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March 11, 2026

A routine for sensitive skin should resemble a well-edited wardrobe: fewer pieces, better made, each serving a clear purpose.
Morning begins with a gentle cleanse, or simply a rinse if the skin feels balanced, followed by hydration and protection. A lightweight serum that supports barrier function prepares the skin for the day ahead. Formulas such as Super Seed Serum, which combines Sodium Hyaluronate, peptides and calming seed oils, are designed to hydrate deeply while reinforcing the skin’s natural resilience. A nourishing moisturiser then seals in comfort; Super Seed Nutrient Cream offers fragrance-free hydration and lipid support, helping maintain a calm, balanced complexion throughout the day.
Evening is when restoration takes precedence. This is the moment for a thorough yet considerate cleanse to remove the day’s accumulation of sunscreen, pollution and makeup. A calming cleanser such as Super Sensitive Cleansing Cream dissolves impurities while maintaining the skin’s barrier, leaving it soft rather than stripped.
Follow with targeted treatment, if using one. For those seeking gentle renewal without the volatility of traditional retinoids, Super Renewal Serum uses phyto-retinol and bakuchiol to refine the appearance of skin gradually and comfortably. Finish with a moisturiser or facial oil that replenishes lipids overnight; the nutrient-rich oils in the Super Seed Facial Oil help restore suppleness and support the barrier while you sleep.
What’s notably absent is excess exfoliation. While exfoliants have their place, sensitive skin rarely benefits from frequent resurfacing. Once a week, sometimes less, is often sufficient, and only if the barrier feels robust. When needed, Sensitive Resurfacing Peel, formulated with gentle lactic acid and nourishing seed oils, offers a controlled way to refine texture without overwhelming delicate skin.
Ultimately, managing sensitive skin is less about elimination and more about equilibrium. When the barrier is supported, inflammation tends to subside, tone appears more even, and radiance returns in a way that looks inherent rather than engineered.
Good skin, in this context, is not the result of force. It is the result of consistency, quality and a certain editorial discipline - knowing what to leave out.