Balm Voyage

Chemist Confessions

An occlusive blend that seals in moisture and keeps irritants outs. This balanced balm is fortified with ceramides to strengthen your moisture barrier and keep dry patches away. Use on face, lips, elbows, hands, get creative!

0.85 oz / 25 mL

An occlusive blend that seals in moisture and keeps irritants outs. This balanced balm is fortified with ceramides to strengthen your moisture barrier and keep dry patches away. Use on face, lips, elbows, hands, get creative!

KEY OCCLUSIVES  -

48.5% Petrolatum: this gold-standard occlusive that seals in moisture no matter the outside elements.
10% Squalane: nourishing, photo-stable, olive-derived emollient that helps Balm Voyage glide on light without that typical gooey balm feel.

SKIN SOOTHERS -

2.5% Boswellia Serrata Extract: Indian frankincense is an ancient extract still relevant today for its skin calming properties. It can calm skin irritated by aggressive active ingredients like acids and retinol
1% Ceramide NP: A natural, waxy component of skin that provides long-term skin barrier function reinforcement. Hello, long-term hydration!

How To Use

Use this balm as a last step spot treatment. Dab on dry patches on face, lips, hands, etc. Get creative!

Dry Skin: No need to fear. Balm voyage is here! Get slather happy and skin will be in the clear in those bitterly cold winter days.

Combination Skin: Dab a bit on your dry zones to keep skin happy and moisturized.

Pro-tip! Are you using aggressive active ingredients like retinol and acid? Dab a little bit of Balm Voyage on those sting-happy or compromised spots. This will help isolate the area and keep skin flake free.


Ingredients

Petrolatum, Squalane, Stearyl Heptanoate, Caprylic/Capric Triglyceride, Glyceryl Behenate, Dimethicone, Dimethicone Crosspolymer, Glyceryl Behenate, Jojoba esters, Helianthus Annuus (sunflower) seed wax, Acacia Decurrens Flower Wax, polyglycerin-3, Dipropylene Glycol, Boswellia Serrata Gum, Ceramide NP, Vinyl Dimethicone/Methicone Silsesquioxane Crosspolymer