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  • Kylie Jenner’s Deep ’90s French Manicure Is Taking Me Back – See Photo

    Kylie Jenner’s Deep ’90s French Manicure Is Taking Me Back – See Photo

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    The French manicure's renaissance has been going strong for years now, and with it have come so many takes: bright tips, three-dimensional details, micro-tips, and so much more. But if you got your first set of acrylics as a teen in the ‘90s, the French manicure variant that's indelibly etched into your brain is one with particularly thick, white tips. And it seems Kylie Jenner is helping to make it one of the more in-demand versions of the French manicure.

    Jenner posted a couple of photo carousels to her Instagram grid between last night and this afternoon, the first of which says, “living my best life,” in the caption. Living said best life appears to include wearing all black, posing on the passenger side of a large vehicle, and wearing a flawless, '90s-inspired French mani.

    Nail artist Zola Ganzorigt shared one of the same photos to her own Instagram grid—a selfie of Jenner showing off the manicure: long-but-not-too-long, oval nails with a traditional, sheer pink base and white tips that cover nearly half the length of the nail. Ganzorigt calls it a “deep '90s French.”

    And yes, that's how we wore our French manicures back in the day. This is exactly what my nails looked like (albeit more square) for my senior prom in spring 1997. And while I don't have photo proof readily on hand, Ganzorigt included her inspiration—the June 1997 cover of Nails magazine—in one of the carousel slides.

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    It's worth noting that Jenner was born just two months after that magazine issue was published, so you could argue that she was born to wear her nails this way. But no matter when you came into this world, this is a look that works for everyone and with everything.

  • Innisfree’s Green Tea Line Is as Refreshing as a Tall Iced Tea—Review

    Innisfree’s Green Tea Line Is as Refreshing as a Tall Iced Tea—Review

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    Save StorySave this storySave StorySave this storyBuy Now at Innisfree

    All products featured on Allure are independently selected by our editors. However, when you buy something through our retail links, we may earn an affiliate commission.

    TL;DR:

    • What it is: A K-Beauty line of green tea-infused skin care
    • What it does: There’s a formula for cleansing, one for toning, and so many amazing serums
    • Who it’s for: Anyone looking for lightweight, antioxidant skin care

    Beloved K-Beauty brand Innisfree’s line of green tea-infused skin care is wildly popular, with one of its most beloved serums being purchased every five seconds around the globe. Closer to home, the green tea line has also earned a devoted following among Allure editors, and it is easy to see why: Whether you’re cleansing (Innisfree Green Tea Amino Acid Cleansing Foam), exfoliating (Innisfree Green Tea Enzyme PHA Toner), hydrating (Innisfree Green Tea Seed Hyaluronic Serum) or treating dullness and discoloration (Innisfree Green Tea Enzyme Vitamin C Brightening Serum), the formulas are light and a breeze to apply. Each is as refreshing and quenching as a tall iced tea, and the leave-on products help protect skin with antioxidant green tea all summer long.

    Innisfree’s Green Tea Line is a part of our Allure Beauty Box product lineup for August. Subscribe to Allure Beauty Box and get editor-approved picks in makeup, skincare, hair care, and fragrance delivered right to your door every month.

    Innisfree’s Green Tea Line

    Innisfree’s Green Tea Line

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    All products featured on Allure are independently selected by our editors. However, we may receive compensation from retailers and/or from purchases of products through these links.

    Buy at Innisfree

  • Tower 28 Juicebalm Vegan Tinted Lip Balm Is Summery Lip Color Perfection—Review

    Tower 28 Juicebalm Vegan Tinted Lip Balm Is Summery Lip Color Perfection—Review

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    Save StorySave this storySave StorySave this story$16 at Revolve

    All products featured on Allure are independently selected by our editors. However, when you buy something through our retail links, we may earn an affiliate commission.

    TL;DR:

    • What it is: A hydrating lip balm with lots of color payoff
    • What it does: Gives lips summery, glossy color
    • Who it’s for: Anyone who wants the hydration and glossy finish of a balm, but with a bigger kick of color

    Tower 28 Juicebalm Vegan Tinted Lip Balm crayons look adorable and cheery coming out of your bag, and pack a pretty punch of color in a hydrating stick format—it’s like your favorite lip balm and a beloved lipstick had a baby. “A glossy, hydrating balm with color is a win,” says Allure’s Sarah Han. Shades like cherry Squeeze, berry Drink, and pinkish-neutral Mix are easy to wear all summer long, and can quickly be sheered out if that’s more your vibe. Swipe on the crayon, keeping in mind that it’s got a decent amount of pigment, so you have to be a little more careful than you would be with a standard lip balm not to color outside the lip lines.

    Tower 28 Juicebalm Vegan Tinted Lip Balm is a part of our Allure Beauty Box product lineup for August. Subscribe to Allure Beauty Box and get editor-approved picks in makeup, skincare, hair care, and fragrance delivered right to your door every month.

    Tower 28 Juicebalm Vegan Tinted Lip Balm

    Tower 28 Juicebalm Vegan Tinted Lip Balm

    $16 at Revolve

    All products featured on Allure are independently selected by our editors. However, we may receive compensation from retailers and/or from purchases of products through these links.

    $16 at Revolve

  • Inside the World of Professional Back-Scratching

    Inside the World of Professional Back-Scratching

    Image may contain Body Part Hand Person Finger Electronics Hardware Nail and AdultPhotography by Rachel PickusSave StorySave this storySave StorySave this story

    Pashun George and her sister grew up scratching their mother’s back before bed. Now, they charge $130 an hour for it.

    In 2010, they turned the tradition into a family business, Scratcher Girls, the country’s first professional back-scratching service. Today, the three of them field appointments in their Miami spa and tour the country delivering professional back scratches.

    “Now more than ever, people are in need of human touch,” says George. Though their business has recently gained traction and TikTok virality (a video of one of their express back-scratching services has 15 million views and counting), the Scratcher Girls are not an overnight success.

    “My mother is the back-scratching queen,” George explains. “She had the idea for the business close to twenty years ago.” Back then, they struggled to convince clients and other businesses to take them seriously.

    “There were a lot of naysayers. People wanted to put us in a sexual category, and it took a lot to separate ourselves from that,” says George. The women decided to take the narrative into their own hands. They started a YouTube channel and made wellness their niche.

    “Back then, you couldn’t even show a bare back on YouTube without getting flagged,” George says. But the sisters were resilient.

    “We posted consistently and made sure to focus on our mission: touch therapy. We gained over 100K followers on YouTube, and we built a following on TikTok,” she says. “We never pay for promotion or advertising. Everything has been 100 percent authentic.”

    Now, the family can hardly keep up with demand. Their clients regularly fly in from places like Russia, the Philippines, and Germany for a 60-minute scratch session administered by George or a family member, all of whom have extra-long manicured nails.

    A session with the scratcher sisters feels similar to a spa. Clients lie on the table, close their eyes, and listen to soothing music. But instead of intense pressure, they receive a softer, soothing touch customized to their liking. The session begins on the back but also includes the arms, neck, legs, and ankles.

    “We don’t stop. We don’t break contact with a client until their time is up. It is full on, uninterrupted bliss,” says George.

    The Scratcher Girls aren’t the only ones back-scratching their way to success. Spas across the country have added the service to their treatment menus, and appointments are going fast.

    Luv Clifton, a Knoxville resident, wanted a professional back-scratching appointment after seeing ZenHeads Spa’s videos pop up on her TikTok For You page.

    For $250, clients can enjoy the “ASMR Massage” which includes 60 minutes of constant back-tracing and hair play with jade combs, wooden chopsticks, fluffy feathers, and more.

    “I was immediately sold,” says Clifton.

    But getting an appointment was more difficult than she expected. Thanks to the treatment’s popularity, appointments regularly get snatched up as soon as they’re made available. Eventually, Clifton got through by adding her name to the waitlist, and the results were well worth the wait.

    “I fell asleep during my session,” she says, “which is normally hard for me.”

    Alyssa Coulter, founder of ZenHeads Spa, has been practicing massage therapy for the past four years. She introduced the ASMR Massage to her treatment menu last year in an effort to expand her services.

    “Being a massage therapist, your body is your work,” she explains, “The amount of money you can make is really limited by how much power your body can put out. We were looking for other low effort modalities that would be easier on our bodies.”

    At the same time, she started seeing ASMR videos on social media. The acronym stands for automated sensory meridian response, better known as the tingles you feel when you watch someone typing on a keyboard or hear rain drops on a tin roof. (ASMR triggers can be both audio and visual.) Coulter figured she could recreate some of the ASMR techniques commonly used on social media—like hair play and dry brushing—in the treatment room.

    Then, in 2024, Coulter started creating ASMR videos of her own. And like the Scratcher Girls, most of her clients now find her through social media. Without it, she says, she might not have gotten through to the “right” people: Her regular massage clients weren’t interested in a professional back-scratch, she says.

    Rebecca Benvie, founder of WhisperWave Spa in New York City, which exclusively offers ASMR oriented services like soft whispers and gentle tracing, experienced something similar when she opened her doors in 2024.

    “Honestly, there’s been a huge cultural shift from when I started [last year] to now,” she says. “People were shy and even borderline embarrassed to be seeking out the service when I first started. It felt like there was something fundamentally embarrassing about wanting to be touched in a nurturing way.”

    Today, one of Benvie’s most popular treatments is “Just Here for the Back Rubs” which promises a full hour of gentle hairbrushing, back-tracing, and light scratching for $150.

    The obvious benefit is relaxation, but Coulter believes it is deeper than that.

    “The more we learn about massage we learn that therapists are interacting as much with the nervous system as we are with actual soft tissue and muscle,” she explains, “So if you can be relaxed in any way, even by light, gentle touch, that can do just as much good for your body for your pain as a deep tissue massage.”

    Morayo Adisa, MD, a double board-certified dermatologist and dermatopathologist based in Chicago, also sees the value. “Back-scratching, if performed by a trained professional in a clean, regulated facility with clean tools, and with the appropriate scratch intensity, can be comforting and stress-relieving,” she says, adding that the practice can “[boost] the production of endorphins and dopamine and promote blood circulation.”

    More specifically, says Tiffany Libby, MD, a double board-certified dermatologist and MOHS surgeon based in Providence, RI, back-scratching (or any type of soft, stroking motion) activates the C-fibers in our central nervous systems which then "activates the part of the brain that is associated with comfort.”

    “It comes down to [the feeling of] safety,” says Katie Schloss, a licensed social worker based in Chicago. “When little kids are learning how to walk, they'll look back at their primary caregiver to make sure that it's safe for them to continue. Adults getting these back scratches is kind of the same thing. They no longer have their mom, sister, or friend to scratch their back so they're seeking it elsewhere in the world.”

    And for some clients, that feeling is worth the triple-digit price tag.

    “It does pain me a little to pay an obscene price to have someone play with my hair,” says Laura Vandergriff, a client of Coulter and a mom to twins. “Listen, I live in a house full of boys. No one is going to play with my hair, so if I have to pay this woman to tickle me, so be it!”

    Vandergriff says she doesn’t regularly treat herself to wellness services, so she figures this option is as good as anything else: “I work a desk job. I have bad posture. When I get a massage, I want them to treat a problem; it doesn’t necessarily feel relaxing. I just want to pay someone to tickle my back.”

    Similarly, Angela Mastantuono, a high school English teacher in southern California, used to treat herself to a monthly massage, but ever since she discovered the Soft Touch Spa in Los Angeles, she can’t go back.

    “When somebody scratches your back or plays with your hair, you never want them to stop. At the end of every session, I book my next appointment,” says Mastantuono. “Now, I go every month religiously.”

    Julie Luther, the founder of Soft Touch, can relate. "As a child, one thing that could always calm me down and get me to sleep was a back-scratch from my mom,” she says. “Some people are looking to fill a void. I feel honored to help fill that space for them.”

  • More Young Patients Are Getting Plastic Surgery to Depuff Their Undereyes

    More Young Patients Are Getting Plastic Surgery to Depuff Their Undereyes

    Image may contain Body Part Face Head Neck Person Photography Portrait Adult and WashingHuy LuongSave StorySave this storySave StorySave this story

    Lower blepharoplasty isn’t the sexiest sounding plastic surgery procedure around, but lately it’s getting a ton of attention in ORs and on social media—including from a new group of younger patients. Once reserved for removing sagging undereye bags and loose skin on the 60-year-old facelift set, lower blepharoplasty is now appealing to broader age groups, including patients in their 30s and even 20s, who want to get rid of chronic undereye puffiness and shadows that serums just can’t fix.

    “This is not your mother’s bleph,” says Adam Kolker, MD, a double board-certified plastic surgeon in New York City. (“Bleph,” as you probably guessed, is shorthand for blepharoplasty.) Ten years ago, it was rare to see someone in their 30s inquiring about a lower blepharoplasty, but in the past few years, it’s become “incredibly common,” says Dr. Kolker. “People are their own harshest critics, and you're seeing your eyes in real time every time you take a selfie, every time you see yourself on Zoom or FaceTime. So I think people are hyperaware of shadows and bags, even in their 20s and 30s.” (Blepharoplasty, a catch-all term for tightening lower and upper lids, was one of the top five most popular plastic surgery procedures in the US last year, according to the American Society of Plastic Surgeons' most recent trend report. The report does not include numbers on patients' ages or on lower blepharoplasty specifically, though.)

    Every time you look at a face, be it your own or someone else’s, it’s second nature to hone in on the eyes. “When we're having a conversation, the eyes are the main thing that we're focusing on; it’s the point of contact,” says Robert Schwarcz, MD, a board-certified oculoplastic surgeon in New York City, who specializes in blepharoplasty and performs about 30 to 40 each month. So it’s common to notice the most minute changes in your own eyes. “People say, ‘Oh, my neck is so bad,’ but it takes a minute to notice that. It doesn't take a minute to notice bags under the eyes,” says Dr. Schwarcz. “It's instantaneous.”

    Ten years ago, it was rare to see a lower blepharoplasty patient in their 30s; now it’s “incredibly common.”

    Lower blephs have also gotten a bump from the social media effect. There’s the speculation over which celebrities have had them—complete with some pretty compelling before and afters that make excellent (albeit speculative) cases for getting a surgery of your own. And there are also more and more millennial and Gen Z TikTok users documenting their lower blepharoplasties online, with some saying the procedure “changed [their] life.”

    “With the rise of information on social media, people are asking for a surgical correction earlier,” says Jason Diamond, MD, a double board-certified facial plastic surgeon in Beverly Hills. Historically, patients started toying with the idea of a lower blepharoplasty around the age of 50, but Dr. Diamond says these conversations now generally begin as patients enter their 30s. This growing interest in lower blephs is also not limited to women. Dr. Schwarcz says more and more men are having the surgery: “Our patients are about 30% male, way up from previous years.”

    These new lower blepharoplasty patients—both male and female—may have tried undereye filler or simply aren’t interested in injections, preferring to jump right to a much longer-lasting solution. Despite its promises and instant-gratification vibe (with just a needle, no more puffiness!), undereye filler has become a somewhat controversial procedure. It can be great for the right patient, but usually that's someone more interested in addressing chronic dark circles than prominent bags. “If someone strictly has hollowness [under their eyes], tear trough filler is a reasonable option to provide volume to an existing concavity,” says Dr. Diamond, but it also can carry the risk of lumps, bumps, and a bluish tint (called the Tyndall effect) in the thin skin of the undereye area. When an unskilled injector offers up undereye filler, the more serious side effects can even include blindness or stroke.

    “This is not your mother’s blepharoplasty.”

    So maybe it’s not so surprising that surgeons have noticed an increased “shifting away from short-lived injectable Band-Aids,” says Dr. Kolker. Filler has been criticized for the undereyes, adds Dr. Diamond, “because it hasn't always provided the results desired—and it’s caused worse counterproductive issues, when performed incorrectly.”

    Patients in their 20s and 30s who are interested in lower blepharoplasty are typically looking to address bags and puffiness, or saying their eyes “look like their mom’s eyes,” says Dr. Schwarcz. In more technical terms, these younger patients are motivated by a desire to correct “a contour defect,” he adds. “Meaning there’s a puff and a drop, or a ‘mountain’ and a ‘valley’ under the eye.” For these patients, the puffiness is usually something that they were born with. It is genetic and has very little to do with age. The goal of their lower blepharoplasty is to “drop the peak of the mountain and raise the trough of the valley so they’re almost at the same height at the ‘cheek-eyelid’ junction,” Dr. Schwarcz explains, which is “the most important thing” to adjust if you want the area where the undereyes and cheeks meet to look smooth and less distinct. (This is generally the goal of lower blepharoplasty for older patients, too, but those also entail removing excess skin that is sagging or looks loose under the eye.)

    In some ways, these new, younger patients may be better suited to lower blepharoplasty, technically speaking, than the more traditional middle-aged candidates. During a consultation for this particular surgery, a plastic surgeon often performs the “snap back test,” in which they gently pull the undereye skin away from the face to see how quickly it goes back into place. For patients who have loose, sagging skin, it might not snap back quickly. “It kind of falls in space,” says Patrick J. Byrne, MD, a board-certified plastic facial plastic surgeon and president of the American Academy of Facial Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery (AAFPRS). A lower blepharoplasty can still be performed, but it’s a bit more complicated. It requires techniques to tighten the corner of the eyes and support the lower lids, which can potentially lead to “very subtle changes in the shape of the eye,” says Dr. Byrne, typically an unwanted side effect. When you’re younger and your skin snaps back faster, you don’t need these additional surgical techniques that could potentially and regrettably wind up changing the shape of your eyes.

    There can be a puff and a drop, or a ‘mountain’ and a ‘valley,’ under the eye that is genetic and has very little to do with age.

    For more and more young patients, lower blepharoplasties are appealing for their ability to address puffiness that can simply be part of their anatomy (other times, puffiness can come with age). “Even at very young ages, you can have this contour imperfection underneath the eyes,” says Dr. Byrne. Lower lid puffiness and perpetual shadows are usually genetic and can be visible even in teenagers, but that’s not to suggest anyone hand out lower blepharoplasties as high school graduation gifts. Surgery-wise, you “generally want to think about addressing this when you've exhausted other options,” says Dr. Kolker.

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    A 32-year-old patient before and after lower blepharoplasty with fat grafting, performed by Robert Schwarcz, MD, a board-certified oculoplastic surgeon in New York City. Courtesy of Dr. Schwarcz.

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    A 24-year-old patient before and after lower blepharoplasty performed by Adam Kolker, MD, a double board-certified plastic surgeon in New York City. Courtesy of Dr. Kolker.

    These other options include in-office tightening treatments (like CO2 lasers) or chemical peels to help smooth and tighten the lower lid. But scalpel-free options won’t always make a really appreciable difference. “The more puffiness, the less of a candidate they are for nonsurgical options to really improve their problem in an effective, long-lasting way,” says Dr. Diamond. Filler can’t do much to help prominent bags under the eyes, but “if a patient has subtle puffiness, adding filler to the surrounding area that's concave can bring those areas forward, reducing the appearance of the puffiness and making the area appear more smooth,” says Dr. Diamond. “You can do undereye filler in literally five minutes, and you can walk out and go to dinner that night. That suits a lot of people who are like, ‘I can't be out for a week. I've got to be ready tomorrow.’”

    But like we said, undereye filler isn’t always a perfect solution, and you really need to go to someone who is deeply experienced—a board-certified plastic surgeon or dermatologist only, and ideally one who can show you a portfolio of compelling before and afters. And even then, sometimes filler can do more harm than good, says Konstantin Vasyukevich, MD, a board-certified plastic surgeon in New York City. In fact, he thinks undereye filler gone awry in younger patients might be one reason they’re asking about lower blepharoplasties. Dr. Vasyukevich has seen a “huge” uptick in patients dealing with “filler-related bags,” and most of them don’t realize it’s related to filler. “They just see it as puffiness,” he says, noting that’s partly because often it’s not being caused by recent filler—it’s old. “Something has been there for a year or even five years and can create puffiness under the eyes.” In these cases, dissolving the filler with hyaluronidase removes that puffiness entirely, without the need for surgery.

    What’s not an option for bringing down lifelong puffiness and shadows under the eyes is skin care, says Melissa Doft, MD, a board-certified plastic surgeon in New York City. Despite all the claims of brightening and depuffing that eye creams and serums and rollerballs make, chronic bags or trough shadows (in the hollow underneath puffiness) are caused by fat pockets under the skin. “There's no cream that's going to get rid of the fat,” says Dr. Doft. No serum or mask or rollerball, either. “The only way is to surgically remove it, and Gen Z and millennials like the idea of one-and-done, which leads them to surgery over fillers.”

    Lower blepharoplasty is considered an incredibly safe and minimally invasive procedure, which no doubt adds to its appeal. It is often performed under IV sedation or local anesthesia (not general anesthesia), and the recovery involves swelling and bruising for a week or two. Minor swelling may continue for a few weeks, and a patient will be fully healed in about three to six months. “It’s a pretty easy healing,” says Dr. Diamond, adding that usually patients describe it as “a painless recovery.” Potential risks can include lid lag, where the lower eyelid pulls down, and what Dr. Byrne calls “little bleeders” behind the eye, which can retract and cause complications; however, these are very rare. “​​You really need a controlled environment where you can have meticulous hemostasis control of those blood vessels to keep the patient safe,” he explains.

    Though the recovery process is less intense than it is for many other facial procedures, targeting the lower lid comes with unique challenges and its own set of considerations. “The lower eyelid has a tougher job than the upper lid,” says Dr. Byrne. “It has to stay suspended upward sufficiently to protect the eye and allow tears to drain.” To address puffiness while avoiding surgical scars on such a prominent area of the face, all the surgeons I spoke with prefer a transconjunctival blepharoplasty approach, which is done through the inside of the eyelid (as opposed to below the lash line), thus leaving no visible trace. As Dr. Diamond explains it, a surgeon will trim down, reposition, or completely remove the fat pockets (there are three under each eye) or fold them over the rim of the eye. “When we shrink the fat pockets down, we’re completely reducing the puffiness,” he says.

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    A 33-year-old patient before and after lower blepharoplasty performed by Dr. Kolker. Courtesy of Dr. Kolker.

    Sometimes, plastic surgeons will add more fat to the area. When a patient has puffiness and hollowness underneath the eyes, as many do, surgeons will use fat grafting to inject fat from the patient’s abdomen into that sunken area so the skin surface right under the eyes becomes an entirely even plane. Fat grafting has become an increasingly popular technique for adding tiny amounts of fat and volume where they’re needed in the face. It’s also useful for patients who are on a GLP-1, though that’s a bit more involved: “I need to graft more fat because their cheek and eyelid junction is way more sunken and hollow,” says Dr. Schwarcz.

    A lower blepharoplasty can cost anywhere from $5,000 to $20,000, depending on the surgeon's location, anesthesia, the surgeon’s expertise, and whether or not fat grafting or laser treatments are performed, as well. The surgery usually takes a few hours, and while most younger patients get it as a standalone procedure, it can also be combined with other surgeries, like an upper bleph (which removes excess fat, muscle, and/or skin from the upper eyelid), a facelift, or a brow lift.

    A lower blepharoplasty delivers smoother, refreshed undereyes, but no plastic surgery has permanent results. The aging process continues, says Dr. Kolker, regardless of whether or not a patient has gone under the knife. “Nothing lasts forever, even thoughtfully performed surgery,” he says, noting that “skin may loosen over time. A lower blepharoplasty done in your 20s or 30s to address puffiness can offer long-term improvement, but it won’t stop the clock.” But, “You’ll almost always look better than if you hadn’t had it.”

    Read more about plastic surgery:

    • Is "Skin Pinch" Surgery Actually a Quick Fix for Crepey Eyes?
    • 17 People Get Real About Their Mommy Makeovers
    • The "Glow-Up" Facelift Is Real
  • 6 Best Peter Thomas Roth Products That Are Like a Facial in a Bottle

    6 Best Peter Thomas Roth Products That Are Like a Facial in a Bottle

    editor holding max complexion pads and products on a tan backgroundCollage: Gabrielle Langdon; Source images: Allure editors; Courtesy of brandsSave StorySave this storySave StorySave this story

    All products featured on Allure are independently selected by our editors. However, we may receive compensation from retailers and/or from purchases of products through these links.

    The best Peter Thomas Roth products prove that actives-driven skin care doesn’t have to feel cold or intimidating—it can be effective and accessible. The brand is known for cutting through the noise with formulas that mimic in-office treatments. Founded in 1993 by Peter Thomas Roth himself (who struggled to find products that addressed mature skin and acne), the brand delivers results that honestly shocked us—we’re talkin’ smoother wrinkles in seconds and that just-left-the-aesthetician glow. Intrigued yet? We tested a ton of Peter Thomas Roth products to narrow down the ones actually worth your money. And trust us: We’ll happily take a $40 wrinkle-reducer that works instantly over a pricey trip to the facialist.

    Our Top Peter Thomas Roth Products

    • Volume Up: Peptide Skinjection Fill + Fix Under-Eye Cream, $45
    • Smooth Operator: Peptide Skinjection Hydra-Gel Patches, $65
    • In the Clear: Max Complexion Correction Pads, $48
    • Hold Tight: FirmX Eye Temporary Eye Tightener Easy-Wear Formula, $38
    • Cool Down: Water Drench Ice-Facial Cooling Mist, $29
    • C the Light: Peter Thomas Roth Potent-C Power Serum, $95

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  • How we test and review products
  • Our staff and testers
  • Volume Up: Peptide Skinjection Fill + Fix Under-Eye Cream

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    Peter Thomas Roth

    Peptide Skinjection Fill + Fix Under-Eye Cream

    $45

    Nordstrom

    $45

    Revolve

    $45

    Ulta Beauty

    Kinonen applying Peptide Skinjection Fill + Fix Under-Eye Cream

    Why we love it: Noticing signs of tiredness under your eyes? A sidekick that covers all your brightening bases is essential. Peter Thomas Roth’s Peptide Skinjection Fill + Fix Under Eye Cream is packed with a 4% Peptilift technology (hi, peptides), hyaluronic acid, caffeine, and a patented plant complex called Juveneye CLR 3% that acts as a skin-regenerating agent—together, these ingredients smooth the look of fine lines, visibly diminish tired-looking eyes, and reduce puffiness. The lightweight cream also has a slight peachy tint that helps blur imperfections, though you’ll probably still want a bit of concealer for full coverage.

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    Allure associate beauty director Sarah Kinonen before applying Peptide Skinjection Fill + Fix Under-Eye Cream

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    Kinonen after applying Peptide Skinjection Fill + Fix Under-Eye Cream

    Tester feedback from associate beauty director Sarah Kinonen

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    “If an eye cream doesn’t have a metal applicator, I don’t want it! That’s why I love this one from Peter Thomas Roth. Its angled tip cools on contact, hugs undereyes to help depuff, and has a peach-colored tint to help conceal dark circles. (You’ll still need concealer, but it makes for a great start to your base!) Although it’s great for morning and night, I prefer to use it before work because it’s so refreshing.” —Sarah Kinonen, associate beauty director

    More to know

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    • Key ingredients: peptides, hyaluronic acid, caffeine, Juveneye CLR 3%
    • Who it’s best for: mature skin, people who are concerned with sagging or fine lines
    • Product highlights: paraben-free, less than one percent synthetic fragrance
    • Fragrance-free: yes

    Smooth Operator: Expression Line Hydra-Gel Patches

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    Peter Thomas Roth

    Expression Line Hydra-Gel Patches

    $65 $57 (12% off)

    Amazon

    $65

    Nordstrom

    $65

    Dermstore

    Allure contributing editor Deanna Pai applying the Expression Line Hydra-Gel Patches

    Deanna Pai

    Why we love it: Another winner from the Skinjection line is the Peter Thomas Roth Peptide Skinjection Hydra-Gel Patches, which we like to call the “whole shebang.” These eye patches deliver a powerful blend of line-smoothing peptides, brightening niacinamide, and a trio of hydrators: hyaluronic acid, squalane, and cactus flower extract. They come in two clever shapes: one for targeting crow’s feet under the eyes, and another for smoothing vertical forehead lines and nose scrunch lines between the brows and along the bridge of the nose. Another welcome bonus is that each patch has a perforated texture, so they won’t slip down the face for the entire 10 to 15 minutes of wear. Pro tip: Pat (don't wipe) any leftover serum into your skin—because why waste even a single drop?

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    Pai before using the Expression Line Hydra-Gel Patches

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    Pai after using the Expression Line Hydra-Gel Patches

    Tester feedback from contributing editor Deanna Pai

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    "My face is really expressive, as one plastic surgeon put it, so even on the cusp of 36, I have decent furrow lines and crow's feet, thanks to scowling, smiling, and everything in between. I liked that these gel patches—which adhere easily and provide a light, cooling sensation—target exactly those lines. Even though those will take months to make a difference, I appreciated the immediate gratification of brighter, more hydrated skin as soon as I took them off." —Deanna Pai, contributing editor

    More to know

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    • Key ingredients: hyaluronic acid, squalane, cactus flower extract
    • Who it’s best for: those with acne, texture, and dull skin
    • Number of patches: 60
    • Fragrance-free: yes

    In the Clear: Max Complexion Correction Pads

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    Peter Thomas Roth

    Max Complexion Correction Pads

    $48

    Amazon

    $48

    Nordstrom

    $48

    Dermstore

    Allure commerce writer Lily Wohlner applying the Peter Thomas Roth Max Complexion Correction Pads

    Lily Wohlner

    Why we love it: At Allure HQ, we live for glass-like glowy skin, but our journeys haven’t been without some trial and error. One product that’s earned a permanent spot in our routines is Peter Thomas Roth’s Max Complexion Correction Pads. These pre-soaked exfoliating pads gently slough the top layer of skin to reveal a brighter, smoother complexion, thanks to a 10% dose of a glycolic acid complex. “Glycolic acid is a chemical exfoliant, particularly an alpha hydroxy acid (AHAs), derived from sugarcane”, Pittsburg-based board-certified dermatologist Lindsey Zubritsky, MD, previously told Allure. It works by loosening and shedding dead skin cells that cause dullness and rough texture, adds Ohio-based board-certified dermatologist Hope Mitchell, MD. The formula also includes 2% salicylic acid to help treat and prevent breakouts, plus soothing aloe and allantoin to keep skin calm and balanced.

    Lily Wohlner before applying the Peter Thomas Roth Goodbye Acne Max Complexion Correction Pads

    Wohlner before applying the Peter Thomas Roth Max Complexion Correction Pads

    Lily WohlnerLily Wohlner after applying the Peter Thomas Roth Goodbye Acne Max Complexion Correction Pads

    Wohlner after applying the Peter Thomas Roth Max Complexion Correction Pads

    Lily Wohlner

    Tester feedback from commerce writer Lily Wohlner

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    “I’ve dealt with acne and rough texture for basically my entire life, but when I discovered the powers of tri-weekly exfoliating, my frequent full-forehead breakouts turned into a rare blemish. I’ve been testing these pads for two weeks, and they live up to my high standards. They don’t smell like a strong acid (rather, they have a nice peach bellini scent), tingle in a good way, and make me look like I just pranced out of a facial. Plus, the long-term benefits have been noticeable—I haven’t had a bout of rough texture or a single breakout in the last two weeks.” —Lily Wohlner, commerce writer

    More to know

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    • Key ingredients: 10% glycolic acid complex, 2% salicylic acid, aloe, allantoin
    • Who it’s best for: people with skin dullness, acne, large pores, or uneven texture
    • Number of pads: 60
    • Fragrance-free: no

    Hold Tight: FirmX Eye Temporary Eye Tightener Easy-Wear Formula

    Image may contain: Brush, Device, Tool, Bottle, and Cosmetics

    Peter Thomas Roth

    FirmX Eye Temporary Eye Tightener Easy-Wear Formula

    $38

    Ulta Beauty

    $38

    Sephora

    Trakoshis applying the Peter Thomas Roth FirmX Eye Temporary Eye Tightener Easy-Wear Formula

    Why we love it: This eye-tightening cream temporarily smooths fine lines and wrinkles in seconds—yes, seconds. Firm-A-Tite, a patented blend of silicates and seaweed, instantly tightens the skin and smooths out fine lines, puffiness, and wrinkles, while peptide technology helps firm and plump over time. FirmX Eye Temporary Eye Tightener Easy-Wear comes with a brush (which you don’t have to use, since it might absorb some product) that makes application mess-free. Once it sets, it stays put without pilling, even under makeup. While it has a slight peachy tint for a touch of coverage, we recommend layering it over concealer if you want a fuller-coverage finish.

    Tester feedback from shopping market editor Angela Trakoshis

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    “The new FirmX Eye Easy-Wear Formula is such a game-changer compared to the original. I love that it doesn’t leave behind that chalky white cast—especially since I wear it on completely bare skin, no makeup or moisturizer underneath. It just smooths and tightens everything in this subtle, fresh-faced way. I’m only 29 (and get a full nine hours of sleep each night!) so my before-and-afters don’t show the full magic, but trust me, my 59-year-old mom swears by it. It’s her holy grail, and now it’s mine too.” — Angela Trakoshis, shopping market editor

    More to know

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    • Key ingredients: Firm-A-Tite, peptide technology
    • Who it’s best for: mature skin, people who are concerned with sagging or fine lines
    • Fragrance-free: yes

    Cool Down: Water Drench Ice-Facial Cooling Mist

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    Peter Thomas Roth

    Water Drench Ice-Facial Cooling Mist

    $30

    Amazon

    $30

    Dermstore

    $30

    Revolve

    Allure commerce editor Sarah Han applying the Peter Thomas Roth Water Drench Ice-Facial Cooling Mist

    Sarah Han

    Why we love it: This is one of those products you didn’t know you needed…until you use it. The Water Drench Ice-Facial Cooling Mist is infused with hydrating hyaluronic acid, brightening caffeine, and a trio of antioxidant-rich green, red, and white tea to protect skin from damage caused by free radicals. The face mist also has peppermint-loaded IceAwake Activating Technology that provides a cooling, refreshing kick to instantly wake you up. Whether you’re dealing with a steamy commute or need a mid-day boost, this spray is like a splash of cold water and a skin-care treatment in one.

    Tester feedback from commerce editor Sarah Han

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    "I love a face mist to wake me up during mid-afternoon office slumps. (IYKYK!) PTR's Water Drench one-ups my other mists because it has unique "IceAwake Activating Technology" as well as peppermint and caffeine for a very noticeable cooling effect. I'm not sure how much of a depuffing effect it has, but the skin-calming benefits are well worth it. Note to self: Keep it in my work tote so I can spritz when I'm waiting on the subway platforms, a.k.a. public saunas!" —Sarah Han, commerce editor

    More to know

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    • Key ingredients: hyaluronic acid, caffeine, green, red, and white tea, peppermint
    • Who it’s best for: everyone
    • Fragrance-free: no

    C the Light: Potent-C Power Serum

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    Peter Thomas Roth

    Potent-C Power Serum

    $95

    Amazon

    $95

    Dermstore

    $95

    Revolve

    Why we love it: You’ve probably heard that L-ascorbic acid (a.k.a. pure vitamin C) is the gold standard in antioxidant serums—but the Peter Thomas Roth Potent-C Power Serum takes a different approach. Instead, it uses a 20% concentration of THD ascorbate—a more stable, more potent form of vitamin C. THDA is then fortified with 2% ferulic acid and 3% vitamin E to boost performance, which includes brightening skin, evening out tone, and smoothing texture, without any of the dreaded, barrier-disrupting sensitivity that can be associated with other forms of vitamin C. Use it twice daily after cleansing for maximum dark-spot and dullness maintenance.

    More to know

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    • Key ingredients: 20% THD ascorbate, 2% ferulic acid, 3% vitamin C
    • Who it’s best for: those with dark spots, dullness, and uneven texture
    • Fragrance-free: yes

    Frequently Asked Questions

    How we test and review products

    When Allure tests a product, our editors look at it from every angle in an effort to best serve you. We review ingredients, scrutinize brand claims, and, when necessary, examine peer-reviewed scientific and medical studies. In addition to testing each and every product that’s included in each and every review, we rely on experts who shape their fields, including dermatology, cosmetic chemistry, and medicine, to help us vet the ingredients and formulas.

    For our list of best Peter Thomas Roth products, we considered each product’s performance across five primary categories: product ingredients and efficacy, packaging, fragrance, texture, and product wear. Every product was determined to have excelled in each category by our editorial team, which is composed of in-house writers and editors as well as contributors—along with special consideration from dermatologists. To learn more information on our reporting and testing processes, read our complete reviews process and methodology page.

    Our staff and testers

    A beauty product is a personal purchase. You might be searching for a face cream to address persistent dryness or a new nail product to add to your Sunday self-care routine; you may simply be browsing around for the latest launches to hit the hair market. No matter what you seek or your individual needs and concerns, Allure wants to ensure that you love anything we recommend in our stories. We believe that having a diverse team of writers and editors—in addition to the wide range of outside testers and industry experts we regularly call upon—is essential to reaching that goal.

    After all, can we really say a skin-care product is the "best" for people over 50 if the only testers we've solicited opinions from folks who have yet to hit 30? Can we honestly deem a high-end diffuser worthy of your hard-earned cash if it's never been tested on curls? We're proud that our staff spans a wide range of ages, skin tones, hair textures, genders, and backgrounds, which means that we are able to fairly assess any beauty product that comes into the beauty closet.

  • Rihanna Just Reinvented the Y2K Zig-Zag Part — See Photos

    Rihanna Just Reinvented the Y2K Zig-Zag Part — See Photos

    Rihanna poses at a premiere in a high messy bun. She wears a brown lace gown and leather jacket.Photo: Getty ImagesSave StorySave this storySave StorySave this story

    When I look back on the hair trends of the late ‘90s and early 2000s—some of which I participated in and some I hard-passed on—I feel a wave of mortification come over me. What were we thinking? I guess that belated embarrassment can be true of many unmistakably era-specific looks, but there's something so distinctive about the hair choices of that time that makes them unlikely to be resurrected anytime soon. Unless you're Rihanna and can make something like a zig-zag part seem unbelievably cool and modern.

    Smurfette herself was spotted in Los Angeles without a stitch of blue in sight, other than one oversized ring. Her outfit was a mix of casual and luxurious: a sweatshirt and jeans partnered with a fur shawl and a snakeskin bag and heels. But her hair was in a category of its own.

    Rihanna walking in a sweatshirt jeans and fur shawlPhoto: Getty Images

    At first glance, you may notice that Rihanna's long, sleek, straightened hair is styled half-up in two completely adorable braids that keep her hair fully off of her face. That alone is hair inspo.

    Rihanna with a zigzag part and braidsPhoto: Getty Images

    But upon closer inspection, it seems she has successfully reinvigorated a look I never thought I could get behind again: the zig-zag part. With all due respect to Melissa Joan Hart and Mandy Moore, I just never thought we could bring this back in a non-cringey way.

    Rihanna with a zigzag part and braidsPhoto: Getty Images

    The key to what makes it work, other than being on Rihanna's head, is the subtlety. Instead of gigantic zigs and zags, held in place by something like colorful butterfly clips, the zig-zag blends beautifully, giving it a grown-up twist.

    While I'm not entirely confident that I could reproduce such a sleek-yet-soft take on the zig-zag part, I am sure that anyone who can will be seen as cute and not cringeworthy.