C Firma Day Serum (eye area)
Layered under SPF, this is the only 'eye cream' where Glow's testers reliably saw measurable brightness improvement. Vitamin C delivery system holds up.
Twelve eye creams tested over twelve weeks. Scored on hydration, fine-line softening, dark-circle reduction, and fragrance load.
Eye cream is the most over-marketed product in skincare. Most do not need to exist. The six below earn the line item.
Layered under SPF, this is the only 'eye cream' where Glow's testers reliably saw measurable brightness improvement. Vitamin C delivery system holds up.
Pharmacy-grade, fragrance-free, ophthalmologist-tested. The right choice for clients with reactive skin or post-procedure recovery.
Heavy texture, ceramide-rich. The pick for over-50s and clients in winter Melbourne air. Pricey but you use a grain.
Best-in-class for the price. Watery, fast-absorbing. Doesn't do much for fine lines but reliably reduces puffiness.
Professional-grade peptide blend. Strong on crepiness. Marketed via dermal clinics; you'll find it cheaper online.
Korean ceramide formulation. The barrier-repair pick at a mid-price point. Less active than the Drunk Elephant but gentler.
If your moisturiser already feels comfortable around the eyes, no. Eye-specific products matter for puffiness, persistent dark circles, and post-procedure care. For everyone else, your face moisturiser does the same job.
Half a grain of rice per eye, patted in with the ring finger. Most people use four times what they need. A 15ml jar should last a year.
Yes — short-term, by constricting blood vessels. The effect is real and immediate, but resets within hours. Useful for events, not for structural change.
Late twenties is reasonable for hydration and puffiness. Active anti-aging in the eye area starts to matter from the mid-thirties, when collagen begins falling faster than it rebuilds.
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