Skin

This Fall Simplify Your Skin Care With a Do-It-All Moisturizer

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Photographed by Karim Sadli, Vogue, December 2014

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But for a new generation of skincare enthusiasts raised on clean ingredients, transparent practices, and the often over-hyped promises of social media, today’s formulas have to be a bit “more proven, and less magical,” says Nabi. “I think everyone wants to invest in fairly simple routines now,” says Dallas-based facialist Joanna Czech of why we’re re-approaching peak cream-obsession. “They don’t want 17 serums or oils, which to be honest, are not necessary.” Czech has little trouble moving jars of the German brand Medical Beauty Research (MBR)’s Cream Extraordinary, a $372 emulsion that plumps and illuminates with gold leaf extract, or the mineral-rich Chuda Healing Hydrating Cream at a somewhat more modest price of $150. There’s this movement toward really focusing on keeping extra products to a minimum,” says Larissa Jensen, a beauty-industry analyst for the market-research firm NPD Group, which saw a 5% spike in moisturizing creams last year while sales of moisturizing face oils, that onetime millennial skin-care favorite, dropped by 4%.

Perhaps unsurprisingly, the skincare brain trust in Seoul is already ahead of this shift. AHC, a Korean-based company, has just launched its Essential Real Eye Cream for Face in the U.S. One tube of the multitasker, a lighter version of the line’s hugely popular eye cream that fans were using off-label on their cheeks for an extra lift, reportedly sells every three seconds in Korea—a statistic that should inspire Mieloch to work a little faster.