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The Ritual

The quiet art of glow

Five dermatologist-approved serums, one fragrance worth the ceremony, and the small rituals that turn a morning into something sacred.

Camille Moreau
April 22, 202612 min read

Photographed by Léa Bertin. Styled in ivory silk and warm morning light.

There is a version of beauty that moves quickly — the one that performs well on camera, that photographs beautifully, that is always on its way somewhere. And then there is the version most of our editors actually live with: slower, quieter, almost devotional. A single serum, pressed into skin before anything else. A balm worn at the collarbone instead of sprayed. A ritual, not a routine.

This is the edit we've been returning to for weeks. Not the newest, not the loudest, not the most-posted — simply the six products that have earned a permanent corner of our bathroom shelves. Some of them are famous. Some of them are not. All of them have been worn long enough to tell the truth about.

A note on how we write thisEvery product below was tested for a minimum of three weeks by someone on our editorial team. When you buy through our links we may earn a small commission — it's what keeps the journal independent and ad-free. We only ever include products our editors use personally.

The serum that replaced three

Vitamin C is the ingredient we've been asked about more than any other this year. Most tolerated poorly. One, for reasons we can only partly explain, behaves beautifully on nearly every skin type we've tested it on — a steady, low-key glow after about a fortnight of morning use. The formula is buffered, the packaging is opaque, the price is not unreasonable.

We pair it with a niacinamide at 10% (yes, still) and very little else. No actives layered. No elaborate routine. The skin, as it turns out, mostly wants to be left alone.

The best beauty routine is the one you will actually do on a Wednesday evening when you are tired.

On the balm at the collarbone

We have been perfuming the collarbone, the inner wrist, and the nape of the neck with a balm rather than an eau — a small change that has reshaped our entire relationship with fragrance. The scent is warmer, closer, more of a weather than a statement. It lasts longer. It doesn't fill a room.

The fragrance below is the one our beauty editor has worn for close to eight years now, in one form or another. Rose, a dry pepper, a hint of incense. It smells like walking home late, in cashmere, having left a party slightly early on purpose.

Shop the edit
The six, as worn
IAffiliate
Violette_FR
Petal Bouche Lip Oil

A cushion-finish oil in rose-adjacent tones. Worn alone, it reads as a lived-in pink.

IIAffiliate
Augustinus Bader
The Rich Cream

The cult barrier-rebuilder. A half-pea worn over damp skin, every night, for eight weeks.

IIIAffiliate
Diptyque
Eau Capitale

A dry rose with pepper and patchouli — the scent of walking home late in cashmere.

IVAffiliate
U Beauty
Resurfacing Compound

A hybrid retinoid-acid-antioxidant blend that behaves itself. Our pick for cautious skin.

VAffiliate
Tata Harper
Crème Riche Eye

A peptide-rich eye balm that doesn't pill under concealer. Three weeks to visible work.

VIAffiliate
Ranavat
Radiant Rani Tonic

An Ayurvedic toning essence with hibiscus. A gentle first step that perfumes the room.

The point of doing less

We used to think a good skincare routine looked like a lineup of bottles. It does not. It looks like three products you know the smell of by heart, used at the same time of evening, most days, for a long time. That's the secret — if there is one. There is rarely any other.

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