathing. Now, in the winter, it would not be enough on this own consistently — I’m currently trying to be good and work through other products so I can’t test — but I found myself enjoying the gentle non-irritating fragrance and the lightweight but rich consistency the oils provided. As my comments suggested, there are numerous oils in the top of the ingredients lists, along with dimethicone and their signature soothing oat, and because of this it’s light but the moisture lasts without that tight, itchy feeling seeping back in for a good while.

21. Charlotte Tilbury Rock n Kohl in Bedroom Black ($37 CDN)

Strangely enough, both my most used makeup item of the year and my favourite makeup item of the year was this black eyeliner. The formula is impeccable, transferring easily to the upper waterline with full pigment, without transferring to the lower waterline and sets in place, without being impossible to remove and it does not irritate my sensitive eyes whatsoever. I have larger eyes and I find that using eyeliner inside the upper waterline really makes a difference in how complete my liquid liner looks and this one is great. I also enjoy that it’s a normal pencil so it can easily be sharpened for easy application and all that jazz. I also once spent many hours looking for this eyeliner when in reality it just was hidden under my bathroom rug.

22. Natasha Denona My Dream Eyeshadow Palette ($89 CDN)

This is a repeater from last year but I pretty much haven’t reached for anything else eyeshadow wise, since I tried it in late 2020. I love the warm-tinged neutrals that leans kind of plummy and taupe-y, as they stay in that neutral family but are interesting and the kind of shades that I enjoy and suit me (as they are warm). The shadows are easy to work with and last really well for me, and I enjoy the selection in the palette of shimmering lid shades of a variety of depths, options for the crease as well as smokier shades. I’ve been particularly fond of the taupe this year and when I’m in the mood, I really enjoy the plums. It’s versatile.

23. Dior Lip Glow Oil in Rosewood ($54 CDN)

In the past few years, I’ve really gotten out of the habit of wearing any sort of lip makeup. However, this year I’ve been enjoying using this expensive non-sticky balm-gloss hybrid. It’s legitimately moisturizing and imparts just enough colour, adding a kind of my-lips-but-better warm rosy shade. It’s super low maintenance and suits easily chapped sensitive lips and is visible on its own, or looks great paired with lip liner.

What were your favourite products of the year?

More Summer Empties | Skincare & Makeup

It seems like I go through phases of not emptying anything and just letting it all accumulate up, followed by periods where the empties back seems to explode seemingly overnight. So before I even think about writing about anything else, I want this overflowing bag out of my life. Now, let’s get onto the good stuff:

An aside: How on earth have I used up to many skincare products??? I must have had a bunch of near empties…

Banila Co Clean It Zero Purifying Cleansing Balm ($32.64 CDN | 100 mL)

I really enjoyed using this cleansing balm and it lasted a while. It had a subtle spa scent that came from synthetic fragrance, which means it did not irritate my skin or sting my eyes — some of us have a tumultuous relationship with essential oils — and did a great job of melting down makeup and then emulsifying to a milk. It sometimes left a film in my eyes but these cleansers all tend to but it didn’t sting and worked on more tenacious makeup. In terms of extra ingredients, it contains antioxidant-rich plant oils and soothing extracts including centella, which made my skin always feel a bit calmer after. I’d purchase again and I have given it as a gift to several people.

Cerave Hydrating Cleanser ($21.99 CDN | 355 mL)

I can say with full confidence that I have never paid full price for this cleanser, and likely wouldn’t, as it’s always on sale somewhere; the issues occur in terms of it actually being in stock, as its gotten popular. I have enjoyed using this non-foaming lightweight lotion cleanser for years, although I will say it can sting if I’ve overdone it on the acids/active ingredients and it is not a intensive makeup remover. It’s a gentle staple for me that I often keep in the shower as a second nighttime cleanse, and it’s great for not drying your skin out while cleansing. I will say when I repurchase, it’ll either be on sale or be one of the house brand varieties chains are coming out with. It contains ceramides, barrier-reinforcing ingredients and hyaluronic acid, along with gentle cleansing agents.

Kate Somerville Goat Milk Moisturizing Cleanser ($60 CDN | 120 mL)

Despite lasting me up to or around six months, I seem to have accumulated two empties of this cream cleanser. It’s my favourite but it’s expensive so I try to stock up when I see it on sale. It’s a great treatment cleanser for dry sensitive skin, never burns and has lots of great quality plant oils to soothe and moisturize, lactic acid, honey and hydrating goat’s milk. It removes makeup well while being super gentle and has a rich cream texture that leaves my skin soothed and generally happy afterwards. It would take something spectacular or just generally more affordable to knock this out of its place. It does not leave my skin dry or tight after use, even with nothing applied after.

Fenty Skin Fat Water Hydrating Milky Toner Essence ($46 CDN | 150 mL)

This milky essence-come-toner is seriously moisturizing, soothing and loaded with beneficial ingredients including squalane, niacinamide, apple fruit extract, hyaluronic acid, natural moisturizing factors and plant oils. There’s something in it that can sometimes be slightly sensitizing but nothing major — it’s probably the amount of fragrance it contains and one of the plant extracts — but I still adore it; the other thing to note would be that it needs to be applied on pretty wet skin or it can start to pill products applied afterwards. I loved it in the drier cooler weather and I love it now, seeing as I repurchased it.

Dr Ceuracle Vegan Kombucha Tea Essence ($51.27 CDN | 150 mL)

I finished this essence/milky-toner hybrid late in spring and I missed it tremendously, but I did wait for myself to finish the other milky toners I was working on before repurchasing. It has a cool consistency that kind of emulsifies when shaken into something super creamy. It’s great for replenishing the skin barrier and adding hydration, moisture and replenishment after cleansing, especially on my dry sensitive skin that is eczema-prone. It contains multiple probiotic ingredients (kombucha and saccharomyces) that are both soothing and function as antioxidants, along with plant oils, sodium hyaluronate, xcentella and a replenishing ceramide. It’s fragrance free and super calming.

Paula’s Choice Resist Advanced Replenishing Toner ($26 US | 118 mL)

This is another favourite milky toner of mine, but with more hydrating and barrier-reinforcing ingredients and less plant oils. I’ve repurchased it many times over the years and it’s a good one, but it’s easy to go through quickly. It contains glycerin, fatty acids, sodium hyaluronate, numerous antioxidants and skin soothers. I’m sure I will pick it up the next time I make a Paulas Choice order. It’s great on sensitive or compromised skin as its fragrance and fairly irritant free. It’s very plumping and is a god-send for binding moisture to the skin.

Tarte Knockout Tingle Treatment Toner ($53 CDN | 150 mL)

This is not an acid toner for the faint of heart but I enjoyed it as a seasoned acid exfoliant user, even if I couldn’t tolerate using it as often as I could with gentler exfoliants. Its an approximately ten percent complex of lactic acid, citric acid, gluconolactone, malic acid, phytic acid and salicylic acid, formulated at what likely is a quite low pH (thanks to the vinegar and other ingredients) so it’s a bit zingy, but it gives good results, especially with the niacinamide so high in the ingredient list. I’m inclined to say that one of the plant extracts I find kind of irritating when used too often but otherwise it really helps with congestion and skin texture and leaves my skin bright and glowy.

Missha Time Revolution Night Repair Ampoule ($56.99 CDN | 50 mL)

I think this was my second empty bottle of this serum and I repurchased when it was on sale for a great price and I think I’d buy again. It’s a great non-active-lead serum that contains niacinamide to strengthen the skin barrier and not much else in that kind of concentration. It contains numerous fermented probiotic ingredients that tend to act as humectants but also help with the skin barrier, which is always a focus for me and my dry sensitive skin. It contains some antioxidant ingredients as well but the highlights are really the niacinamide and the probiotics. It contains some essential oil derived fragrance but it doesn’t seem to be an issue in terms of skin sensitivity for me and actually seems to make my skin feel stronger and generally happier.

Beekman 1802 Milk Drops Ceramide Serum ($45 US | 0.95 ounce)

I really enjoyed using this ceramide-infused and barrier-restoring humectant serum, but it’s kind of a pain to get ahold of regularly so I don’t think I’d make the effort to repurchase. I was lucky enough to find it at a discount from a FabFitFun sale and the ingredients intrigued me enough to try it. The goat milk derived ingredients are interesting and soothing/hydrating, the ceramide is promising, and I quite enjoyed the rest of the formula as well, made up of probiotic bifida ferment lysate, sodium hyaluronate, squalane and honey. It was a humectant serum that did more that I really enjoyed using, especially when my skin was visibly stressed and I had visibly overdone things.

Kate Somerville Squalane+Hyaluronic Hydrate + Plump Serum ($98 US | 30 mL)

This is a really sophisticated and well-formulated hyaluronic acid based humectant serum but it’s very expensive for something I tent to go through quick; it’s one of those skincare things I enjoy but only purchase on a good sale. It’s a super juicy hydrating serum in a milky vehicle, with squalane, glycerin, panthenol, adenosine and multiple forms of sodium hyaluronate. It’s a super gentle, non-stingy and non irritating formula and tends to give me hydrated plumped, juicy looking skin.

Drunk Elephant Protini Resurfacing Serum ($111 CDN | 30 mL)

This serum is expensive but might just be worth the money for me because of the results it gives me and the good six months (or more), it lasts with typical use. It’s 10% lactic acid that does double duty as a chemical exfoliant and a nice humectant serum. It features squalane, some lovely plant oils, numerous peptides and skin-identical ingredients to fortify the skin barrier. I love how it contains nothing irritating and easily fits into my routine a few times a week. It’s pricey but I’ll repurchase after I’m done playing with the current exfoliants I have on the go because I do miss it. It really helps with texture and keeps my skin looking generally plump and bright.

Cosrx Advanced Snail 96 Mucin Power Essence ($33.70 CDN | 100 mL)

This “essence” is my favourite humectant serum — honestly don’t know what makes it an essence compared to a serum but I won’t complain as you get a lot of product for your money –, mainly consisting of barrier-repairing and healing snail secretion filtrate, but has sodium hyaluronate and allantoin thrown in there too. It’s great for plumping up the skin and holding onto moisture and minimizing irritation and dryness. I even repurchased multiples last time I ordered this. It’s my go-to.

L’Oreal Revitalift Filler [+Hyaluronic Acid] Eye Cream for Face ($25.99 CDN | 30 mL)

I’m kind of shocked that I haven’t really seen any coverage on this value-sized eye cream, considering how delightful it is. It’s great for a sensitive eye area, as it’s fragrance-free and doesn’t really contain common irritants. The pump packaging is super efficient and lets you easily get all of the product out without compromising the stability with any of the antioxidants or other ingredients, and it lasted me ages. The fourth ingredient is a fermented extract, known for functioning as an antioxidant and skin-soother (fermented black tea and saccharomyces ferment), and it’s followed by shea butter, pro-xylane, a cell-communicating ingredient, caffeine, another notable cell-communicating ingredient, sodium hyaluronate and ascorbyl glucoside. My experience in using this eye cream were plump, bright and non-irritated under-eyes. I primarily used as an eye cream and I will repurchase after I finish what’s in my stash.

Cosrx Advanced Snail Peptide Eye Cream ($37.28 CDN | 25 mL)

I finished my second bottle of this snail secretion filtrate based eye cream and happily snagged another when I saw it on sale. Again, it’s a really well formulated eye cream, formulated without fragrance or any sketchy extracts. It contains the super repairing snail, along with brightening niacinamide, arganine, sodium hyaluronate and peptides that function at the very minimum as humectants. It never burns or stings and makeup wears nicely on top of it.

Anessa Perfect UV Sunscreen Mild Milk SPF 50+ ($40.47 CDN | 60 mL)

This is a great sunscreen in terms of both UVA/UVB protection, sweat/humidity resistance and is both easy to tolerate and cosmetically elegant. It’s both drying alcohol and fragrance free, while still being super lightweight and dries to this soft-focus velvety finish on its own. The matte finish isn’t my favourite on myself because it tends to cling to dry patches and just leaves me feeling more dry and heavy than I’d like — but I’m someone who prefers dewy formulations with drier skin to begin with as a preference. It’s a combination sunscreen with some of these newer generation potent filters that are available in Asia and it has a minor and manageable white cast. It never runs into the eyes or stings during workouts or heavy sweating, I will say. I finished it, using it for sweaty yoga practices on my chest neck and shoulders but i also enjoyed it for the occasions when I was sweating heavily and needed serious sun protection. I would be curious to try a different formulation from the brand.

Laneige Water Bank Blue Hyaluronic Cream Moisturizer ($30 CDN | 20 mL)

Looking at the ingredient list for this moisturizer, I was pretty meh, as it includes squalane super high on the ingredient list but not much else of note, other than hyaluronic acid, allantoin, beta glucan, a ceramide and lactobacillus ferment lysate, all at the bottom of the ingredient list. However, once I tried it, I couldn’t stop using it. It has a subtle spa scent that does not come from essential oils — so it agrees with my skin — and it has a really nice cushioning cream texture that soaks into the skin and leaves it hydrated and plump. I’ve already repurchased.

Summer Fridays Cloud Dew Gel Cream Moisturizer ($61 CDN | 50 mL)

This is a great water-cream moisturizer that I’ve heard fantastic things about and wasn’t too expensive, but it’s just not rich enough for my dry skin. I actually used it up on my chest and neck and loved it that way but won’t be repurchasing. It contains multiple forms of hyaluronic acid, glutamic acid, numerous amino acids, ascorbic acid and a ceramide but does not have that cushioning-feel and emollients/occlusives my eczema-prone skin craves. I will note that it’s fragrance-free and non irritating.

Kate Somerville DeliKate Recovery Cream ($103 CDN | 50 mL)

This moisturizer is as expensive as I am comfortable spending — and I always shop around and try to stock up when its on sale — but it’s been my go-to since early quarantine era. It has a great whipped balm texture that feels lightweight while adding comfort to dry tight skin and is fragrance free and is formulated without those plant extracts that can sometimes be an issue for me. It has shea butter, ceramides, peptides, honey, a few cell-communicating ingredients and some soothing plant extracts. It is concentrated enough that it lasts forever, is great under makeup and is great for healing a damaged skin barrier without any risk of stinging.

Paula’s Choice Omega+ Complex Moisturizer ($37 US | 50 mL)

This moisturizer has a texture that is similar to the Kate Somerville, which may explain why I love the two so much, but is even more whipped and cloud-like in airless pump packaging. It’s also about half the price. It too is fragrance free and formulated without anything that I’ve ever experienced irritation with and does not sting. It’s loaded with omega-rich plant oils, fatty acids, ceramides, squalane and a bunch of barrier-repairing ingredients. I never know when the product is empty until it is, which is my only complaint and I always repurchase when I place an order.

Ilia Super Serum Skin Tint SPF 40 in Tuluum ($65 CDN | 30 mL)

It’s so rare that I finish a foundation-class kind of product but I’ve been reaching for this sheer-to-light coverage tinted sunscreen for the last year or two as my go-to. It applies pretty well over dry patches, has a dewy finish, always makes me look a bit better and is sheer enough that I’m actually using enough to get sunscreen coverage. It’s fragrance and alcohol free and has shea butter, niacinamide, squalane and sodium hyaluronate for skin benefits. I’ve repurchased already, as it suits my everyday base needs, and it has such an impressive colour selection for a sheerer product.

L’Oreal Bambi Oversized Eye Volumizing Mascara in Intense Black ($15.99 CDN)

I typically love L’Oreal mascaras but this spin-off of the original Bambi mascara was not a favourite. As someone with sensitive eyes, looking volume, separation and a little bit of drama, this brush was a little too spiky and I didn’t enjoy the comb-like brush. The formula seemed quite wet and didn’t do anything special after it dried out any. I also have never used a lash curler so I obviously do not need to be chasing a lifting mascara. It did offer good length, definition and separation. I didn’t find it that volumizing, either.

L’Oreal Voluminous Lash Paradise Mascara in Mystic Black ($13.46 CDN)

This is the drugstore mascara that I measure all other drugstore (and non-drugstore) mascaras against. It’s a fairly dry formula — but even so, I prefer it once it starts to dry out — and the packaging tends to be a mess, smeared with old dried mascara but it gives great volume, some length and curl too with minimal product. It does not irritate my eyes or feel heavy on my lashes and gives some drama and the large natural bristle brush is great. It gives some volume, is conditioning and adds some drama that is definitely buildable. The only downside is it can be kind of difficult to remove, despite not being waterproof. I have used many tubes of this and given many tubes to friends as gifts.

L’Oreal Bambi Eye Mascara in Extra Noir ($15.99 CDN)

This is another drugstore mascara that I’ve repurchased and I really enjoy using. Like the others, it does not irritate my sensitive eyes and actually does feel pretty conditioning and lightweight. It’s a happy medium between a dry and wet formula, has a plastic brush that does not have that stabbing-your-eyeballs feel. It has a football-shaped brush with short bristles that really does give like a thickening wide-eyed effect while adding some length. It does not clump easily and is a great everyday mascara that removes easily and even works when I’m dealing with seasonal allergies. It’s buildable too but I don’t find it to be the most drama-inducing mascara in the world.

L’Oreal Brow Stylist Micro Ink Pen in Dark Brunette ($13.28 CDN)

Another thing L’Oreal does super well is brow products, as they come in great typically-ashy shades and have sophisticated formulas while remaining fairly inexpensive. I really have come to love using their brow pens as an everyday brow staple. They pull super natural and read as actual hairs for the most part and work to fill-in more sparse areas of the brows for a more uniform look, which suits my needs well as someone with a lot of brow hairs but definite sparse areas. They wouldn’t work as well for someone looking for a full-on defined brow or someone looking to dramatically alter their brow shape. I quite liked the darker shade for the outer half of my brows but I think I prefer the light brown shade overall, which is what I’ve repurchased.

What have you finished lately?